Sunday, February 18, 2024 Alaska Sealife Center Eiders, Smew

Seward, Alaska

 

Cautions about avian flu have kept the aviary doors closed at the ASLC, but today all I had to do was step on the specially treated mats before entering a magical world.

 

Many of the birds, like the HORNED and TUFTED PUFFINS, were still in drab winter plumage. But the SPECTACLED EIDER, KING EIDER, and STELLER’S EIDER paraded about in their breeding plumage finery. Such spectacular colors and patterns! 

 

The females also sported a subtle dash of class: the iridescent blue speculum of the Steller’s Eider, and a glossy blue bill for the Spectacled Eider. 

 

The elegant and striking black on white “cracked ice” pattern of the drake SMEW needed no colors to impress. The demure hen followed in his magnificent wake.

 

These spectacular seabirds brightened my afternoon on an otherwise overcast and dim day.

 

Happy Birding!

Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter 






















Saturday, February 17, 2024 Swans, and Merlin

Seward, Alaska

 

Sunrise 8:33 am, sunset 5:53 pm for a total day length of 9 hours and 20 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 23 seconds longer.

 

After three spring-like sunny days with booming surf and t-shirted beach goers playing frisbee, the clouds snuck in overnight bearing light rain, temps from 24-36, and a north wind. More cold rain is in the forecast until Friday.

 

The TRUMPETER SWAN family with two cygnets returned to the north end of the Lagoon. The youngsters were more concerned than their complacent parents, even when the snowblower rumbled past on the boardwalk. Two other adult Trumpeter Swans cautiously walked on the ice at the south end and then eased into the water by the culvert. 

 

At the tidelands, a very wary Trumpeter Swan, about a quarter mile out on the flats, took off when it saw me. I added #51 to my list when a RAVEN flew overhead, chased (or followed by) a MERLIN. It happened too fast for me to both check with my binocs and take a photo. Beautiful raptor!

 

Happy Birding!

Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter




















Sunday February 4 - Sunday February 11, 2024 Squall Birding and a Sitka Black-tailed Deer!

Seward, Alaska

 

Birding this past week slowed down as the temperatures rose into the 20s and then 30s, bringing snow, then sleet, rain, and squalls. Seeking new species for my January 31-February bird list provided incentive to get outside and get wet. 

 

Last Sunday, I found a single PIGEON GUILLEMOT in the SMIC boat basin, and a DIPPER at Afognak Pond. Far out at the edge of the low tide at Afognak Beach I at last found 36 ROCKSANDPIPERS and a DUNLIN feeding among a flock of Short-billed Gulls (previously counted.)

 

On Monday, in a snowstorm, I added a PACIFIC LOON south of the harbor Uplands. On sunny Tuesday, I enjoyed watching a BALD EAGLE dining at the bird café along Lowell Point Road, though the entre did not enjoy being invited to lunch. A Greater Scaup and Yellow-billed Loon paddled around by Scheffler Creek, and one Great Blue Heron roosted on the blue coal loader platform.

 

Varied Thrushes seem almost abundant this winter at feeders and at the beach. I photographed a brilliant male foraging at Lowell Point Beach on Wednesday. The two Long-tailed Ducks and Common Loon were still there, along with the usual Barrow’s Goldeneyes, Red-breasted Mergansers, Common Mergansers, and Pelagic Cormorants.

 

It really warmed up by Friday resulting in snow and rain squalls. As previously reported, I found two more species: Rusty Blackbirds and Robins. Saturday’s weather was much worse with continual, hard squalls all the dark day.

 

Today let up and alternated heavy snowfall like a shaken snow globe with clear intervals. I scored a RED-NECKED GREBE at the SMIC boat basin with a raft of Surf Scoters. I was watching beautiful male RED CROSSBILLS at Ava’s when Robin C called. He reported seeing a Trumpeter Swan family with two cyngets at the Lagoon yesterday and a big surprise today.

 

I immediately left and drove to the Lagoon just in time to see my first ever SITKA BLACK-TAILED DEER in Seward. She was feeding on partially exposed vegetation along the shore. It’s amazing that deer are in Seward. After occasional reports over the years, at least two have recently been documented from Lowell Point to Tonsina Point, and one or two in town. In some photos, they look like yard ornaments. Crazy. 

 

Here's my list of 50 species since January 31, which does not include several species seen earlier:

Rusty Blackbird

Bufflehead

Brambling

Black-capped Chickadee

Chestnut-backed Chickadee

Pelagic Cormorant

Red Crossbill

White-winged Crossbill

American Crow

Harlequin Duck

Long-tailed Duck

Dunlin

Bald Eagle

Gadwall

Barrow’s Goldeneye

Common Goldeneye

Horned Grebe

Red-necked Grebe

Pine Grosbeak

Pigeon Guillemot

Glaucous-winged Gull

Short-billed Gull

Great Blue Heron

Steller’s Jay

Dark-eyed Junco, Oregon, and Slate-colored

Common Loon

Pacific Loon

Yellow-billed Loon

Black-billed Magpie

Mallard

Common Merganser

Red-breasted Merganser

Marbled Murrelet

Red-breasted Nuthatch

Rock Pigeon

Common Raven

Common Redpoll

American Robin

Rock Sandpiper

Greater Scaup

Surf Scoter

White-winged Scoter

Pine Siskin

Fox Sparrow

Song Sparrow

White-crowned Sparrow

Trumpeter Swan

Varied Thrush

Downy Woodpecker

Hairy Woodpecker

 

Happy Birding!

Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Report Reporter

 

 



















Friday, February 9, 2024 Rusty Blackbirds, and Robins

Seward, Alaska

 

Sunrise 8:54 am, sunset 5:32 pm for a total day length of 8 hours and 37 minutes. Tomorrow will be 5 minutes and 15 seconds longer.

 

Fickle February turned up the thermostat to 35Âş today and let the burdened clouds vacillate between snow, sn’rain, and rain. More mixed showers are in the forecast until Wednesday. The National Weather Service issued an avalanche warning for the Kenai Mountains and also roofs (!) due to recent heavy snowfall, strong winds, and unstable snow.

 

This dreary day perked up considerably when I heard the creaking and whistling of at least seven RUSTY BLACKBIRDS at a feeder hotspot on Second and Madison. They rummaged through the soggy snow, striding from one spot to the next, gleaning fallen birdseed while a few others serenaded from hidden perches in the trees. Hopping around with these rock stars were at least three VARIED THRUSHES, glowing like bright round pumpkins. 

 

A very short time later, I found another eight Rusty Blackbirds at a feeder on First Ave. At least 15 in all. Plus, another Varied Thrush and the usual PINE SISKIN and COMMON REDPOLL birdfeeder vacuums, DARK-EYED JUNCOS, RED-BREASTED NUTHATCHES, BLACK-CAPPED and CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEES. Two ROBINS cautiously watched from the alders. 

 

I’m so glad these and all the other birds made it through the cold snap. Now they have to survive the cold winter rain.

 

Happy Birding!

Carol Griswold

Seward Sporadic Bird Reporter