Sergio Seipke coming on February 5, 2019!

February 5, 2019, 6:45 PM, University of Puget Sound, Thompson Hall, room 175, suggested $10 contribution for expenses and for room use.

Join us to welcome Sergio Seipke of Raptours, who is in the state with Bill Clark to enjoy the raptors of western Washington, hosted by Bud Anderson of Falcon Research Group, whom we all know.

Bill Clark and Sergio Seipke at the Platte River (courtesy RapTours)

Sergio will talk discuss “Five Years Hawkwatching Around the World.”  He says, “I will share raptorial highlights in our tours from 2014 to 2018. This talk features a number of raptor photographs, landscape pics, anecdotes and some funny facts of the destinations Raptours has been to as a company. In other words, a collage of raptor images taken in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Mexico, Nepal, Panama, South Africa, Thailand, and the USA.”  Sergio will also discuss the 19 diurnal birds of prey of Madagascar briefly, where he will lead a tour next November/December.

World raptor expert and wildlife photographer Bill Clark founded Raptours in the 1990s to cater to birders who have a particular interest in birds of prey. In 2006 Bill co-led a tour with Sergio Seipke in northern Argentina. Bill then suggested to Sergio that he should offer raptor tours as a means to help fund his Raptors of South America field guide project. The idea was an appealing one: small tours would be perfect to be in the field and collect data for the book. So, Sergio started offering raptor tours himself to destinations in South America following Raptours’ guiding style and philosophy.

In February 2013 Sergio formally organized Raptours, L.L.C., in Lincoln, Nebraska, and now owns the company. Sergio says, “This resulted in a new and very exciting phase of my raptor career. Since 2005 to date I have designed, organized, and led or co-led raptor tours in eight countries in four continents.

“Raptors have inspired me to travel. I’ve watched, studied, photographed and enjoyed raptors in 13 countries including Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Germany, Panama, South Africa, Thailand, the U.K., and the U.S.A. While mother taught me to speak Spanish, raptors made me fluent in English and Portuguese. I have met many inspiring individuals in my travels ranging from superstar international raptor experts to impressively knowledgeable local naturalists. Not that I am counting, but as of March 2015 I have seen 192 species of raptors. OK, maybe I am counting them, after all.”

Ken’s Skagit Trip 2018

 

A field of Snow Geese(Click photo to enlarge)

Saturday Dec 1 Ken Brown led a group of 20 ABCers on his annual first-weekend-of-December trip to the Skagit and Samish Flats and surrounding areas. Weather smiled on us and we had a dry, not too cold and not very windy day. We met at the Smoky Point rest stop at 7:30 AM and on leaving took the next exit going north to take a back roads route through Snohomish County to get the Fir Island. The order of cars was much out of the ordinary. Diane, Fay and the Willettes usually bring up the rear of any caravan we take on trips, but this trip Diane, Faye and Laurel rode at the front of the line in Ken’s car, and Bruce, Karen, Terry and I took the caboose position. Bruce did all the eBirding for the trip and added the equivalent of an anther expert trip leader, helping make our intimate 5-car, twenty person entourage more manageable.

Male Northern Harrier

We started the day with a bang. At a stop at a home with several feeders Ken and a few others located a White-throated Sparrow under a cedar tree, and we watched good flocks of sparrows. On the next few miles of roads large blackbird flocks gave us chances to look them over hoping for a Rusty Blackbird, and while doing this we spotted a Northern Shrike immature bird perched unusually high on a conifier tree. A Cooper’s Hawk gave perched and fly-by looks, and Trumpeter Swans and Snow Geese flew around. We located at least 2 late-season Brown-headed Cowbirds in one of the blackbird flocks, and then headed for Bow Road in Stanwood.

The Cooper’s Hawk that flew by at an early stop.

This is a dead end road with large wet fields near a dyke, and we spent some time there. We found our first Rough-legged Hawks, a dark Red-tailed Hawk, ? Harlan’s (really far away and tough to be sure so we left is as just a dark morph/Harlan’s, a flock of pipits, an American Kestrel that fooled us flying in doing its best Peregrine imitation, along with eagles, swans, geese, a field full of Killdeer and a few Wilson’s Snipe.

A likely 3rd year Bald Eagle with the Osprey-like head coloration.

A surprisingly quick porcelain stop in Stanwood (it takes time for a line of 20 to make it through) and we were off to Wylie Slough. There we targeted the four rarities that have been being seen there. A disconcerting search by the Sherriff and lots of help for a 2-year old presumed drowned at the boat ramp a day earlier made access awkward, but we managed to find the Black Phoebe first by the boat ramp, then later at the other end of the slough. We failed however in an energetic search for Swamp Sparrow, American Tree Sparrow and Northern Waterthrush. We managed a good list though, an had really good looks at male and female Northern Harriers, lots of Bald Eagles, Cooper’s Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk, along with large numbers of American Robins, Cedar Waxwings and various finches that were devouring a really good crop of fruit from the trees beside the dyke trail.

March Wrens kept us busy hoping one of the birds moving in the bushes would be one of the rarities we sought at Wylie Slough.

A quick stop at Hayden Preserve added Long-billed Dowicher, Greater Yellowlegs, and Least Sandpipers (these by only a few observers) along with big numbers of dabbling ducks.

Black Phoebe

We spent the rest of the afternoon driving through the Skagit anmayd then the Samish Flats looking primarily for raptors. We had good numbers of RLHA, RTHA, and BAEA, along with remarkable numbers of Northern Harriers. Amazingly we did not find any Peregrine Falcons nor Merlin, leaving us with a surprising one-falcon species day (American Kestrel). We planned to end the day at the West 90 looking for Short-eared Owls, and a couple of us got a brief glimpse of one SEOW flying very far away back toward the East 90. As darkness fell, Ken hurried us over to the East 90 curve where we manage to get off the road enough to get out and look for the owls. Just as light failed us Bruce spotted one SEOW fairly distant, but everyone got looks. As we watched that owl, another appeared much closer and proceeded to fly back and forth, before flying right at us and crossing the road quite nearby. A great end to a very nice day.

Numbers:
79 Species of birds
14 species of waterfowl
6 species of shorebirds
Many thousands of Snow Geese
3 Short-eared Owls
0 Peregrine Falcons and Merlins, so 1 species of Falcon.
19 tired and happy ABCers who enjoyed another of Ken’s patented trips.
Good Birding.
Ed Pullen

REPORT: SPRING BIRDS OF ISRAEL – November 13, 2018

SPRING BIRDS OF ISRAEL

Bird Migration map by Yossi Leshem of the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel

The ABC meeting on November 13, 2018, featured birding travels in Israel by two sets of the WIllettes. Carol Smith and Laurel Parshall traveled there in April 2017 in a small tour group. Faye McAdams Hands and Diane Yorgason-Quinn went in March 2018 in connection with the International Swift Conference and the Eilat Birding Festival.

Click to enlarge maps and photos.

Willettes’ travels in Israel

First shown was the migration map showing that the migration route through Israel is huge due to its being a bottleneck. Then a map was shown of points of interest covered by each twosome. We actually covered different areas in the north half, then many of the same points getting down to Eilat on the Gulf of Aqaba (Red Sea). Interestingly, Israel is only about the area as one-third the state of Washington.

Carol Smith starts out the Israel bird show (photo/Diane Y-Q)

The difference of a month made a big difference in species seen. Spring migration continues pretty strong for March and April as different streams flow through. The Med, the Dead, and the Red sea were covered well between the two groups, as well as the huge Negev Desert in the center. Jerusalem was a high point for March this year as the Common Swifts returned right on time to places holy to all three of the monotheistic religions.

Faye IDs a Steppe Buzzard (photo/Diane Y-Q)

Carol and Laurel saw and photographed all 5 species of Sandgrouse in April, while the March twosome had only three species which were very hard to find that early. Carol and Laurel also saw the rails and crakes, while the March trip only had Coots and Moorhens.

Hoopoe, national bird of Israel (Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Palestine Sunbird (Photo/Diane Y-Q)

Raptor migration was going on over the cliffs above the Dead Sea and of course at the world-famous Eilat Mountains. The March group rubbed shoulders with teams prepping for the Champions of the Flyway, a huge international bird contest that took place soon after our trip, which raised funds for tackling illegal killing of birds in Croatia and Serbia for 2018. They choose different projects for the funds each year.  Faye and Diane had the good fortune to have Jonathan Meyrav as a leader at the Eilat Birding Festival, who founded the Champions of the Flyway project, keeps the Israel Bird List, and is birding tourism director of the Israel Ornithological Center.

Carol Smith & Laurel Parshall model the Birds of Israel shirts from their April 2017 trip to Israel (photo/Diane Y-Q)

The iconic birds for all were the Hoopoe (national bird of Israel), four species of Swifts, Wryneck, Tristram’s Starling, White-spectacled Bulbul, Griffon Vulture, Egyptian Vulture, Black and White Storks, and lots of different Buzzards and Eagles!

Diane Yorgason-Quinn and Faye McAdams Hands model their Swift Conference shirts & regalia from March 2018 (photo/Adam Trent)

A web article that describes the incredible migration: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.MAGAZINE-israels-500-million-birds-the-worlds-eighth-wonder-1.5485176

October 2018 Virtual Pelagic trip

A Virtual Pelagic Trip!

10-23-18 – Opening slide. Thank goodness it wasn’t a quiz!

On October 23, 2018, ABC’ers delved deep into Pelagic birding with presentations by Ed Pullen and Ryan Wiese, as well as additional information by Bruce LaBar and Art Wang.

Ed Pullen starts his slides

Ken Brown opened the meeting by recapping upcoming ABC events, and then Clarice Clark presented information on an upcoming guided tour of SE Arizona for Tahoma Audubon this coming spring featuring guide Chris Chappell, formerly of Pierce County. There were only one or two spots left open by the end of the evening! For more info on those spots, contact Clarice or Jerry Broadus at jbroadus@seanet.com.

Ryan Wiese gets into his slide presentation

All pelagic bird species occurring off the coast of Washington were discussed in depth including likelihood of seeing, world populations and scarcity, life histories, etc. The slides were extremely informative and are now available to ABC’ers here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CkekblylR_ufUXRB-FS-DCNJgRiXBOs2/view

Bruce LaBar discusses the underwing patterns of Sooty and Short-tailed Shearwaters

Pelagic trips discussed included Westport, Monterey Bay, Maine, Cape Hatteras, and Hawaii. The concepts of going onboard in shorts and flip-flops (Cape Hatteras) or in swimsuits and then jumping in the water to swim ashore (Hawaii) were happily contemplated!

Art Wang, wearing his Stormy Petrel Hatteras shirt. discusses various pelagic trips

Chumming was discussed. Bruce, a longtime spotter for Westport Seabirds, explained that one reason chumming didn’t happen on their trips until the furthest point was reached was to get accurate counts of the birds. Westport Seabirds has the best data available for this reason. Other trips chum all the way out and have a parade of the same birds following the boat the entire ride. It was revealed that Monterey Bay has banned chumming altogether with the exception of Debi Shearwater’s trips, which should end soon with her retirement. The alternative to chumming is to get chummy with fishing boats.

Fine points were discussed, such as the recent split of Xantus Murrelet into Scripps and Guadelupe.

Some highlights included the fact that Rhino Auklets are OUR birds with approximately 90% of the lower 48 population breeding in Washington waters. Also, Short-tailed Shearwaters, rare as they might seem here, are actually the most populous shearwater species on the planet! Red Phalaropes like to feed in the spume of whales! And yes, those South Polar Skuas really are the thugs you thought, guilty of all possible crimes and some even unimaginable.

Red Phalarope

The very interested group asked excellent questions and kept the meeting going until we got kicked out and all the cookies were gone (thanks, Faye)!

Maine pelagic birders reunited! Presenter Ed Pullen flanked by Carol, Diane, and Faye, wearing Atlantic Puffin shirts

Harrowing Halloween Happening

The sentinel calls the troops

On October 14, 2018, Adam and I proceeded to the UW-Bothell campus, north parking garage roof at 6 PM, which Tweeter Scott Ramos had described as a major crow roosting route. Two other carloads of people showed up to see the big show, but had left disappointed when nothing much had happened before sunset (6:23 PM), just a few small streams of birds in the distance. The roof looked out over the North Creek Wetlands. We stuck it out and were rewarded, or possibly punished, by crows!

Adam told me to turn around slowly

Five minutes after sunset the nice evening got horrendously noisy, and suddenly we were surrounded by crows. We did in fact feel like we were in the eye of a crow cyclone, as they closed in on us from every side! We took lots of pictures, but truly a much wider-angle lens and possibly a drone would have been needed to give the true feel of the onslaught!

Sunset at UW-Bothell

I just wouldn’t have been a bit surprised had Alfred Hitchcock made one of his famous walk-ons at the height of the cawcaphony! As it got darker, they started landing on the floor next to us, blocking our exit from the roof. In fact, they were pushing ever so relentlessly closer to us and covering every tree and building top. Just when my fight-or-flight instinct started to turn on, very suddenly it all stopped almost as if a clock had chimed at 7 PM! The silence was deafening, too, as every bird suddenly dropped into the nearby trees and faded away.

Air traffic controller

They noticed our car and moved to block our exit!

We put down 5000 on eBird, but there could very well have been 10,000, as Scott had estimated. Just couldn’t tell which birds we’d already counted, as they were on all sides of us, seeming to circle us. We drove away feeling a little relieved that we weren’t the center of their universe after all.

Diane’s crow shirt attracts attention

Adam has to wave away the crows

No Halloween Haunted House could compare to this real experience. There was definitely a ghostly vortex on this rooftop with no one but the two of us and thousands of crows on a lonely Sunday night in October.

Just before they suddenly departed a full dark

See more of our photos and short videos here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/76552838@N03/albums/72157702433592684

Field Trip Report E WA Sept 7-10

Ken Brown took our group to Eastern Washington for a check on migration for 4 days from Sept 7 to 10, 2018.  Some really great sightings as well as the inevitable disappointments.

Looks like a pothole!
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Forster’s Tern with fish
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

I missed the trip, but lucky participants were Ken, Ed Pullen, Laurel Parshall, Kay Schimke, Mary Pearse, Richard Smethurst, Carole Breedlove, Kathryn Cooper, Eric Dudley, Fred Matthaei, Jody Hess, and Petrea Stoddard.

The rest of the group makes it through the critter tunnel, leader Ken in back on right
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Critter tunnel works for Kay and Richard
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Some of their eBird reports are here, including the remarkable report from Lyons Ferry where they had EIGHT warblers, including Chestnut-sided!

Lyons Ferry: https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S48429808

Columbia NWR: https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S48395221

Potholes State Park: https://ebird.org/pnw/view/checklist/S48404447

Chestnut-sided Warbler!
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Cassin’s Vireo
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Roadside specialties included Kestrels and Wild Turkey!

Turkeys!
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Kestrels galore
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

The scenic highlight was Palouse Falls.

Palouse Falls
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

Lesser Chipmunk at Ryegrass Rest Area
(Photo/Laurel Parshall)

More of Laurel Parshall’s photos can be found on her FLICKR site, and she’d appreciate seeing others’ photos.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/llp_unesolitaire/albums/72157700280625731/with/30045465397/

 

September Member Slide Night a hit!

On September 18, 2018, we got a chance to share some of our birding experiences and photos with each other and really enjoyed it.

Joe & Maggie Tieger on Australia

First up was Faye McAdams Hands, who had a really great trip to Papua-New Guinea with stops in Australia.  With just a cell phone, she managed to capture the magic of that alternate universe including Yellow Robin, Whipbird, Bowerbird, Topknot Pigeons, and Birds of Paradise, as well as being in the right place for a total lunar eclipse seen only on that side of the planet!

Lisa Pedersen showed slides of her trip to the Galapagos with her daughter and brought in her talented artist daughter’s comics from that trip, as well as other souvenirs.  Multi-media!

Joe & Maggie Tieger went way south again and brought back Rockhopper Penguins and Albatross, as well as a video of the dance of the Blue-footed Boobies.

Newlyweds Eric Dudley and Mary Kay Elfman showed slides from their pre-honeymoon cruise of the Galapagos, a totally different type of experience from Lisa’s trip which was land-based.  They showed educational photos of various Darwin’s finches, among many others.

Kathleen Miller showed some terrific slides from Bolsa Chica in southern California, including a stunning shot of a winter-plumaged American Avocet.

Kathleen Miller stands as Ryan Wiese shows her slides

John Riegsecker showed a few shots from his massive collection of birds with prey, not for the faint-hearted.  He actually knew what the prey species were in most cases, too.  He ended this display with an Osprey projectile-muting.

A real ending to John Riegsecker’s collection!

Blair Bernson was our final presenter, giving a hint of the Big Year he’s in the middle of, starting with his Big Month.  He has big plans for bird travel, and ABCers were able to give him some tips.  We look forward to more about this when we do our Big Year reports in January.

Blair Bernson gives us some provocative hints of the Big Year he’s doing

We had such a good time with this program that we may do it again next year.  We even finished on time!

 

Summer 2018 Peninsula Osprey Survey

PURDY SPIT: Long-time use of power towers by Osprey has come to an end as the towers are now being dismantled after 2 years of Osprey discouragement (see red spikes). A new pole/platform has been erected at the corner of Purdy Drive and Goodrich, but the Osprey have ignored it completely. Maybe the discouragement protocol will make the entire area unfriendly to them. Very sad for me, as this was my “home” nest for 30 years.

8-7-18 – Purdy Spit towers about to be taken down

PURDY DRIVE: The pole erected around 25 years ago to offer the Osprey an alternative to power towers, and which had been roundly ignored by them in favor of the towers, has been retrofitted to new guidelines, which the birds apparently did not write themselves. It now resembles the new pole put up on the spit (which the birds have ignored for the one season it has been in place) as well as the new pole put up 3 or 4 years ago in Victor, which came into use in its second year.

8-8-18 – Old unused post on Purdy Drive, now “enhanced.”

PEACOCK HILL NORTH: The cell tower was occupied again this year and has two young ready to fledge. Apparently no undue interference with eagles this year, which had been a problem at this tower. Don’t know where they fish. John Riegsecker has been monitoring this one.

Peacock Hill nest on 8-10-18 by John Riegsecker

GIG HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL PLAYING FIELDS: Success again on the light standards!  The Osprey seem to enjoy the fluttering tinsel designed to scare off birds.

8-8-18 – Gig Harbor High School with Ospreys on light standards

WOLLOCHET BAY: The long-used platform appears to have not been used this year, a first in the 20 years I’ve been watching it. Again, the state has not funded the cam set-up, and the hardware appears to have been stripped off it.

8-7-18 – Wollochet Bay abandoned nest. That’s a Redtail overhead, not an Osprey.

THE INN AT GIG HARBOR: Another joyfully successful season at the cell tower complex, worrisome with all the new construction going on around there for the new Fred Meyer complex. Recommend watching from the Tanglewood restaurant parking lot, then going into the restaurant and having dinner or a drink to celebrate in late July to early August.

7-28-18 – The Inn at Gig Harbor with nest and 2 young on left tower & adult watching from right tower

KEY PENINSULA HIGHWAY at W302 INTERSECTION: Cell tower with sticks in every possible cranny, but seemingly successful again, with at least one Osprey observed in attendence every time I’ve gone by for 4 months.

Key Peninsula Hwy nest on 7-26-18

VICTOR: This platform was erected as mitigation for taking out TWO NESTS when the power towers in North Bay were removed several years ago, such as is going on now in the Burley Lagoon at the Purdy Spit. Tall pole on hill is hard to see into, but a bird was seen there on half the visits in 4 months, so good likelihood of success, but not as obvious as last year when young were obviously seen on the nest. Not sure the bird seen was a juvenile, but there’s been ongoing work on decorating the nest with green ribbon lately.

Victor nest on 7-26-18

UZZELL & NELSON RD, S. KITSAP: John Riegsecker told me he’d seen a nest here on the cell tower, but no birds. I visited it on August 1 and saw a beautiful full nest, but no birds. Perhaps they had already fledged, or perhaps they were harassed enough to abandon it. A very nice looking nest. Will check it earlier next season.

8-1-18 – Uzzell Rd in S. Kitsap. No sign of birds.

PORT ORCHARD: The nest just northeast of the intersection of Sedgwick and Bethel is on the edge of stormwater retention ponds on the dead-end road of a fancy subdivision. This nest had been observed several years ago to be successful, then seemed to have been removed. This year it’s back! An Osprey was on hand to greet us. Nest can be observed well from the Les Schwab Tire Center on Sedgwick.

8-4-18 – New nest on formerly occupied cell tower just off Sedgwick

ACROSS THE BRIDGE: Lots of good reports from Chambers Bay, being monitored by Max Warner and John Riegsecker, among others. John got pictures of the two young still in the nest recently, where one youngster had a crossed bill, but seemed to be growing well. He reported it to Bud Anderson of Falcon Research Group, who is monitoring raptors with crossed or overgrown bills.

7-30-18 – Chambers Bay nestling with crossed bill. Photo/John Riegsecker

SUMMARY: Some big disappointments, but some gains, too. One interesting observation is that the nests so far from water that I don’t know where they go to fish are doing better than the ones on the water. Happy birds at the Inn at Gig Harbor, for example; whereas Wollochet Bay failed this year.

Compare with last summer’s survey: http://abcbirding.com/summer-2017-peninsula-osprey-survey/

ABC, July 17, 2018 – BOOK DISCUSSION: “Birding Without Borders,” by Noah Strycker

ABC, JULY 17, 2018:  We held our annual book discussion on July 17th.

The meeting started off with a recap of the recent wildly successful field trip to Cassia County, Idaho, for those Cassia Crossbills, with subsequent stops for other good stuff. We met Marcus Roening for dinner in Twin Falls upon arrival, when he and Heather had gotten the bird and were headed elsewhere. He gave us some good and timely tips, mainly to go to Porcupine Springs, which we did with great success! After getting the bird, the two carloads (Car #1: Faye, Diane, Carol, and Art; Car #2: Ken, Ed, Teri, Laurel) split up. Car #1 headed home with stops at the Chat spot Marcus had told us about; at Shoshone Falls (wow!); a new wildlife refuge in Idaho; in Ontario, Oregon, for 2 Long-tailed Grackles; and Vernita Bridge with 11 Nighthawks! Car #2 headed into Nevada where they all got another lifer, Himalayan Snowcock in the Ruby Mountains; then into Oregon with lots and lots of Pinyon Jays! See Ed’s report: http://abcbirding.com/4-day-cassia-crossbill-trip-report/

7-17-18 – Joe Tieger in yellow shirt led book discussion

On to the main event! Joe Tieger led a lively discussion on Noah’s book, Birding Without Borders. Of course most of us had met Noah when ABC had him report right after his big year before the book was published, an event concocted by Kay Pullen, which turned out to be the biggest event ever for ABC, where we had to involve Tahoma Audubon and the Slater Museum at UPS, where it was held in the UPS rotunda. (See: http://abcbirding.com/april-12-2017-abcs-new-best-friend-noah-strycker/).

So we all felt a personal connection to Noah. Joe had a list of discussion points which really brought lots of talk, such as what we might have added to his sparse equipment list? In this particular case, Joe had a compelling sales pitch, telling us we should never go off into the wilds, especially if alone, without a Personal Locator Beacon, which he showed us. He explained how it worked, and we’re all ready to go buy one! If you want to know more about Joe’s particular choice, you can ask him at: jmhornbeam@comcast.net.

There was a lively discussion about listing, Big Years, and personal styles of birding. Most of us wouldn’t have wanted to expend the single-minded energy that Noah did, even if we had the money, although Noah’s expenses were amazingly low, considering what he was willing to put up with and his sponsorships.

The discussion turned weird when it came out that Noah said one thing he could have left home was his pair of leech socks.  No one agreed with this, and horrific stories were told!

Much conversation about Noah’s book

One educational topic that Joe touched upon was Birding Pals. Several had experience with Birding Pals, with satisfaction up and down the scale from high to low, kinda like computer dating.

Thanks, Joe, for a lively discussion!