Summary of a Day of Hawk Watching at Cape May with Pete Dunne

Great Day at the Falcon Fest Workshop with Pete Dunne

Kay and I are at Cape May, NJ on Falcon Fest weekend, and are half way through Pete Dunne’s hawk-watching workshop through the Cape May Bird Observatory, and today was just a wonderful day.  The winds were out of the northwest, prefect for a day of hawk watching at Cape May.  As Pete says, “Birders come in on  a northwest wind, it’s uncanny.”  There were easily a hundred birders on the various platforms today, and the birding was great.  We spent the afternoon yesterday on the platform with Tom Reid, the official counter, and yesterday was flush with peregrine falcons, an estimated 60+ in the hour and a half Kay and I were on the platform.  Not a lot of other hawks noted though as you can see on the day count posted today:

Today was cool in the morning, warmer in the afternoon, and a perfect overcast sky against which to spot the birds.  Dunne is a great and patient teacher, and we felt we made great progress in raptor ID, although here are just a few of the gentle ways Pete guided us to the right ID when we (mostly I) were off target:

  • “What makes you say that?
  • “Let me take a look.”
  • “I’ve made that mistake many times too.”
  • “Take a closer look.”
  • “That is one of the toughest hawk watch IDs.”
  • Many more I forget now, but needless to say with a casual bare-eyed glance upwards Dunne was right essentially every time.

Here are a few fun “Pete Dunnisms” from the conversations of the day:

  • Osprey look like a gull that’s not gull, with slotted wingtips (primary feathers separated) and with a head.
  • Kingfishers are, “Heads on wings  that are running on fumes.”
  • Broad-winged hawks are like well dressed birds, the kind of buteo that you would not mind if your son or daughter brought home to meet.”
  • Harriers have languid, desultory wing-beats.
  • On why juvenile raptors tend to have longer wings and tails. “Like surfers.  Novices use big boards so they can keep upright, but more experienced surfers use smaller boards so they can be more maneuverable.”
  • Kestrels tend to come in small flocks or groups.  Merlins won’t tolerate the company.
  • On thinking about the likelihood of an accipitor being a Sharp-shinned vs. Cooper’s:  “If we stay stuck in the 30 year old probability (used to be 50:1 SSHA vs COHA and now can be nearly 1:1 some days) we are sunk.  Cooper’s are just vermin now-a-days.”
  • Best of the day. First casually, “Sometimes it’s easier to ID hawks without binoculars.” Then after a split second of thought, “This hawk watch is brought to you by Swarovski.”

Also today was a peak Monarch butterfly day, with huge numbers seemingly everywhere, but especially on some favored roosts where a pine tree branch would just be decorated with Monarch’s.   Sorry to miss Rolan’s woodpecker presentation, but glad we are here.

Ed

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Plea For Help at Grays Harbor

Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2012 14:03:22 -0700

ABC Birders: 

You can help with this!

Dear Birder Friends, 

For the past 10 years, we have been working with students in Grays Harbor County providing a series of classroom presentations about shorebirds and shorebird conservation. The finale of our time with them is a field trip to Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge to see shorebirds during the spring migration. Volunteers help during the field trips and provide needed assistance with helping kids see and identify birds. This year, we are very short of our usual volunteers so I am reaching into my personal pocket for birders I know that might be willing and able to help out.

We have field trips scheduled for the following dates: April 17, 18, 19, 20, 23; May 1, 2, 3, 4, 7.  They are mid-day either starting or ending around noon. The buses drop students off at the Sandpiper Trail and the students, with parent helpers and teachers, walk down the trail. They spend about an hour in the shorebird viewing area of the boardwalk before leaving. The students all have field journals and some teachers will have the students bring them to work on. We have some binoculars for students, also. The students are 3rd and 4th graders. This is an underserved population of kids and we consider this environmental education program a very high priority!

We would love to have YOU in the prime shorebird viewing area, with a scope, helping kids see and learn more about the shorebirds they have been studying. Would you be willing to help? If so, please contact me with your availability and we’ll provide the specific times. 

Thank you in advance for your consideration of this request!

Posted for Diane  Y-Q

Washington Shorebird GISS Notes

Ken’s helpful class handout on the GISS of Washington Shorebirds

GISS  General impression structure shape

Black Bellied Plover:  240gms., about size of G. Yellowlegs, larger than A.Gold.Pl., chunky large headed, thick chest, primaries slightly past tail. run stop feeding.

Am. Gold.Pl.:  145gms., attenuated, slim neck & chest,long legs-toes completely past tail in flight, usually 4 primaries exposed, wings 1/2″ or more past tail tip.  run stop feeding, upland also.

Pac. Gold. Pl.:  130 gms., same size as American, recalls BB Pl. ie front heavy upright, rounded body, heavy chest, ie. dumpy, 3 primaries exposed, 1/2″ or less beyond tail, long tertials, run stop feeding, upland.

Snowy Pl.:  40gms., slightly smaller than semi-palm, rounded front heavy, large headed slim billed, run stop plucking beaches, salt lakes, alkali flats, light backed

Semi-Palm. Pl.:  45 gms, intermediate between peep and sanderling, chunky but attenuated, round head, stubby bill, run-stop feeding beaches, mudflats, scattered flocks.

G. Yellowlegs:  160gms., 2x weight of Lesser, long legs, neck & bill, prominent adams apple, active feeder, walks steadily picks at surface, often runs frantically to chase fish, flooded fields, marshes, tidal creeks. bill upturned.

L. Yellowlegs:  80gms., slightly smaller than dowitchers, delicate, slim chest & smoot body contours, small head, slim straight bill. walks rapidly and methodically, picking, seldom runs, flooded fields, shallow ponds, mudflats.

Solitary Sand.:  50gms., Midway between peep & Lesser Yellowlegs, compact, short wings, legs & neck, slightly larger head, moves slowly and nervously picking at surface, ponds, creeks, marshs, solitary, spotted above.

Willet:  215 gms. near G. Yellowlegs, stocky and more compact than G.Y. larger head, thick neck & bill, walks steadily picking, shallow probes, tidal creeks & flats.

Wandering Tattler:  110gms, close to red knot, slim & attenuated, short legs, medium lengh bill, horizontal stance, walks quickly over rocks, teeters like spotted, picks & probes, usually solitary, loose flocks. largest rock piper.

Spotted Sand:  40gms. slightly larger than peep, short legs & bill, horizontal stance, active walks quickly picking, shallow fluttery flight close to water surface.

Whimbrel: 390gms., larger than willet, smaller than LB curlew, bulky & attenuated, long neck decurved bill, stipes on head, walks steadily, picking & probing, mudflats, marshes.

LBilled Curlew:  590gms, distinctly larger than Godwit or Whimbrel, heavy body, long decurved bill, no stripes on head, walks steadily picking & probing, mudflats, pastures.

Hudsonian Godwit:  300gms, willet size, heavy chest, long pointed wings, upturned bill, white rump & wingstripe, walks steadily, deep prober, mudflats, flooded fields, very rare.  15.5″.

Marbled Godwit:  370 gms, larger than willet, bulky body, long legs, abreviated supercilium, upturned bill, steadily walks, probing deeply, mudflats.

Bar-tailed Godwit:  340gms, between Marbled and Hudsonian in size, shorter neck and legs than Hudsonian but longer bill, walks steadily probes deeply, mudflats, tidal flats, widening supercilium behind eye.

Ruddy Turnstone:  110 gms, slightly larger than sanderling, chunky short legs & neck, short bill, low croucher, flips debris, digs in sand also cobbled habitats.

Black Turnstone:  120gms., chunkier than ruddy, short neck & legs, chisel like short bill, croucher, flips debris, rocky areas.

Surfbird:  190gms., 10″, 2nd largest rock piper, chunky, short stout plover like bill. Active, walks quickly over rocks, tugs or pecks.

Rock Sandpiper:  70 gms., slightly larger than dunlin, chunky and rounded, medium to long droopy bill, croucher, walks steadily, picking, hops & fluttters from rock to rock.

Red Knot: 135 gms., dowitcher size, chunky, short legs, medium bill, horizontal stance, walks slowly picking and probing, sandy beaches, mudflats.

Sanderling:  60gms, size of dunlin, larger than peep. chunky rounded body, large head, thick neck. medium bill, picks at surface, chases waves. whitest shorebird in winter.

Semi-Palm Sand:  25gms, 6.25″, slightly larger than least, plump body, not as front heavy as Western, straight blunt-tipped bill, deeper at base than western. walks steadily, picks nervously, aggressive mudflats.

Western Sand:  26gms, 6.5″, front heavy, larger head, longer droopy finer tipped bill, roosting birds more upright than Semi-palmated sandpiper, picks & probes shallow, large flocks migration, with dunlin winter, mudflats.

Least Sand:  20gms. 6″, medium bill fine tipped, roosts more upright than S-P, crouches when feeding, bill tip close to toes, walks steadily, picking broad mudflats close to shore, often higher on mudflats.

Baird’s Sand:  38gms, 7.5″, slightly larger than peep, steep forehead, straight fine tipped bill, long wings often crossed, walks steadily, picking, dry edges of mudflats, short grass.

Pectoral Sand:  73gms., 8.75″, Larger than dunlin, Males largest, bulky broad chested, but attenuated. small head, longer neck and legs than Baird’s. Primaries to tail tip. picks at surface, mudflats, pastures, ponds.

Sharp-Tailed Sand:  68gms, 8.5″, similar to Pectoral, more rounded body, longer legs, shorter slimmer bill, not 2 toned, red cap, buffy chest, with Pectorals usually.

Dunlin:  60 gms, 8.5″, Sanderling size, chunky, short thick neck, long droopy bill, dun colored, rapidly picks & probes, winters here in good numbers, large flocks by default.

Stilt Sand:  58gms, 8.5″, dunlin sized, smaller than dowitchers, long legs, fine tipped droopy long bill. walks steadily with bill down, probes deeply or picks at surface, often belly deep in ponds, shallow water, submerges head.

Buff-breated Sand:  63gms, 8.25″, size of Pectoral, sleek, attenuated, squarish head, short straight bill, upright stance, walks quickly with pigeon-like gait, (head bobbing), short grass, plowed fields, dry sandflats.

Ruff:  150gms, 11″, female close to Lesser Yellowlegs, male close to Greater.  chunky, round body, long legs & neck, short droopy bill, hunches when feeding, upright when alert. active, wanders continuouly, picking & probing,  ponds, marshes, flooded fields often with yellowlegs.

Short-Billed Dow:  110gms, 11″,  size of Lesser Yellowlegs, chunky but attenuated, short legs, long bill, horizontal stance, usually slimmer and flatter backed than LB in relaxed feeding pose, bill shorter, thicker at base, with longer curve at base, probes deeply, sewing machine in shallow water. mostly coastal, salt water.

Long-Billed Dow:  115gms, 11.5″, chunky, round back, indented near tail base, bill longer, thinner based, flatter for longer distance than S-B. ie curves more quickly from head.  Only winter time dowy, fresh water, ponds, sheltered tidal, sewing machine feeding.

Wilson’s Phalarope:  60gms, 9.25″, longest bill, needlelike, small head, long neck, spins in water, picking, usually inland.

Red-Necked Phalarope, 35 gms., 7.75″, smallest, compact with slim neck, small head. medium length bill, spins also, inland, coastal, pelagic.  Striped back.

Red Phalarope:  55gms., 8.5″, similar to sanderling, 40% larger than R-N, bulky, heavy chested, thick neck, large head, heavier plover like bill, 2 toned. plain back, spins, mostly pelagic, coastal after storms.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Skagit Trip Highlights

A bit off topic but several ABC members including Kay and me, Diane, Faye, Caroline and Mike joined trip leaders Charlie Wright and Bruce LaBar on the TAS trip to Skagit yesterday.  The most remarkable thing for sure was the incredible sunny and warm weather, but the birds were great too.  My highlight was seeing 2 “blue geese” in the big flock of snow geese on Fir Island, and finding a new roost side for the Black-crowned Night Herons.  Incredibly they were in a fir tree behind a nursing home right in the middle of a town (? Stanwood).  We also found 3 Merlins, a Peregrine, several Am. Kestrel, 2 Short-eared owls, 2 Snowy Owls and many W. Meadowlarks, several N. Shrike, and the usual winter birds.

Let’s be sure to continue to lead TAS trips too as they not only provide all of us with good birding opportunities but contribute to TAS and the whole birding community.

 

Gull Class Notes

If you want to prepare for the upcoming gull ID trip, here are my notes from Ken’s Advanced birding class on gull ID from the 2009-2010 winter class.  It’s also available as a word document which is more easily readable.  Here are the class gull notes as best I can put them here on the site.

Helps to put in a group by behavior and bill shape. 

Tern-like GullsStraight billed, pick off surface Typical GullsBony plate gonydeal angle, hooked bill, rip and tear
Masked Gulls:Boneparte’s  Gull

Black-headed Gull

Gray-headed Gull

Brown-headed Gull

Andean   Gull

Hooded GullsLaughing  Gull

Franklin’s Gull

Lava Gull

Small gullsLittle Gull

Ross’s Gull

Primitive White-headed  gullsHeermann’s Gull

Gray Gull

Dolphin Gull

Olrog’s Gull

Black-Tailed Gull

KittiwakesBlack-legged Kittiwake

Red-legged Kittiwake

Small White-headed GullsMew Gull

Ring-billed Gull

Fork-tailed GullsSwallow-tailed GullSabine’s Gull Large White-headed GullsCalifornia GullHerring GullYellow-legged  Gull

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Kelp Gull

Great Black-backed Gull

Slaty-backed Gull

Western Gull

Yellow-footed Gull

Glaucous-winged Gull

Glaucous Gull

Iceland Gull

Ivory GullIvory Gull

This helps you know whether to look for a juvenile in winter, small gulls have a formative plumage, so you don’t see juveniles in the winter, vs. large gulls see juveniles the whole first winter.

First Cycle Molt Strategies of American Gulls

Group APreformative Molt Extensive
First Pre-alternate

Molt variable

i.e Complex alternate

mostly small gulls

Group BFirst Prealernate

Molt moderate to

Extensive

No Preformative Molt

i.e Simple alternate

Group CFirst Prealternate Molt limited(Occationally absent?)

No Preformative Molt

Simple Alternate

Group DPrealternate and

Preforma-tive Molt

Absent

Simple Basic

Group EInsufficient Data
Boneparte’s Gull Heermann’s Gull Black-legged Kittiwake Ivory Gull Swallow-tailed Gull
Black-headed Gull Gray Gull Red-legged Kittiwake
Gray-headed Gull Dolphin Gull Herring Gull complex (some)
Brown-headed Gull B elcher’s Gull Lesser Black-backed Gull
Andean Gull Olrog’s Gull Slaty-backed Gull
Little Gull Black-tailed Gull Glaucous-winged Gull
Ross’s Gull Mew Gull Complex Great Black-backed Gull
Sabine’s Gull Ring-billed Gull Glaucous Gull
Laughing Gull California Gull Iceland  Gull
Franklin’s Gull Herring Gull (complex) Thayer’s Gull
Lava Gull Herring Gull (complex)
Yellow-legged Gull
Lesser Black-backed Gull (some)
Slaty-backed Gull
Glaucous-winged Gull (some)
Western Gull
Yellow-footed Gull
Great Black-backed Gull (some)
Just memorimze this part, it will help you know adult plumages
Species Eye Color Wing Tips Bill Legs
Ross 13-14” Pale-Gray Unmarked Red
Ivory 15-17” White Unmarked Yellowish Black
Glaucous 26-32” White primaries, unmarked Yellow, red spot lower mandible Flesh-colored
Glaucous-winged 24-27” Dark Gray spots Flesh-colored
Western 24-27” Pale to fairly dark Black w/ small white tips, blending into dark mantle Flesh colored
Slaty-backed 27” Flesh colored
Herring Yellow Contrasty black tips with white spots  or mirrors within the black Yellow with red spot on lower mandible Flesh colored
Thayer’s Brownish “   with less black in wingtips Yellow w/ small red spot Pink
California 20-23” Dark Yellow w/ red opr red & black spot Greenish
Ring-billed 18-21” Yellow Yellow with complete black ring Yellowish or yellow green
Mew 16-18” Dark Greenish yellow, unmarked Yellow-green
Laughing 15.5-17” Blackish blending into dark mantle Dark red or dusky Dark red or dusky
Franklin’s Irregular black bar crossing white ground Dark red Dark red brown
Boneparte’s 12-14 Dark Long white triangle, Tipped black Black Red
Sabine’s 13-14 Long clear-cut black triangle B lack with yellow tip Black
Heermann’s 18-21” Dark Black unmarked Red Black
Black-legged Kittiwake Dark Solid b lack, cut straight across Yellow, unmarked B lack
Red-legged Kittiwake Red
Kodak Gray Scale of Mantle Colors of Gulls
0 Ivory Gull
3-4 Glaucous Gull
3-4 Ivory Gull
3.4-4.5 Ross’s Gull
3.5-4.5 Brown-headed Gull
3.5-4.5 Andean Gull
4-5 Glaucous Gull
4-5 Kumlien’s Gull
4-5 Black-headed Gull
4-5 Ringed-bill Gull
4-5 American Herring Gull
4-5 European Herring Gull
4.5-5.5 Little Gull
5-6 Boneparte’s Gull
5-6 Gray-headed Gull
5-6 California Gull (N Interior North America)
5-6 Thayer’s Gull
5-6 Glaucous-winged Gull
5-6.5 Common Gull
5.5-7 European Herring Gull
6-7 Yellow-legged Gull
6-7.5 California Gull (ours)
6-7.5 Mew Gull (N. America)
6-8 Glaucous-winged x Western Hybrid (Olympic Gull)
6.5-8 Kamchatka Gull
6.5-7.5 Black-legged Kittiwake
7 European Herring Gull x Lesser Black-backed Gull  (Britain)
7-8 Black-legged Kittiwake (N Pacific)
7-8 Swallow-tailed Gull
7-8 Vega Gull
7-8.5 Yellow-legged Gull
7-9 Sabine’s Gull
8-9 Laughing Gull
8-9 Franklin’s Gull
8-9.5 Western Gull (N W USA)
8-9.5 Black-tailed Gull
8-9.5 Red-legged Kittiwake
8.5-9.5 Gray Gull
9-10.5 Yellow-footed Gull
9-11 Lesser Black-backed Gull
9.5-10.5 Lava Gull
9.5-11 Western Gull (SW USA)
9.5-11 Slaty-backed Gull
10-11.5 Heermann’s Gull
11-13 Lesser Black-backed Gull (N. Europe)
12.5-13.5 Dolphin Gull
12.5-14 Kelp Gull
13-15 Great black-backed Gull
14-15.5 Kelp Gull  (S. America)
14-16 Belcher’s Gull
15-17 Olrog’s Gull

Herrmann’s gulls will chase other gulls like a Jaeger, and young birds can even have a white flash in wing.

Parasitic Jaegers come thru the Puget Sound in the fall.  Point-no-point is a good place in the fall.

Gonydeal angle is the jutting part of the bottom of the bill.

The orbital ring is around the eye, is dried skin, and is affected by hormones.  Brighter in breeding plumage.

Glaucous-winged x Western gull:  aka Olympic or Puget Sound gull.  This is what makes gull watching in WA interesting.  Maybe up to 75% hybrids in some colonies.  Most birds from along the coast and in Strait of Juan de Fuca tend to Western.     In birds that tend to Western Look for smudgy head in basic plumage,  for too light a back for mixed orbital ring color, for dark but not black wing tips.    If it tends to GW, look for too bright a bill, or too dark a wing tip, or too dark a back.     In juvenile tend to be murky colored overall, not a crisply contrasty as in Western.

Molt of a Western Gull:  timing:  born May or June in Juvenile plumage, strongly variegated, with noticible barring on upper tail coverts, black bill, blackish tail.  Starts PA1 molt in August and cont thru October, changing out the head and some of the scapula.  Suspends in midwinter and starts againin Feb, finishes in May.  So thru first winter brown, dark bill, highly variegated, and does not change much until March.  PB 2 molt starts in April thru September.  So thru the first year only not in molt about 3-4 months.   PB 2 plumage has pink base on black bill, but otherwise looks like a juvenile, brownish.   PA2  from mid Aug, to Oct, suspended thru winter, then Feb – May.  molt into pale base on the bill, so by second spring will have dark backs, clear heads, but coverts look juvenile.  PB3 molt from April – Oct.  Basic 3 is adult-like.  Very small differences, maybe black on tail, maybe black primary tips, maybe black on distal bill, PA3 is from August 20- duration hard to ascertain.  PB4 molt from Mid may to June thru Nov.  Adult-like after  PB 4.

Black-tailed Gull:   a primitive white=headed gull.  Asiatic,  3 WA records.  All adults.  4 cycle gull.  Kodak 8-9.5.  Long primary projection.  Lack mirrors in the wingtip.   (ie no white area with black both proximal and distal)    Black band on tail sub-terminally in adult.  Long bill, eye arcs,   Very slight gonydeal angle.   California gull similar color, not quite as dark.  Dusky hood, almost comes around the neck.

Ivory Gull:  Medium sized.  No PA molt.   White all year round, mew gull sized, young bird black faced.  One WA record.  Simple basic, one molt a year.

Gulls bills, lower bill has two plates, fused together at the gonydeal angle.  This allows them to widen and swallow big things.

Little gull:  complex alternate.  Like a little Boneparte’s Gull.  100 WA records thru 2000.  Almost all from the Puget sound area.  Almost always on fresh water, with Bonepartes.  Large lakes.  Sept and Oct are the best months.  A few spring records, mid March thru mid june.  Few winter records.  Average 2/ year.   B y sept have gone into first winter plumage.  11” smallest gull in the world.  Adult has blackish underwings. Dark bill, dark auricular patch.    Juveniles may not have dark underwings.   In Juveniles much darker upperwing markings.    Kodak 4.5-5.5

Boneparte’s is a masked gull, not a hooded gull, cap only comes to the mid-nape.   Stay thru mid-winter.   Go farther south.   First winter has carpal marks, black terminal tail.  Big field mark is the white leading upper wing edge triangle.  Kodak  5-6.  Rare to uncommon in E WA.   Cyclic, some years more, some less.

Black-headed gull:  >15 records, most in fall.   Kodak   4-5.   Lighter backed than Boneparte’s, pinkish legs, bill is pinkish to red,  slightly larger than Boneparte’s, twin lines on top of head, dark underwing primaries.

Gulls: 

Franklin’s Gull:  a hooded (not masked) gull, hood in breeding plumage comes way down on the neck.   Seen 5-20 times annually in W WA, most in the fall, June-Nov.   Often up ot a 350 kilometer from the breeding sight.  Only a few spring records in W WA.  Since 2000 44 E WA reports, most May- Early- June.   Maybe expanding breeding range.  Breed at Mal Huer.   Possible to see a Sept bird with some juvenile plumage, but most of our birds are first winter.  Smaller bill, more complete hood, and outer two retrices of the tail lack black of the tail band (vs. Laughing has full black tail band in first winter bird.)  Rounded head.  Mirror in P10, and white between the gray of the wings and the black of the wing tip.

Laughing Gull:  3 WA sightings, probably moved north with Heermann’s gulls in the fall, one spring sighting.  Kodak 8-9.  Larger bill, longer bill, slight droop in the bill.  Hood smaller than Franklin’s.  Duskier breast and flanks than Franklin’s in most plumages.   Head shape is a longer forehead, not as rounded as Franklins,  one of the few gulls with two complete molts, because it is such a long distance migrants.  The PA molt can be incomplete.    Birds always molt, they can skip breeding, but always molt.   Juvenile plumage is a basic plumage.

Mew Gull:   3 types of Mew Gulls, the Mew Gull, the European Mew Gull, and the Kamchatkna Gull.  (breeds in Siberia, visits W. AK, no WA records)  3-4 year gulls, small bill, no red spot in bill.  Usually first PA 1 molt produces a gray back.    Complex alternate strategy (small gull)  Smaller than Ringed-bill gull.  Adult has yellowish feet, unmarked bill in adult, Kodak 6-7.5.  1st winter, gray back, bi-colored bill, pink legs.  Slowly in the second year the pinkish legs become yellowish.   As with all gulls, there is wide difference in plumage color, i.e. some darker, some lighter, esp. in juveniles.    Wingtip has two mirrors, 9 & 10 and extensive tongue tips in P6-8.    Second winter is adult-like with some distal dark on the bill and less white in the wingtips.   Therefore less black/white checking in the perched bird wingtips.   Common gull is a little lighter, Kamchatka is intermediate coloration, larger and bulkier.  Mew is darker.

Ring-billed Gull:  Lighter in all plumages than CA gull.  Complex alternate.  First winter carpal mark, dark tail tip.  Second winter has dark bill tip.  Very pale mantle and scapulars.  Kodak 4-5.  Adult mirro in 9-10, no tongue tip.  Narrow wings.   Red orbitral ring, pale eye, red gape in breeding birds.

California Gull:  larger than Ring-billed.   First year plumage mimics second year plumage of a Herring Gull.   Kodak  5-7.5.  C Ommon to abundant in winter off the coast of WA.  At least 100,000 California gulls in the fall in WA.   In E WA uncommon to locally common in winter, do breed in E WA.   Both first and second cycles more  heavily marked than the book suggests.   In subadults the bill can have a bluish cast.   Formative plumage has no gray in the back.  Dark eye.   Adult with red and black spot in the bill.  Bill long and parallel edged, with a slight Gonydeal angle.

Small white headed gulls vs. Large white headed gulls.

Primaries 1-6, i.e inner primaries.  If these feathers are brownish they are 1-2nd year birds.  If they are grayish they are 3-4th year birds.

Herring Gull: Kodak 4-5 i.e very pale.  Uncommon to locally common W WA, fairly common to common in E WA.  Split from Thayers in 1972.  Mostly at coast and off shore and Straits of Juan de Fuca.  ( so around here not many seen)   More often on fresh water.  on the East Coast two mirrors, West Coast usually a  mirror only on P9, in spring some have yellow legs,  and the eye turns yellow in the second cycle.  Some can have flecking in the iris.  Juveniles tgher are basically two plumages, first 2 years look like a juvenile, then the 3rd year plus look like adults.   Note pale inner primaries in first and second winter birds.  Bill is large with a fairly large Gonydeal angle, looks fierce.  Flat head, long forehead, often a bump at the back.   Adult winter,  discrete streaking on the neck,  wing tip black from below vs. Thayers is light from below.     Vega  type Herring gull, no WA records.

Thayer’s Gull:  Inland marine waters, to the Straits, also NW WA, Rare in E WA.   In subadult the whole underwing is pale.  In adults the underside of the wingtip is light.   Neck in winter has indistinct streaking.  Orbital purple red, dark eye.  Upperwing has large windows and several tongue tips, making the wing tip whiter overall.

Thayers- Iceland- and Kumliens are all very closely related.   All small bill, pale eye,

Iceland Gull:  8 records thru 2000.  4 E, 4 W WA.   Always pale wing tips, long primary projection.   Tail falls at P6-7.  (vs Glaucous gull with shorter primary projection)

Kumlien’s Gull, no WA records.  Intermediate between Thayer’s and Iceland.

Glaucous Gull:  big gull, long sloping forehead, fierce looking.   Rare to locally uncommon migrant and winter visitor.  Annually about 8 W WA, and 4 E WA.   Occationally small groups in migration.  Almost all seen are first or second year birds.  Moderate Gonydeal expansion.  Relatively parallel bill.   Pale wing tips, not really grayish.  Bill is bicolored, sharply defined.

Glaucous-winged Gull:   Bill si stout, slightly bulbous at the tip (less bulbous shorter Western Gull bill)  Kodak 5-6.  Wing tips Kodak 6-8.  First year bill dark with some pink at the base, second year more pink at the base, eye usually dark occasionally to pale.   Remember we see mostly juveniles and adults.  Fewer other plumages.  Long sloping forehead.    Second winter they get the gray back.  Pinkish orbital, pinkish gape, dark eye.   Juvenile all brownish.

Slaty-backed Gull:   all birds identified have been adults.  Kodak 9.5-11.5, bill stout medium length, parallel with out much Gonydeal expansion.  Very distinct tongue tips in P 6-8.  P10 always a mirror, P9 sometimes a mirror.  Bubble-gum pink legs.    Look like a darker Western gull, black wing tips,  They have a wide skirt, i.e  the edge of the secondaries edged in white.  Seen with the wings folded.   Streaking on the neck, duskiness on the head, (mascara line)  vs. Western gulls with clear white heads.   Clear eye.

Western Gull:  Kodak 8-11, ours are 8-9.5.  The further you go south the blacker the back.  Variegated plumage in the juveniles.  Flat on top head, sloping forehead.  Strong black tail, strong secondary bar.  Third year has no windows on the wingtips.  There are indistinct tongue tips in the sub terminal primaries (6-8)   Bill is shorter than GW, stouter, wider, more bulbous at the tip.   More coastal and on straits,  GW is more inland and to the north.

Lesser Black-backed Gull: 3 records.  Kodak 9-13.   Streaked flanks on young birds.  Adults have yellow legs.  Light eye, long bill, slight Gonydeal angle.     In the east coast a white headed dark backed bull is Greater, a dirty headed black backed is Lesser.

Greater Black-backed:  1 WA record.  One other record west of the continental divide.  Massive bill, the largest gull.  Pink legs.

Heermann’s Gull:  4 cycle gull.  Comes north in post breeding dispersal.   June- Nov mostly in WA, mostly on the coast, some on straits, occasionally in the sound.  All dark gull.  Nothing else like it in our area.   Most of the birds seen in WA have the darker head by the time we see them, but in June-July should have white head.

Birding class 11-24-09

Ross’s Gull: Complex alternate, Kodak 3.5-4.5, 2-3 year cycle, very small.  Just b arely larger that Boneparte’s  Gull, twice in WA, Adult 1994 E side, 2008 Feb in Tri Cities area.  19 times in the US, 3x in NW, 16 times in NE USA thru 2000.  Stubby short,  some have pinkish tinge is felt to be dietary.  Dark collar is unique in breeding plumage.

Sabine’s  Gull:  pelagic gull, fork tailed.  Tri-colored upper wing, white triangle on trailing edge, Kodak 7-9, a complete pre-formative molt, and incomplete pre-alternate molt, variable depends on feed supply, very rare in E. WA.   Juveniles migrate south prior to molt, so early in season could see brownish individual.  First winter usually not seen in N. America.  First summer partial hood, with dark bill, only adults have yellow tip on bill.  Fall and spring seen off WA coast.  Small, dainty.

Kittiwakes are 3 cycle gulls, go thru first winter in juvenile plumage.

Black-legged Kittiwake:   Note first summer bird has black tip.  Adult with all yellow bill, and completely black wing tips.  Fairly common off shore as a migrant.  Irregular in winter.  Rare to irregular inland.  Rare in E WA.  Kodak 6.5-8.  Pre-alternate molt is variable.  Deep wingbeat, buoyant, lots of up and down flying.

Red-legged Kittiwake:  8.5-9.5 Kodak, very rare off-shore migrant, declining in numbers, 6 recent records in WA, more sightings recently off shore on pelagic trips.  Darker backed, very short stubby bill, note dark undedrwing.  Narrow wings

Ed Pullen

Ocean Shores Jan 27th

Friday, January 27. I had some business in Aberdeen so I spent the late afternoon at Ocean Shores.  The Emperor Goose was present at the golf course on the fairway near the driving range with usual group of Greater White-fronted Geese (2) and Canada Geese (8). Later I went to Damon Point.  There were reported eight different owls there but I only saw 2 on the right side of the point walking from the parking lot 3/4 of the way down the beach. Further adventures saw birds at the Jetty but the light was so bad with the setting sun that identification was difficult (for me).  Good birding all.  Roger Hunt.

Welcome Birders

In case you couldn’t guess ABC stands for Advanced Birding Class, the Tahoma Audubon Society birding class taught by Ken Brown for many years. In order to free up spaces in the class for new students, and to provide a forum for the rest of us to continue to meet regularly and organize field trips together we’re planning to meet monthly.  The first meeting will be Thursday Jan 26, 2012 at Bella Nina restaurant in Tacoma at 7 PM.  We’ll start to decide on a format for the meetings, formalize a meeting time and place, and will have a brief presentation on Sparrow ID by Ed Pullen.  Looking forward to seeing you all there.