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Showing posts with label March. Show all posts
Showing posts with label March. Show all posts

13 March 2012

March Bird Calendar


A quick list:

Here are some species to watch for arriving or leaving this area in March.

(southern East Kootenay Trench - between the US border and roughly Skookumchuck.)

Of course, a few individuals of some species remain all year, and some brave ones come back early.  This is meant as a general guide.

Don’t forget to try to record the last time you saw the winter visitors, like Bohemian Waxwing and Common Redpoll.



March
 

Perching birds

Pacific Wren
21-Feb-10
B. Baerg - eBird
Cassin’s Finch
01-Mar-01
Mildred White
Mountain Bluebird
5-Mar-06

Western Bluebird
8-Mar-05

Western Meadowlark
8-Mar-05

Say's Phoebe
11-Mar-05

Horned Lark

rare – Feb, Mar
American Robin

some over-winter, become more common in early March
Varied Thrush
11-Mar-10

Tree Swallow
11-Mar-05

Spotted Towhee
18-Mar-07

Violet-green Swallow
21-Mar-00

Common Grackle
24-Mar-11
K. Knight - eBird
Bohemian Waxwing
24-Mar-76
winters here, this is the latest date seen, from Mildred White’s records



Raptors

Northern Harrier
11-Mar-05

American Kestrel
16-Mar-06
B. Baerg - eBird
Turkey Vulture
11-Mar-10

Osprey
29-Mar-92
Mildred White



Water - side Birds
Killdeer
8-Mar-05

Tundra Swan
9-Mar-00
higher numbers are seen around Invermere
Bufflehead
9-Mar-12
small pockets may be seen in winter
American Wigeon
11-Mar-10

Northern Pintail
11-Mar-10

Green-winged Teal
11-Mar-05

Pied-billed Grebe
11-Mar-05

Great Blue Heron
14-Mar-92
most start arriving (some here all winter)
Redhead
21-Mar-08
D. Nicholson - eBird
Ring-necked Duck
25-Mar-04

Lesser Scaup
27-Mar-10

Wood Duck
25-Mar-04

American Coot
20-Mar-04

Marsh Wren
16-Mar-99
R. Johnston - eBird
  

Yes, these dates are a little earlier, in some cases, compared to records going back to 1974.

Hope to have the month of April up soon, stay tuned!


PS - if you should meet me in person: I don't have a good memory for details so if you ask me "when do bluebirds come back?" I probably won't remember, (one of the hazards of living "day to day", perhaps) but I'd probably remember where to get the link for this, which I can give you.

Happy birding!



10 March 2012

March "Eureka" on Pighin Road


Birding Buddy #1 and I headed out Friday 9 Mar 2012 to find some more ticks for our club's Winter Seeker Challenge - with great success!

We had a report earlier in the week of WESTERN MEADOWLARK singing.

Eureka on Pighin Road!

The song of the meadowlark contains a couple of notes I believe are designed to carry long distances - much of the song is trilly burbles giving it that beautiful liquid quality, but then it throws in a couple of pure, loud tones that really carry in a multitude of conditions - wind, barometric pressure, background noise. It is these notes I first heard off in the distance, (despite having a strange middle ear condition that makes it sound like a jet liner is revving its engines beside my ear - some kind of infection, the docs say but hearing is not damaged) so I got out my brand new squeaker to see if the meadowlark would react to it. After sending out only a half dozen notes which I hoped were a fair imitation of the WEME loud tones, in flies the bird for us to see and hear its full song! Sweet!


A pair of WESTERN BLUEBIRDS graced us with their presence at their bastion of occurrence along Mission Wycliffe Rd, where we also saw a couple of small hordes of RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD singing their hearts out in their usual non-breeding jumble of sound and movement.



A warm southerly wind was hitting the bluffs above St. Eugene Resort but just a few meters lower down on the St. Mary's River, it was chilly. (No herons at the heronry there.) Starting the day off at zero degrees Celsius in Lower Kimberley, the thermostat climbed steadily and got up to an amazing 14 degrees C by the time we hit Bull River. It was hot, I say! I even took off my hat, which, to those of you who know me in person, know this to be a reliable indicator of warmth.




Human-enhanced Osprey tree - waiting silently



A strange sight greeted us, along Bulkot Rd, off Ha Ha Creek Rd: about a hundred BOHEMIAN WAXWING were spread out over a kilometer amongst the farm buildings, flitting between trees, utility lines, and fence posts, hawking the explosion of insects, I suppose. I usually only see them in their tight flocks descending to dessimate a Mountain Ash tree in the winter.




My version of a Northern Shrike - Sony Cyber-shot 12.1 max  lens telephoto


A pair of mating RED-TAILED HAWK was a brief treat.

Steeples Road, off Wardner / Fort Steele Rd, proved very productive (relatively). A GREAT-BLUE HERON kindly flushed from a back pond so we could see it, only to return to the same spot after a short flight. If it hadn't moved, I doubt we would have been able discern that long skinny grey shape with a white puff at the top as the head of a heron behind the tall dry marsh grasses.  The pair of KILLDEER sitting quietly at the pond's edge were a little harder to spot - un-moving, with their backs to us.  My brain picked out the anomolous shape against the gray gravel - like a kid's "Hidden Object" activity book.  Weird to see them so quiet.




Scanning for - well, anything - at Kootenay River at Wardner. Yes that is ice.


Birding Buddy spotted the 3 TUNDRA SWAN at Wasa Sloughs. Duh! How do you miss 3 big white birds! All of them had their heads in the water at my first scan, so my brain just registered clumps of snow against the far bank! Lol. (I am so amusing to myself).

Wild Turkey has become our nemesis bird - motivation to get out again ASAP. On the way home, we discussed proposing changes to the rules of the Winter Seeker Challenge to stack the odds more to our favor, being semi-casual winter birders. Nothing too complicated - a formula to give bonus points for irregular species, and to birders whose names start with "D" or "R" - no just kidding. Day-dreaming winning, really.    ^ ~ ^

Day List:
British Columbia bird codes
Kimberley to Wasa Sloughs via Mission Wycliffe Rd, Ha Ha Creek Rd, Wardner / Fort Steele Rd, and main highways between.

CLNU
NOFL
SOSP
EUST
CORA
CORE
PISI
BCCH
AMCR
HOFI
AMRO
EVGR
RWBL
STJA
CAGO
BBMA
CAFI
RBNU
WEME
RTHA
ROPI
WEBL
RECR
MOCH
AMDI
BAGO
COGO
MALL
BOWA
TOSO
NOSH shrike
GRJA
BUFF
COME
GBHE
KILL
GCKI
TUSW Tundra Swan

happy birding!