Weborg Point Warblers
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Memorial Day Weekend has arrived, and I look around at the bevy of people around me thinking, “if you only knew, this whole landscape was BROWN a month ago. We didn’t even have LEAVES 2 weeks ago!”
Nothing has really changed between Thursday (pre-weekend) and Friday (officially the weekend) — the weather is still sort of crummy (50′s and cloudy more often than not) and there is no magic “feeling” of anything, marking the significance of one day to the next.
But what has changed is the magical flourishing of green upon the landscape; everything has literally just sprung to life. It is truly boggling, and amazing, and beautiful. And with it has come a full-court press of Little Birds. What has felt like a slooooooooowwwwwww process this spring (I never did see any teals, wigeons, shovelers, etc.?) has finally truly picked up steam. :)
I took my sandwich and salad from the Northern Grill down to Peninsula State Park, and picked Weborg Point as the most likely place to have some wildlife/bird activity. It was perfect! Seriously, if I could enjoy a simple sandwich at Weborg Point every day for the rest of my life, my life would be utterly complete. It is impossible to improve upon perfection!
A few flittery warblers caught my eye over where another couple was eating. The birds were a few feet too close for my 10×50′s, but were too far to make out with the naked eye. So I obligingly ate while admiring the gorgeous view across the bay and Strawberry Channel.
But then, a couple of bites into my burger, I saw several gazillion warblers in the trees over my head and behind me! Gack! I unceremoniously shoved a couple more bites in my mouth, snapped the lid shut (warbler poop on my sandwich did not appeal, no matter how pretty the birds are) and grabbed my binocs. And watched the show.
My first catch was a female Yellow Warbler, and shortly thereafter a male Yellow Warbler. I didn’t have my bird guide with me, so was hoping that the rusty streaking on the male’s breast had bought me a 2nd species. No dice though. :) I also finally spied several Black-and-White Warblers, which just made my day, because I’ve been listening to the little buggers for 6 weeks now but haven’t been able to spot one!!
I was also entertained right from my picnic bench by a delightful little Eastern Wood Pewee. This little fellow had it totally figured out. He found an old snag poking up in the middle of a number of trees, but open to the grassy area. He sat atop the snag, watching for bugs. Then when he saw one (several?) he’d take off and flit around in circle, catch it, and return to the tree. It was sort of like tight circular bomber runs, and he did this over and over and over again.
There was also a Black-Throated Green Warbler, another happy sight because I’ve also been listening to them for the last 3-odd weeks, but finding them as they sit stock-still in a tree and sing is pretty much impossible. It’s ridiculous; their coloring makes them totally indistinguishable from a semi-sprouted leaf on a tree.
Of course, the infamous Yellow-Rumped Warblers were well-represented (I’m thinking the park should be renamed Yellow-Rumped Warbler Central!), both males and females were plentiful.
I did snap my best pics of a male thus far; I have a standard (and very limited) 18-55mm camera lens which makes warbler photog pretty much impossible. So any shots I do get, that feature distiguishable birds smaller than a crow :) are pretty much a personal victory! LOL!! :) It was very nice of this little fellow to sit still, and fairly low! in a crab-apple tree.
I decided to abandon my sandwich for a bit (I didn’t see any critters which might steal it, LOL), and take a quick walk down the dock. The dock is usually good for at least a few birds zooming by so quickly that it’s impossible to identify them. :)
My true hope was that I might spot a shorebird. They are rare over here (too many people, I think), but I’ve seen ‘em before, so I hold out hope.
I totally scored! :) There, on a rock right along shore, was the unmistakable silhouette of a sandpiper. I was so excited I held my breath, and just kept snap, snap, snapping pictures.
The setting sun was also behind clouds, so the light was marginal quality. I kept waiting for her (him?) to spook and fly off, but she didn’t. She hopped from rock to rock, picking and pecking for food.
I was shocked at how friendly she turned out to be. Neither me, nor my beeping and clicking camera, seemed to bother her a bit. She hopped and flew from rock to rock, peck, peck, peck. Then she flitted up to the dock itself and quickly wove around, back and forth, pecking at invisible bits that apparently she found quite yummy. :)
Finally she had enough and flew off, to a rock sitting in the water, on the north side of Weborg Point, just behind one of the campsites.
The light was quickly dropping, so I headed back to my burger :) but on the way I spied a little bit of movement in a bush.
I saw a bit of yellow hopping around, so switched to manual focus and tried to snap a decent picture. I kept getting pictures of his feet and body :) but the 4th shot finally was of his head! Woo-hoo! A Wilson’s Warbler. My first of the season.
All in all it was a fantastic trip to my favorite little birding spot. Combined with a perfectly gorgeous calm evening, and my favorite chicken bruschetta sandwich, I couldn’t have asked for more. Except maybe for the sun to stand still. :) ##
Tagged with: pewee • spotted sandpiper • warbler • weborg point
Filed under: Birds • Lifelist • Places
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