Best Birdwatching Scene in a Movie – ever!

8 10 2010

 

The Great Escape

 

In fact maybe the only Birdwatching scene in a movie? The boys of Stalag Luft III bone up on Masked Shrike identification! From The Great Escape – 4:05 in (here)





Little Park Big Day – Pictures Pt 2

5 10 2010

Ruby-crowned Kinglet

Here are a couple more pictures from the Saturday. The thing I like about the Little Park is that it is so small the birds always tend to be close enough to snag a decent shot.





Little Park, Big Day – Pictures Pt 1

4 10 2010

Black-throated Green - Luke Tiller

Here’s some of the warbler snaps from my fun Saturday in the Little Park in Chelsea. I’m now at 76 species for the Little Park including 15 species of warbler (a female BT Blue on Sunday making it 15 on the season).





Little Park, Big Day

3 10 2010

Swainson’s Thrush – Luke Tiller

Saturday morning I found myself in the city. After a weeks worth of lousy migration weather it was almost tough to sleep such was the excitement of  getting up to see what the overnight winds might have delivered in the shape of birds to the Little Park on the Hudson.

I have to admit that having been here in the states a number of years now that I sometimes become a little blase about the common migrants (and the more you bird, the more ‘common’ birds get added to that list). What I love about having a patch is that it often makes finding of even the most prosaic of birds exciting, for example the thrill of adding Semipalmated Plover to the Allen’s Meadows list was no way undermined by having seen thousands of them in other parts of the state.

As I’ve said before, for me the thrill of birding is the thrill of the unknown. The great thing about the Little Park on the Hudson is that almost any find there is something of a thrill beyond the odd House Sparrow or Starling. Saturday morning though was something of a banner day at the park. I arrived just before sun up and realized that the park was alive with migrants. Not quite dripping with birds but nothing to be sneered at. Almost as soon as I got into the park I was on my first goody of the day, an immature White-crowned Sparrow and things just snowballed from there.

Although commonplace almost anywhere else, a latish Ovenbird was highly unexpected in a spot with barely a patch of trees, let alone an area with something of an understory. The bird’s somewhat startled impression, as it flitted out of a patch of bayberry, almost seemed to scream ‘what the heck am I doing here!’ It wasn’t alone in being the only woodland specialist skulking through the shrubbery, as almost immediately I had a Swainson’s Thrush scuttling along the edge of the hedge row, a genuinely good bird most places let alone a small patch of greenery smack bang in the middle of Chelsea.

Birds just kept coming and going through the morning, and before I knew it I had been circling the confines of that little park for about 4 hours. Having the camera with me is something of a blessing and a curse. It allows you to capture some of those birding moments for posterity but the time it takes to get shots eats into your birding time, so for me it’s a bit of a double edged sword.

Just to show how even the most common birds can cause of frisson of excitement when found out of context, three of my highlight species of the day wouldn’t cause most northeastern birders to bat an eyelid in almost any other circumstances. For me though a trio of birds that most birders probably hardly even consider migratory really made my day. Firstly the welcoming sound of a trio of Black-capped Chickadees caught my ear. These birds rarely nest in Central Park let alone nest in the tiny confines of the Little Park but here they were winging their way south through the trees (I also noted large numbers in Central Park on Sunday so it must be a fairly big movement year for them). The other two highlights a couple of wandering woodpeckers: first a Red-bellied and then even more unexpectedly, a little Downy. Usually these would have been glossed over on the way to finding better birds, but here in the context of the Little Park it gave them a new meaning and gave me a new appreciation of them (not that I don’t love Chickadees anyway – I mean who doesn’t!)

All in all a pretty exciting day in the park, with highlights being: 9 species of warbler (2 Nashvilles probably would have been the best species but for the conspicuously out of place Ovenbird), 3 White-crowned Sparrows, 1 Swainson’s Thrush and 1 Red-breasted Nuthatch.

Trip List (asterisk denotes new park species – notes on numbers where I can be bothered):

Canada Goose, Double-crested Cormorant, Osprey (2)*, Peregrine Falcon (1), 3 x Gull Species (Ring-billeds back in force), Rock Pigeon, Mourning Dove, Red-bellied Woodpecker (1)*, Northern Flicker (12), Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (1), Downy Woodpecker (1)*, Eastern Phoebe, Blue Jay, Black-capped Chickadee (3)*, Red-breasted Nuthatch (1)*, House Wren, Golden-crowned Kinglet (4)*, Ruby-crowned Kinglet (6), Swainson’s Thrush (1)*, American Robin, Gray Catbird (20+), Northern Mockingbird, Brown Thrasher (2)*, European Starling, Nashville Warbler (2)*, Northern Parula (4), Magnolia Warbler (3), Myrtle Warbler (3), Black-throated Green Warbler (1)*, Blackpoll Warbler (1), Palm Warbler (8), Ovenbird (1)*, Common Yellowthroat (15+), Scarlet tanager (3)*, Chipping Sparrow (2), Savannah Sparrow (2), Song Sparrow (10+), White-throated Sparrow (10+), White-crowned Sparrow (3)*, Dark-eyed Junco (4), House Sparrow.





Spring Arriving Too Early?

30 09 2010

Magnolia Warbler - Luke Tiller

A bit of fun last night, but this report from the BBC makes for some depressing news regarding long distance migratory bitrds. This year people were noticing how early spring seemed to have sprung here in Connecticut. I guess it seems to be a part of a worrying global trend according to this article on the BBC website (more here).





Nocturnally Migrating Ospreys!!!

29 09 2010

You too may have heard the reports of Ospreys migrating through NYC at night. We decided to step out onto the hallowed turf of Quaker Ridge and try our best to spot a few! Full report from Luke Tiller and Catherine Hamilton.





NYC birding – beyond Central Park!

24 09 2010

Palm Warbler - Luke Tiller

Seems like I am not the only person getting some enjoyment birding NYC outside of the confines of Central Park. Check out 10000 birds (here) for adventures in Bryant Park – a whole host of incredible and fun shots. Hopefully I’ll be back at the little park this weekend for more fun and more pictures. I wonder what would happen if I set up hawkwatching there?





Things I’m doing

24 09 2010

Northern Parula

As well as the hawkwatch I’m helping out with a few other events at Audubon Greenwich. You can find out about them using their calendar (online here). The next event is the walk for fall warbler identification, part of a series of workshops I am doing on fall bird identification. October see me taking a closer look at sparrows and hawks. Hope to see some of you for them.





Northern Wheatear – Allen’s Meadows

23 09 2010

Northern Wheatear - Mike Warner

Just thought I’d post a record shot of the Northern Wheatear from Allen’s this morning. Great find by Mike Warner, Penny Solum and Tina Green at my old patch. Thanks to Mike for the photo. Glad someone had the sense to get a shot of it – I forgot my camera when I went down. I broke my not twitching non-lifers rule for the day but it is Allen’s Meadows after all!  It was even a rather horrifically ‘tick and run’ kind of twitch as well, as Brian O’Toole and I were in and out in less than 20 minutes before winging our way back to work. The Lark Sparrow making it a Two fer Thursday. Another incredible set of birds for Allen’s! Nice find by Matt Hoyt with the Lark creating the old picnic table effect!





Bird Music: The Bird and the Bee – Don’t stop the music

22 09 2010

A Rhianna cover of all things and not one of her finer moments either!