Sunday, November 7, 2010

May to October, 2010

The fall season is not yet over (as usual, some of the best birds turn up in November, the classic time for wrong-way strays from the south and west) and the annual Christmas Bird Count is yet to come. But our season in East Quogue -- May 1st to October 31st -- is over and this seems as good a time as any to review the year.

We had only a very modest spring warbler migration and land bird migration in general was not strong. The outstanding bird was probably Hooded Warbler in Maple Swamp which is a southern overshoot and perhaps occasional nester on Eastern Long Island (and not one of the neotropical warblers passing through on the way to northern breeding grounds). The falloff of these so-called neotropical migrants on Eastern Long Island is very striking. The cause? Deforestation on the tropical wintering grounds? Poor breeding success in the North Woods? Global warming? Whatever the reason or reasons, it is very noticeable in our area.

Shorebird migration was more impressive. We had a few good days with large mixed flocks heading north -- including Western and White-rumped Sandpipers and Red Knots. And the return migration which began, as always, in July featured a Hudsonian Godwit at Cupsogue in mid-July and, in the second week of August, several Marbled Godwits moving between Cupsogue and Pike's Beach. Add a sprinkling of Red Knots and a variety of terns including Forster's, Roseate and Caspian as well as many Royals.

In the breeding bird department, Chuck-will's-widows returned to their long-term East Quogue site and a flock or covey of Northern Bobwhite was present in East Quogue throughout the season. Green Herons bred on or near our East Quogue/Weesuck Creek place and three young birds appeared on our pond. Breeding Vesper Sparrows were seen, heard and photographed at Westhampton (Gabreski) Airport.

As is often the case, fall migration was far superior to spring migration with warblers moving in August and September and an invasion of Red-breasted Nuthatches in September. A burst of new arrivals in early October heralded a period of intense activity with hundreds of birds of several species feeding on the newly ripened seeds of Baccharis, Ivo, Poison Ivy, Red Cedar and even Phragmites over a period of almost three weeks in mid-October. The lead species -- consisting of literally hundreds of birds -- was the Yellow-rumped Warbler accompanied by flocks of American Goldfinches, Black-capped Chickadees, Ruby-crowned and Golden-crowned Kinglets, a singing Purple Finch and several species of sparrows: Song, Swamp, White-throated, Chipping and Field plus probable Grasshopper Sparrow (seen in silhouette at dawn) and at least one Lincoln's Sparrow -- a first for the property (also seen on Dune Road).

The fall warbler migration featured an excellent array of species including Orange-crowned, Mourning, Tennessee, Cape May, Nashville and Northern Waterthrush. But the outstanding bird -- not just of the season but of the year -- was a BELL'S VIREO feeding prominently along the shrub layer between the marsh and the woods behind on September 19. This bird, refound several times and also seen by Eileen Schwinn, is a member of a western species that extends as a breeder into the midwest and occurs on the East Coast as a vagrant. Although it is considered difficult to distinguish (mainly because of confusion with immature White-eyed Vireo), this bird showed almost all the field marks for Bell's Vireo including constant tail flicking and occasional wing flicks. I had previously seen this species on Dune Road in October, 1996, and spent a lot of time researching previous reports and looking at specimens (all written up in a Kingbird article). Needless to say, this bird was new for the property; including the Lincoln's Sparrow, the property list now stands at 235 species (give or take a species or two).

If anyone is interested in the Bell's Vireo details and references, let me know and I'll forward the lot. I've also made a report to NYSARC (the New York State Avian Records Committee).

The fall raptor migration was fairly good. There was a long parade of Osprey with sometimes as many as seven or eight species over the creek or feeding on dead branches on Pine Neck directly opposite. Other dominant species were Merlin and Northern Harrier but Bald Eagle (at Cupsogue in early August), American Kestrel, Peregrine, Cooper's Hawk, Sharp-shinned Hawk and a possible Goshawk were also seen. Other fall migrants were Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Royal Terns, a single Caspian Tern, Wilson's Snipe, American Woodcock, Virginia Rail, Winter Wren, Brown Thrasher, Eastern Towhee, Dark-eyed Junco as well as plentiful numbers of Northern Flickers, Gray Catbirds, American Robins, Barn and Tree Swallows; also Ruby-throated Hummingbird, Baltimore Oriole, Scarlet Tanager and Bobolink.

A curiosity was a small white egret with two long head plumes seen and photographed in Weesuck Creek at the end of June. This is the second bird with this character that I have seen here. Normally the white egret that sports these plumes is the Little Egret, a close relative of our Snowy that is native to Eurasia and Africa. However it is claimed that Snowy Egrets can show this character as well. The probable explanation for this phenomenon is hybridization and I would venture a guess that this bird (as well as the previous one) was a Snowy Egret with some Little Egret genes. Okay, 234 species!

Eric Salzman

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Saturday, October 30: last day

Here's the post for Saturday, October 30:

There was frost on the marsh grass this for the first time (it has been a warm October but colder weather is coming) along with a rather spectacular sunrise, somewhat delayed by the gathering of clouds in the east. There was a Marsh Wren in the phrags, Brown Thrasher and Eastern Towhee in the bushy edges along with a fair collection of sparrows, kinglets, chickadees and goldfinches. Goodbye to all that for now. This is our last day out here for 2010 so this blog will go from almost-daily to once-in-a-while until next spring. Thanks to Eileen Schwinn and the surprisinglly loyal readership of this bird/natural history blog centered on East Quogue and our Weesuck Creek property.

As the Olive-sided Flycatcher said: Cheers!

Eric Salzman

Monday, November 1, 2010

Friday, October 29: out on the marsh

Here's a delayed version of last Friday's post (October 29) from East Quogue:

A touch of cooler weather this morning, a bank of clouds keeping the sun hidden long past its appointed time and a very low tide suggest an early visit to the marsh to look for possible late October migrants. Eileen Schwinn stops by for an early morning visit and we make our way gingerly as far out as possible towards the open water in the middle. Standing on a precarious mud tussock, we can see the central pond (no yellowlegs or Great Blue Heron this morning) but also into the muddy creek bed that carries the marsh stream flow out and the tidal flow in and out. Suddenly, in a little extension of mud and water almost at our feet, a rail appears! Tucked away in this little crevice, it seems as small as a sparrow but it had a long bill, identifying it as a Virginia Rail, a bird of 9 or 10 inches but somehow dwarfed by the mature Spartina reeds and the mudbanks all around. This plucky not-quite-so-little bird, feeding in the muddy edges, actually moves towards us until is is only a few feet away, right in front of us. It turns and disappears behind the reeds several times but always comee back to what is obviously, from a rail point of view, the sweet spot. Even after the click of Eileen's camera seems to scare it away, it returns, allowing her to take its picture in the gloomy light and allowing me good enough views of the shape and color of the bill (longish, thick at the base and light-colored), the short, wagging tail and the speckled or spotted back). This is not the first view I've ever had of Virginia Rail in the marsh but it is certainly the best and closest!

Here's Eileen's shot of the bird; alas, it doesn't even show the bill but it is, I can assure you, a real live Virginia Rail.


Nothing tops seeing a rail close-up but good views of a calling Winter Wren in the edge vegetation comes near; it was the first of this species for the season. Other birds of note include Common Loon and Marsh Hawk flyovers, a Greater Yellowlegs in the pond first thing in the morning, Juncos oddly perched high in trees in a couple of places and the usual October assortment of Yellow-rumps, finches, sparrows and kinglets (Ruby-crowned only) although in much diminished numbers.

Eric Salzman

Sunday, October 31, 2010

October 28: fog

This was a delayed post from Thursday, October 28 .
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

There's been a lot of fog this week. It came in with the warm weather from the south and it has been so thick that the other side of Weesuck Creek has been completely invisible. This morning the fog finally lifted over the creek and brought out the sun and the vivid colors of Pine Neck. The sudden change in weather pulled me out of the house and down the path to the water where I put up a American Woodcock -- not once but twice. It was the best bird of the week!

I reached the water in time to see some fishing Ospreys and to watch a couple of Common Grackle blitzes, brief and noisy, with hundreds of birds dropping to pay us a visit. The Grackles (there were some Starlings mixed in but it was mostly just Grackles) seem to move in a chaotic fashion but in fact they have their own systematic organization. The first scouts land and spread out over open areas and then gradually move into the woods. In the meanwhile, new arrivals come winging in, always leap-frogging over the grackles already on the ground and taking over the territory next door. Eventually, the whole flock turns over in this fashion or just takes off to look for another likely area to blitz.

Although the fog lifted over the creek, it remained stalled over the bay and Dune Road, usually quite visible, was simply not there. The change in weather has put a dead stop to migration (the odd Woodcock excepted); the hordes of Yellow-rumps and the various sparrows have as good as disappeared leaving only a few isolated individuals of each species. One bird that was not stopped by the change in weather was the American Robin with small groups flying over in no particular direction right into the peasoup; it's easy to tell when the Robins are on the move because they have very recognizable flight calls which presumably help to keep them together. If you hear a series of mysterious little 'sss' sounds coming from the skies, it's probably Robins on the move. One bird that warm weather brought back was the Royal Tern, also recognizable by its calls reverberating through the mist. Other birds that can be identified by sound are the two kinglets (but you have to be able to hear high frequencies to recognize the Golden-crowns) and the American Goldfinches which are still here in numbers.

The stormy weather that punctuated the fogs this week brought down tree branches and a lot of leaves but enough remain to make a colorful display. We don't have the sugar maples that make New England autumns so colorful but the Red Maple and Red Oaks take on a lot of color along with various shrubs and vines. Poison Ivy makes a particuarly beautiful display even more beautiful than its companion, the harmless Virginia Creeper. The Tupelos also show a lot of color but they color out early and are mostly stripped of their leaves by now. The whole effect of fog, wind, water and autumn color (plus white egrets and Great Blue Herons) makes a magnificent show, evoking traditional Chinese or Japanese landscape art.

Eric Salzman

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

sparrows at Ponquogue

October is sparrow month. I often like to say that our place has a good variety of habitat but that we lack classic sparrow grasslands or grassy edges. Strictly speaking that isn't really true. Although our "front lawn" -- the rapidly disappearing open space/meadow in front of the house -- hardly qualifies, the marsh is actually a kind of grassland. The dominant plants in the marsh proper are Spartina alterniflora and Spartina patens and we also have plenty of Phragmites australis and all three are grasses. And we do get the so-called marsh sparrows in the marsh: Saltmarsh (the most common), Seaside, Nelson's (in migration and winter) and even LeConte's (once; a veritable vagrant). Our common breeding sparrow, the redoubtable Song Sparrow, uses the marsh edges and sometimes ventures into the marsh itself to feed.

But the big influx of sparrows in October is marked by the arrival of large numbers of Swamp and White-throated Sparrows which along with Song Sparrows (some of which are undoubtedly new arrivals) feed in the bushy edges of the marsh and sometimes move further up into the woods where they will stay all winter. The White-throat even sings on warm days and it has one of the prettiest songs of any bird consisting of a melodic note or two followed by a bouncy rhythm. It also has a very noticeable loud 'chink' for an alarm call. Swamp also has a soft, warbler-like (or Phoebe-like) chip that is very recognizable. They are our most common sparrows at the moment.

Another sparrow that is rather common in migration and winter is the Chipping Sparrow but it isn't much noticed because (1) it is here all the time (it is a common breeder), and (2) it loses its distinctive red cap and white eye stripe in its non-breeding plumage and has a rather non-descript look. A less common sparrow at this time of year is the striking White-crowned Sparrow, one of the biggest and best-marked of its tribe (although most of the White-crowns that we see are young birds that have red-and-gray stripes instead of black-and-white stripes). Savannah, Field, Grasshopper and Vesper Sparrows, all breeders on Eastern Long Island, also turn up in migration and sometimes winter as well but take a little searching. Savannah is most common on Dune Road and in wintertime you can see its rare cousin, the Ipswich Sparrow which is a larger, plaer version of the Savannah. American Tree Sparrow is a northern breeder that winters here in some numbers.

Among the better sparrow finds are Fox Sparrow, and Lincoln's Sparrow (like a Swamp but more neatly marked and streaked), both seen in migration from time to time. Among the rarities that wander regularly to the East Coast, count Clay-colored Sparrow, Lark Sparrow, Henslow's Sparrow (a declining grassland species which formerly bred on Long Island and still turns up now and then) and Harris' Sparrow. Closely related to the sparrows (some people count them as sparrows even though they don't look 'sparrow-y') are the Eastern Towhee and Dark-eyed Junco, the former a local breeder and fairly common migrant, the latter a common migrant and winter bird. Finally, among birds that are not sparrows but look like one, I might mention the Dickcissel which does occur here in migration.

Over the years I've managed to spot and/or identify quite a few of the above list, mostly in and among our high tide bushes (Iva and Baccharis as well as Phragmites) which are currently in seed and attracting good numbers of sparrows, warblers, goldfinches and other birds. But this is tough sparrow birding. You see the bushes twitching and catch a bit of movement. But what is it? It is a real struggle to catch these birds in the brief instants that they perch out in the open on one of the bushes. Sparrows are hard enough to identify if you get a good look but they are also quite shy. The best local places to look for sparrows (and have a fighting chance to figure out what they are) are on Dune Road between Ponquogue Bridge and the Inlet. The road going to the old Ponquogue Bridge and the adjacent parking lots have a variety of sparrows at this time of year. Although they are flighty, they tend to return to the grassy edges where they can be studied at length. Patience is the prime requirement.

Eric Salzman

Sunday, October 24, 2010

flocks

Maria Daddino sent me an e-mail reporting 100s of grackles all around her house and, as I was reading it, I looked out the window and what did I see? Common Grackles all over the place. When I went outside, the grackle din was deafening. They were not only spread out over the open areas around the house but they were on the ground all through the woods. Literally hundreds of Common Grackles, Quiscalus quiscala, feeding on the ground and engaging in a grackle gabble of extraordinary dimensions. What they talking about? Grackle gossip? Travel plans? There is obvious communication in these big flocks as they roam the territory. decide to drop in on Maria or Eric, and then, just as inexplicably, take off for someone else's back yard. All decisions seem to be made collectively -- by acclamation one might say if grackle squeaks and squawks can be thought of as acclamatory!

A couple of years ago I saw a flock over Riverhead that seemed to cover the sky -- literally tens of thousands of birds streaming overhead. There were a few other birds mixed in -- Red-winged Blackbirds, Brown-headed Cowbirds and Common Starlings -- in the flock but mostly it was grackles, grackles, grackles.

Grackles aren't the only blackbirds to flock up. The Red-wings tend to roost up at night and fly out to find food in fairly substantial pods. American Crows are getting flock-y as well and flocks of crows are called, rather charmingly, murders (this seems to be an old name going back to medieval England). There was a Murder of Crows making an awful racket and flying around the place for quite a while this morning and you can see why, on the eve of Halloween, they might stir up dark thoughts. There must have been two dozen birds in that crow bunch and it certainly seemed as though they were up to no good. Perhaps they were stirred up by a predator. Although I didn't see any hawks around this morning there was at least one feral cat which might easily have suggested mayhem to the collective corvid mind.

There was also a little mixed feeding flock of smaller birds moving through the woods, another sign of approaching winter. The birds in this collectivity consisted of the two kinglets, the two nuthatches, the two titmice (chickadees and titmice), two woodpeckers (Downy and Red-bellied) and at least one very shy Catharus thrush, probably a Hermit.

Eric Salzman

Saturday, October 23, 2010

lots of birds and a good mushroom

Did I suggest in my last post that things are getting quieter down at the marsh at sunrise? This morning there were literally hundreds of birds moving in every direction but the flocks were so dominated by a few species -- Yellow-rumped Warblers, American Goldfinches, Red-winged Blackbirds plus a few sparrows -- that it was impossible to pick out anything else. What I couldn't see however I could hear: an Eastern Towhee, kinglets, nuthatches, chickadees, Blue Jays and Crows. If there were rarities, there were well hidden amidst the flocks of familiar avifauna.

Although this was not a good summer for mushrooms (too dry), fall rains have brought out a number of species, including some great edibles. In addition to the Hen-of-the-woods (Grifola frondosa) and the Honey Mushroom (Armillaria mellea), there has been a burst of Wood Blewits, one of the tastiest of the wild fungi. Wood Blewits have the distinction of being an example of a species that has a stable and recognizable English name while the scientific name (which is supposed to be universally recognized and therefore more stable than the common name) keeps shifting. I have seen it called, among other things, Clitocybe nuda, Lepista nuda, Tricholoma nudum, Tricholoma personatum, Lepista personata (the last two probably designating a closely related but different mushroom). In any case, our Blewits are light purple with firm flesh, densely packed gills, a smooth rounded cap, a short stem and a bulbous base.

Eric Salzman

Friday, October 22, 2010

The Sun Also Rises on Weesuck Creek

Our outlook is easterly and, if we get up in time, we get to see some gorgeous sunrises (our sunsets are mostly hidden by the woods around and behind the house). It's getting easier every day to meet the sunrise. This morning's official time was 7:15 am but, since the sun has to clear Pine Neck and, usually, a bank of clouds, the actual emergence of the fiery orb is usually a few minutes later. Yesterday morning, it looked like the Appalachians had moved off shore. A superb mountain silhouette lined the sky just beyond Pine Neck and Dune Road and the sun had to climb above to offer us the gift of its rays. This morning the cloud cover was more broken and the light effects more spectacular as the sunlight reflected color from the red/orange end of the spectrum off the clouds even before the giver of light could be seen. Giver of light and giver of warmth and dryness as well. If you're birding on these chilly mornings, the appearance of the sun makes a distinct difference; the birds come out to catch the warmth and, if there has been a lot of dew, to dry off. It's a very special moment.

You can probably guess that, if I'm writing about the sun and not the birds, these were slow mornings. The Birds of October were still present (Yellow-rumped Warblers, American Goldfinches, both kinglets, both nuthatches, chickadees, various sparrows) but these were the slowest mornings since the beginning of the month. Even so, there were at least two Merlins flying over early yesterday, a Red-tail today and the reappearance of Royal Terns after a week or two of absence. A Hermit Thrush popped up yesterday morning on the path that borders the property on the north side. Also Northern Bobwhite have been heard calling in the past few days and again this morning.

I've been thinking about Wednesday's Lincoln Sparrow. Although I have listed it as a first for the property, I'm sure that I have seen this bird before. The standard guide books don't mention it but Lincoln's and Swamp Sparrows, not always so easy to see well in their preferred habitat of dense shrubs at the marsh edge, are very similar. Just to confuse things a little more, most of the books show migrant and winter Swamp Sparrows as streaked. Every year we get an October influx of Swamps and many of them show at least light streaking. The difference is that the Lincoln's Sparrow streaking is dark and distinct and appears in as a well-marked band of streaks over a buffy ground; the rest of the underparts are white (not always so easy to see). The underparts of the Swamp Sparrow -- with or without faint streaking -- are rather dingy grayish.

Eric Salzman

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

add-ons

Add to the list of popular food items in or around the marsh: Seaside Goldenrod; Poison Ivy and Red Cedar berries.

Add to the list of Weesuck Creek birds: LINCOLN'S SPARROW!

The big flocks of birds present since the beginning of the month (Yellow-rumped Warblers, American Goldfinch, Black-capped Chickadees, Tufted Titmice, Swamp and Song Sparrows) are scattered all through the shrub layer at the marsh edge and into the area of mixed Iva, Baccharis and Phragmites. The big attraction for these birds are the seeds and berries of all these plants. The Golden-crowned Kinglets are here too, often feeding out in the mixed Phragmites/Baccharis zone, but as far as I can determine, they are picking off tiny insects and not eating seeds like the others.

It was another very birdy morning with the Lincoln's Sparrow appearing only at the very end of some extended bursts of activity. As I was rounding the corner to head back to the house, a sparrow popped up to the top of a bush. I glanced at it sideways. Oh, I thought, another Swamp Sparrow. Except that Swamp Sparrows don't have neat, dark streaks on the breast. Like a Swamp Sparrow, this was a smallish bird with a noticeably small bill, a broad gray eyebrow and a touch of an eye-ring. But it had strong streaking on the back as well as the front and at least a touch of buffy under thosee breast streaks (not as strongly colored as shown in the books but enough to contrast with the white -- not grayish -- underparts). This is a new bird for the property, #235 according to my best count to date!

There were lots of other birds in the vicinity. After have gone missing for a couple of days, Eastern Phoebes and Palm Warblers reappeared along with both nuthatches and a beautiful Nashville Warbler hunting below eye level.

Eric Salzman

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

mostly in the marsh

As I was coming out of the woods around the upper edge of the wetlands, the tide was dropping and I decided to venture out into the open marsh. Almost as soon as I had passed beyond the phragmites and out into the Spartina patens, a Wilson's Snipe jumped up and zig-zagged its way to the opposite side of the marsh. Wilson's Snipe (formerly Common Snipe and again Wilson's before that) is the American cousin of the European bird (which I saw this summer in Latvia). It was a first of the season for me.

But that's not all. Almost as soon as the Snipe had flown, something else darted low through the grass and into the higher Spartina alterniflora bordering the main water flow through the area, protesting vocally as it went. I'm not even sure if it was running or merely flying low but it disappeared entirely and no amount of coaxing or tromping around in the muck and mire could make it show itself. My guess is that it was one of the smaller rails but beyond that I cannot say.

A bit later in the day, after morning cloudiness had given way to blue skies and sunshine (and with the tide definitively gone out), I went back to the area and almost immediately flushed a Wilson's Snipe! No sign, alas, of the mystery bird.

One unusual sighting was that of a Northern Parula apparently feeding on the Marsh Elder. This plant, otherwise known as Iva frutescens, is in full display right now with its packets of white feathery tassels at the end of each of which there is a seed. Along with the Baccharis halmifolia or Groundsel (and also possibly the Phragmites or Big Reed), these plants offer nutrition to the flocks of Yellow-rumped Warblers, Black-capped Chickadees, American Goldfinches and at least three species of sparrows (Song, Swamp and White-throated) at this time of the year. Is it possible to add Parula Warbler to that list? Another unlikely denizen of the area early in the morning are Golden-crowned Kinglets which I have now seen and heard almost every day in the marsh edges. Are they also feeding on the seeds of these plants or do they find that these dense shrubs provide good cover at night?

There's one bird that has arrived in recent days and that I've now seen several times but, inexplicably, have forgotten to mention. The bird is the Black Duck which is a sometime breeder on the East End but is much more common as a migrant and winter bird on the South Shore bays. I saw a flock of six of them yesterday and again this morning.

Eric Salzman

Monday, October 18, 2010

Kinglets close up

Today seemed like it might be a hawk day (there were several around in the morning causing more than one Blue Jay ruckus). So I brought my spanking new spotting scope down to the pond to look for birds coming across the creek in the early afternoon. On good hawk days in the fall, the raptors fly west or southwest and most of them move across Weesuck Creek and come right over our place (sometimes they veer off to follow the Shinnecock shore to the southwest). But, ironically enough, my attention was distracted from any serious hawk-watching by a flurry of birds in the dead cedar directly opposite on the far shore of the pond. I ended up watching, not giant hawks and eagles, but tiny Golden-crowned Kinglets (our smallest bird, hummers always excepted) crawling around in the bare, moss-covered branches. I was even able to see the scarlet (the books say 'orange') crowns of the male birds -- a stunning color that is further enhanced by being surrounded by yellow and black -- truly a crown for a little king!

There were literally crowds of birds all along the marsh this morning with -- surprise! -- Yellow-rumped Warblers by the dozen...literally hundreds of birds in all. Either because the torrent of Yellow-rumps was so overwhelming as to command attention or because other birds have actually moved on, many other species seem to have disappeared or dropped drastically in numbers -- no Catbirds, no Phoebes, no Red-eyed Vireos. Both kinglets were present along with Blue-headed Vireos, Red-breasted Nuthatches, a few Swamp Sparrows and numbers of Robins and Flickers. The only other warbler seen was Common Yellow-throat. Also American Goldfinches, Chickadees and Titmice.

When large numbers of small passerine birds are on the move, the accipiters are rarely far behind. Both Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks (Accipter cooperii and Accipiter striatus) are bird hawks and both species were skulking around in the woods, occasionally perched out in the open and were often chivied by the Corvid Corps: i.e. our Homeland Security crows and jays that regularly patrol the site. The hawks migrate along with their food supply and, unlike the buteos and falcons (Merlin excepted), they are well adapted to working in the woods.

Eric Salzman

Sunday, October 17, 2010

wind & no wind

Yesterday's power winds from the northwest suggested (1) a major effort to strip the leaves off the trees (not quite successful), and (2) conditions conducive to getting some big birds into flight (also not very successful). Instead the first birds I saw were some of the smallest around: both kinglets, goldfinches, a smattering of warblers (almost all Yellow-rumped), both nuthatches and even a single high-flying Tree Swallow struggling desperately to make headway against the strong gusts. Plus a few Robins, Flickers and Blue Jays. Where were the hawks? Even the gulls seemed to be lying low.

By contrast, this morning was quiet and sunny and there were lots of birds -- all of them Yellow-rumped Warblers. Well, almost all. The kinglets and nuthatches were still around and there was a small run of sparrows. The most interesting observations were vocal: a calling Eastern Towhee (never saw it but the call is unmistakable) and several unusual sounds that I could not trace.

Eric Salzman

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

sparrows at Ponquogue

Went down to Ponquogue with Eileen Schwinn this morning to look for sparrows. The grassy and shrubby areas around the road from Dune Road to what's left of the old Ponquogue Bridge (just east of the new bridge) has always been our best hunting grounds for sparrows in fall migration in the Shinnecock area and this morning was no exception. We found Dark-eyed Juncos, White-crowned and White-throated Sparrows, Song, Field and, best of all, at least one LINCOLN SPARROW -- the last-named a slightly more petite version of the Song Sparrow with a small bill, a very even row of strong breast streaks on a buffy ground (cleanly cut off and white below), a distinctive gray supercilium and a buffy malar on both sides. The Juncos, White-crowned and Lincoln's Sparrows were all firsts of the season for me. Lincoln's Sparrow is a bird that I've seen out here only once or twice before; the only dated record that I could find was also in mid-October in the same area.

What we did not find was the possible Clay-colored Sparrow that Eileen saw here yesterday. We did find other birds besides sparrows, notably Northern Harrier, Northern Flicker, Northern Mockingbird, Eastern Phoebe, Golden-crowned Kinglets (on the ground in the sand!), a White-breasted Nuthatch (on a telephone pole!), the expected collection of Yellow-rumped Warblers and one Palm Warbler. There were a few small ducks in a pond just to the east of the road but I never did get a fix on them (they were probably teal but which kind I'm not sure).

Eric Salzman

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

blackbirds in a roost, Osprey on the creek, sparrows in silhouette

The main sign of life this morning down at the marsh was the huge racket being made by the Red-winged Blackbirds in their roost in the big stand of Phragmites on the Bay Avenue side of the marsh. This roost, which forms every fall, has been growing in past weeks and there may be as many as a couple of hundred birds overnighting there. For all the noise this morning -- chuckles, whistles, clucks and gurgles -- not a single bird was in sight; everyone was well hidden deep inside the thick stands of reeds. At one point, a Merlin came winging over and, almost immediately, all the jabbering stopped as if turned off by a switch. Only when the falcon was good and gone, did it pick up again. Normally, this blackbird confabulation would result in a few birds hitching their way up the reeds and then, little by little, smaller and larger groups would begin leaving, culminating in a major exodus that would empty out the roost. As I was waiting and watching, a few birds popped out and flew around a bit -- scouts perhaps? -- but apparently they didn't like what they saw as most of them flew right back in. Gradually the noise died down and I fully expected the whole mass of birds to exit at any moment. But it didn't happen -- not at least on my watch. Eventually I just gave up, left the marsh and resumed my rounds. Sooner or later these birds must have flown out to look for something to eat but apparently their decision-making process was deadlocked early in the morning.

Did I suggest in a recent post that the Osprey migration had fallen off? Well yesterday there were as many as 7 or 8 birds flying over the creek or sitting on branches or tree stubs opposite. They were catching fish too with as many as four Osprey tearing into their catch of the day at any given time; other birds were seen flying with a glint of silver reflected from the sea creature caught in their talons -- on their way, one presumes, to find a place to dine on their take-out repast. And while I was Osprey-watching, a Peregrine Falcon popped out of the Pine Neck woods and worked its way across the mouth of the creek and across our marsh eventually disappearing over the trees.

Also of note from yesterday were two sparrows sitting in the dead cedar on the far side of our pond. Unlike the common Song Sparrows and the now widespread Swamp Sparrows, these were small, flat-headed, Ammodramus-type sparrows. Since they were seen only in silhouette and I couldn't see any of other field marks, I can't completely rule out competing possibilities but the odds are very good that they were Grasshopper Sparrows, a bird I have seen here in migration only once before: in mid-October, 2007.

Eric Salzman

Monday, October 11, 2010

another good morning

When you get four days in a row of high activity during migration season, the question comes up: are these new birds that just came in last night or did they arrive on Friday or over the weekend and are taking a pause in their journeys to rest and bulk up? Unless you actually see them coming in at first light (which happens sometimes), the question is difficult to answer. There are, to be sure, resident birds; these are the ones that hang around all year long and they were singing and calling this morning as though spring had finally arrived (it certainly felt like it). On the other hand, the changing composition from day to day of the birds that make up the morning rush suggests that new ones have been arriving. Admittedly, there is always the possibility that migrants may use a larger area as a waystop and the changes may merely reflect local movements in the area. Without actually banding or otherwise marking the birds, it's impossible to be completely sure.

In any case, there were a lot of birds, dominated once again by 'rumps & pumps' -- many Yellow-rumped Warblers and smaller numbers of tail-pumping Palm Warblers (including a couple of Yellow Palm Warblers in the mix). Two birds that appeared in noticeably larger numbers were Blue-headed Vireos and White-throated Sparrows; until this morning the White-throats were unaccountably scarce (now we can expect them to be with us all winter).

Among the more unusual birds were another trifecta of warblers. One was the not-uncommon Blackpoll Warbler in its fall Pine-Warbler-like guise (wingbars, yellow wash on the breast, streaked on the back). The second is the Common-Yellowthroat-like fall MOURNING WARBLER with its plump, short-tailed look, grayish-olive head with complete (or almost complete) eye-ring, light lemony yellow wash all the way underneath; although the head was not distinctly grayish there was some contrast between the head coloration and the back which the Yellowthroat lacks). I've seen this plumage a number of times now and am more and more convinced that it is an immature Mourning Warbler.

The third warbler is still more challenging. This was a Vermivora warbler with an olive-gray back, an indistinct eyeliner and a rather even dull yellowish cast underneath. I don't believe this was a Tennessee Warbler which, as I observed the other day, has a much more greenish back, less yellow in the vent, a stronger eye line and a shorter tail. So I'm calling this one an ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER. The bird was feeding fairly high in the trees but I don't think that rules out this species in any way; Orange-crowned Warblers, in spite of their reputation for frequenting low, open areas, can often feed higher up. This is not a bird I see here very often but I have two good records from almost the same date in mid-October, 2009. In my opinion, both Mourning and Orange-crowned Warblers are more common than is generally realized; they are just very easy to overlook or misidentify.

Other warblers seen were the usuals: American Redstart and Common Yellowthroat. There was a Baltimore Oriole flyover and a few Brown-headed Cowbirds mixed in with the very numerous (and very vocal) Red-winged Blackbirds. Plus a number of Eastern Phoebes, a few Cedar Waxwings as well as both nuthatches. I actually saw a White-breasted Nuthatch nuthatching -- that is, hacking at a nut (actually an acorn wedged in a crack in the bark of a Pitch Pine). Several birds were seen feeding on the seeds of the ultra-common Marsh Elder (Iva frutescens): Yellow-rumped Warbler, Palm Warbler, Swamp Sparrow and American Goldfinch. These are all birds that like the marsh environment and get through the winter here by feeding on these abundant seeds.

Marsh Elder's counterpart at the edges of the marsh is Groundsel-Tree (Baccharis halimifolia) which is just now developing its wind-blown seed bundles (each seed is attached to a light feathery white bristle that allows the seed to be dispersed by the wind; it is these striking white bundles that make such a spectacular display at this time of the year. There are also a lot of butterflies and dragonflies on the move, the former mostly Monarchs, Red Admirals and Mourning Cloaks, the latter including the big Green Darners, at least two kinds of Saddlebags (red and black) and one or more species of the late-season red Meadowhawks -- neat medium-sized libellulidae (the fancy name for dragonflies) that are next to impossible to pin down as to species.

Eric Salzman

Sunday, October 10, 2010

...and on the third day

The third morning after Friday's big rush was again active. This time there were three pairs of eyes instead of one with the East Quogue A team -- Eileen Schwinn and Mike Higgiston -- in attendance.

New for the season: a Brown Creeper climbing up the shingles of a neighbor's house, a Field Sparrow out in the marsh with other sparrows, and White-crowned Sparrow seen by Mike Higgiston on a neighbor's hedge (but not seen by me).

The only really unusual bird was a possible Mourning Warbler, this one with a thin eye ring but very washed out and looking more like an immature Common Yellowthroat than a Mourning Warbler (it never occurred to me before that there could be a confusion between Mourning Warbler and Yellowthroat but with the immatures this is a real issue!). I'm calling this one a Mourning Warbler because the yellow underparts were brightest on the belly and the head was quite gray. For comparison, several immature Common Yellowthroats were also seen with the difference being that the head and back were more or less uniform in color and the yellow underneath was brightest under the chin and tail and washed out on the belly.

There were, unsurprisingly, many many Yellow-rumped Warblers and they were accompanied, as usual, by some Palm Warblers and Ruby-crowned Kinglets. One other warbler seen: American Redstart. One other kinglet seen: Golden-crowned.

Also on the day list (as on previous days): singing Mockingbird and Carolina Wrens, Catbird, Eastern Phoebe, a couple of empids (one with a noticeable eye ring, one without), Tree Swallows high overhead, Blue-headed and Red-eyed Vireos, a few Robins and a couple of Flickers, Song, Swamp and White-throated Sparrows, Goldfinches and House Finches. Also a handful of Osprey fishing on the creek and three early morning N. Harriers working the marsh (or was it the same Harrier circling around and coming back over and over again?).

Eric Salzman

Saturday, October 9, 2010

some good second-day warblers

The second day after a big migration push -- such as the one that took place yesterday -- can sometimes bring some interesting new arrivals and this morning was no exception. A plump, short-tailed, gray-headed warbler with broken eye-rings bouncing around in low shrubs at the marsh edge was a MOURNING WARBLER; like many fall Mourning Warblers (presumably immatures), this one had a slightly yellowish throat but there was a clear demarcation of the hood running across the breast. In case there was any question about the ID, the bird obligingly called; its rather scratchy/dinky 'twit' sound rules out its Western twin, MacGillivray's Warbler. Another good bird was a TENNESSEE WARBLER (small, short-tailed, olive-green on the back and greener on the crown and rump with a thin but strong eye line and supercilium) rummaging around in the Baccharis and Iva bushes; again, a first-fall bird. And a third in this outstanding warbler trifecta was a CAPE MAY WARBLER in the lower branches of an oak tree at the woodland edge. This was a heavily streaked bird with the black streaking over a strong yellow ground. The streaking extended all the way up to the throat and the yellow ground covered the underparts from the face and neck all the way down to the vent; only the undertail was white. This bird could have been a breeding plumage male except for the lack of chestnut facial patches; even so, there was the barest wisp of color -- a kind of rusty visual echo -- where the patch should have been.

As expected, there were still quite a few Yellow-rumped Warblers around accompanied by somewhat smaller numbers of their usual entourage: tail-wagging Palm Warblers and bouncing, cracking Ruby-crowned Kinglets (they make a cracking noise and some even show their ruby crowns). Golden-crowned were not very far away and again easy to see at lower than eye level. The warbler list included Pine, Blackpoll, American Redstart, and Common Yellowthroat. Other birds of the morning included Blue-headed Vireo (no Red-eyed!), a single Eastern Phoebe, a solitary calling Fish Crow flying over, a very few Catbirds, Song and Swamp Sparrows, Am Goldfinches and House Finches, many American Robins on the move and big flocks of Red-winged Blackbirds and Common Grackles. There were two Greater Yellowlegs in the pond first thing in the morning and a flight of about a dozen yellowlegs -- probably all of this species -- came overhead a bit later. Also later in the day there were flocks of D-c Cormorants and Canada Geese on the move. And it was a decent raptor day as well with several N Harriers, at least one Am Kestrel and one Merlin and quite a few accipiters, both Cooper's and Sharp-shinned -- all noted in an hour or so of raptor watching. A few Osprey also turned up but, for the first time, there were none perched on the dead stubs at the far end of Pine Neck. The big Osprey push of the past week or two seems to be over and I have the impression that the local Osprey family may have taken off for winter quarters. Also missing: Royal Terns; not a one seen or heard.

Eric Salzman

Friday, October 8, 2010

a big morning

This was the big migrant morning that we've been waiting for. It was, not surprisingly, overwhelmingly dominated by Yellow-rumped Warblers. As the sun came up, dozens -- make that hundreds -- of birds appeared at the edge of the marsh, mostly popping up out of the phragmites, groundsel and marsh elder and into the cedars and oaks nearby. These warblers (we used to call them Myrtles, a name I still prefer) were accompanied by fair numbers of tail-wagging Palm Warblers (including at least one 'hypochrysea' or 'Yellow' Palm Warbler, a subspecies that we see more commonly in the spring) plus the season's first (at least in my view) Ruby-crowned Kinglets. I also had my first good views of Golden-crowned Kinglets, a few of which were also working the marsh edge instead of the tall pines and oaks they usually prefer. I've suspected their presence in recent days but this was the first time I had a look at them and, since they were uncharacteristically low, I could actually see the golden crowns!

That's not all. My favorite (my nomination for Best Bird of the Day) was a singing Purple Finch perched high on the big tupelo at the head of the marsh. It was in a female-type plumage (this is one case where the female plumage makes the bird easier to identify) but it was, no doubt, a first-year male.

Other warblers were American Redstart and a Pine Warbler type with streaks on the back -- not a Pine Warbler at all but a Blackpoll in fall plumage (also the first seen this season). Both Red-eyed and Blue-headed Vireos were well represented. Other birds included a morning burst of Am Robins with a few N. Flickers mixed in, a number of Eastern Phoebes (there's one fluttering around outside the kitchen window as I type this), Eastern Wood-pewee, some high-flying Tree Swallows, both nuthatches (the White-breasted was the first of the season; the Red-breasted has been here for a while), Marsh and Carolina Wrens (both singing), Song and Swamp Sparrows plus the usual mimids (Mockingbird & Catbird), corvids (crows & jays) and larids (gulls, that is; no terns at all).

There were V lines of D-c Cormorants overhead all morning. The recent parade of fishing and migrating Osprey continued with up to 5 and 6 birds on the creek at a time. Judging by the noisy crows and jays, there were probably more than a few raptorial visitors around but I saw only three: a Red-tailed Hawk soaring over Pine Neck, another being chased across the creek by a pack of crows, and a Northern Harrier that came winging its way over the creek seemingly unnoticed by the jays and crows (who also ignore the Ospreys).

And not to forget: two Box Turtles active in the warm weather: one with bright yellow markings and a bright orange eye (presumably a male) and a slightly smaller one that was mostly black with orange highlights and dark eyes (presumably a female). I know you can tell the sexes apart by looking at the plastrons but, as they completely ignored me, I preferred to just let them go their own way.

Eric Salzman

Thursday, October 7, 2010

phrags and a Merlin

Although conventional wisdom holds that phragmites -- the tall reed that seems to spring up everywhere but especially in wet spots and marsh edges -- is of no use to wildlife, I find that many birds use it as a place to bed down for the night or as a resting place during migration. When I walk the marsh edge at sunrise (getting easier and easier to catch these days), I often see birds stirring themselves and coming out of the phragmites to warm up or dry off in the sunlight and feed. There were Black-capped Chickadees, Yellow-rumped Warblers and American Goldfinches in that category this morning. Also, Red-winged Blackbirds commonly roost in these reeds and, on occasion, Downy Woodpeckers seem to feed on the stems. So perhaps the phragmites is not as utterly useless as some claim (or perhaps the birds are just adapting to it).

Other birds seen this morning included Eastern Phoebe, two or three Red-breasted Nuthatches, Pine and Palm Warblers and all three mimids (Catbird, Brown Thrasher, N. Mockingbird). At one point, there were two Osprey feeding on their catches (good-sized fish) next to one another on dead stubs at the far end of Pine Neck opposite plus three more birds circling over the creek. But the outstanding bird of the morning was a perched adult female Merlin at medium height on a stub overlooking the pond: a dark brown bird with a creamy stripe extending back from the eye, a weak 'moustache' (really sideburns), heavy dark streaking on the breast, striped tail and, when it finally took off, a low, powerful flight. This is the classic female (could be an immature I suppose) of the 'columbarius' subspecies, the common eastern Merlin, also sometimes called the Taiga Merlin, indicating its far-north breeding ground.

Eric Salzman

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

weather, birds, mushrooms & asters

The continuous streak of lousy weather has made things difficult for birds and birders alike. The rain itself has been a problem but not so much as the high winds and high tides which have flooded out all the paths around the edge of the marsh and even up into some trails that usually stay dry. This morning's tide was high but not quite as bad as that of recent days and there was little or no rain or wind. I managed to catch up with one flock of mostly Tufted Titmice (Titmouses?) accompanied by American Redstart, Northern Parula, Black-and-White Warbler, a few Yellow-rumped Warblers, an Eastern Phoebe, a Brown Thrasher and, by sound only, a Northern Waterthrush. Also a Red-breasted Nuthatch or two, the usual Am Robins, Crows and Blue Jays plus a medium-sized Accipiter (probably a female Sharp-shinned Hawk) that was being chased across the creek by the crows.

I tried to track down some high-pitched sounds that I'm pretty sure were emanating from some Golden-crowned Kinglets but I could not verify this. However Derek Rogers, the preserves manager for the Nature Conservancy, reports a flock of migrants this morning at Pine Neck, just across the creek, that included the uncommon Yellow-throated Vireo as well as Golden-crowned Kinglets and other warblers and vireos.

Mushrooms, not necessarily edibles, have sprouted everywhere -- notably the yellow form of the Amanita muscaria, the notorious Fly Mushroom (that's the one, usually shown as red with white spots on top and a troll underneath; it's more hallucinogenic that deadly poisonous but I'm not recommending it). And there are a few pockets of blue asters as well as some of the smaller white asters, all adding to the fall colors that are starting to come in.

Eric Salzman

Saturday, October 2, 2010

birds of October

Some of the birds of October arrived last night following the tropical rainstorms of the previous few days.

The morning dawned bright, cool, clear and blue-skied and the birds took advantage; migration, which had been bottled up all week was released. Many of the species that appeared were first-of-the-season arrivals. In this category were some old friends: Yellow-rumped Warbler, Blue-headed Vireo, White-throated and Swamp Sparrow. Other migrants on view were Yellow-billed Cuckoo, E. Phoebe, a couple of Traill's Flycatcher-type empids (i.e. Willow or Alder Flycatcher), Red-eyed Vireo, Palm Warbler, American Redstart, Black-and-white Warbler, Common Yellowthroat (male with full black mask), at least one Baltimore Oriole, a few Tree Swallows overhead, and numbers of Black-capped Chickadees, Red-breasted Nuthatches, Song Sparrows, N Flickers, Gray Catbirds and American Robins (most of them probably migrants rather than local birds).

Considering the weather, the raptor flight was disappointing. There were a few high-flying Osprey (obvious migrants) plus a big Blue Jay row that ended when a large female Cooper's Hawk came streaking out of nowhere and, Blue Jays in hot pursuit, high-tailed it out of sight.

Eric Salzman

Friday, October 1, 2010

wind, rain and mushrooms

This morning brought a furious wind storm but, for the first couple of hours at least, no rain at all. Then, when the rains came in late morning, the winds mysteriously stopped. In weather conditions like this, only some of the larger birds were willing to take to the air; most creatures simply hunkered down.

The rain of the past few days has produced something that has been missing all summer: mushrooms! I found a very fresh chicken mushroom (Polyporus or Laetiporus sulfureus), a glorious Hen of the Woods (Grifola frondosa), a few boletes and russulas, and, next to a neighbor's driveway, a burst of Honey Mushrooms (Armillaria mellea), all good edibles. I took a few of the larger caps of the last-named and found a new and highly sinful recipe for them (suffice it to say that both butter and sour cream were involved). When I went back today, the heads the entire crop had been decapitated -- whether by the gardeners (in an unnecessary burst of diligrence) or by another, unknown mushroom picker, I cannot say. For many years, I was the only birdwatcher in East Quogue and now there are several. Perhaps the same is true in the field of mycology, the study of mushrooms, or, more precisely, mycophagy, the eating of mushrooms (to be a successful mycophagist you have to be at least something of a mycologist!).

Eric Salzman

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

the deer are back; so are the bobwhite

It's been a relatively deerless summer. We don't have a flower or vegetable garden to tempt the animals. only a relatively natural setting plus a dog. But the deer are back. Not just the usual doe with two fauns but a collection of 8 or 9 animals that kept the dog barking all night and that only scattered at dawn when I took him for a walk down to the pond (I could barely restrain him!). They all ran one way into the woods except for a big, handsome buck with a good-sized rack of antlers. He first stood his ground, facing me and then bounded across the neck of the pond, heading into the high grasses back of the Weesuck Creek shore. Do male deer have harems? Was he trying to defend his flock or draw attention to himself and away from them?

In a totally unrelated development, a few eggshells scattered on the path near the neighbor's dock jutting out into the creek, was an oddity. These big, white eggshells cannot belong to any native birds and we do not have any loose chickens running around the property. The explanation? They must have been brought here by raccoons as booty from someone's garbage!. There are plenty of mussel and crab shells scattered in the woods and out on the dock and I have now come to the conclusion that these are also due to raccoon omnivory!

Birds? Oh, yes. The damp, cloudy weather with winds from the southwest has effectively put a halt to migration around here but there were Marsh Wrens -- heard and seen -- in the marsh this morning and a flock of young Am Goldfinches also working the marsh edge. But best of all was a flock (covey?) of six Bobwhites, presumably young birds, right outside our screen porch. I actually heard their peeping flock calls before I saw them. They stayed for quite a while, congregating under the flaps of granddaughter Juliette's tent where they proceeded to take extensive dust baths. Only after about a hour of this, did they decide to trot off. These birds are molting into mature plumage to the point where you can see which birds are male and which are female. Hope they make it through the winter!

Eric Salzman

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Birding Latvia

Here's the text of my trip report for the birding portion of my recent trip to Latvia. I didn't include photos this time as there were some problems in the past. If anyone is interested in a small portfolio of photos from birding Latvia, just e-mail me es@ericsalzman.com and I'll be happy to pass them along. Eric Salzman

Latvia: August 23-September 10, 2010
In December, 2009, I organized a program for the Center for Contemporary Opera under the title “Accord/Discord”. The program – which included works of mine (my Brecht Suite and “Accord”, a work for solo accordionist), new arrangements of Latvian songs and of tangos by Osvaldo Pugliese and Oscar Stroks -- was performed by mezzo Laila Salins with composer/accordionist Bill Schimmel and a string trio at the cell theatre in the Chelsea district of New York. The program attracted the attention of the Latvian-American community and resulted in an invitation to tour in Latvia in August/September 2010 in a slightly revised form under the title “Tango/Balades”. I was invited to go along for the ride (give a talk, work with the Latvian musicians to prepare, etc.). And since there were breaks in the schedule between the rehearsals and the main performances, I was also able to do a week or so of birding; hence this report.
First, a bit of background. Latvia is the middle of the three Baltic states that lie on the Baltic Sea opposite Scandinavia. All three countries have a complicated history and have been dominated at times by the Germans, the Swedes, the Poles and, most recently the Russians. Latvia finally gained its independence after World War I only to lose it again when the Russians took over in 1940. The Germans were back during World War II and then Soviet Russia took over, apparently definitively, in the post-war period. Only in 1989, with the sudden collapse of the Soviet Union, did all three Baltics unexpectedly regain their independence. In the past twenty years, Latvia (like the other Baltics) has had growth and prosperity, joined the European Union, and then experienced major inflation and economic crisis.
In spite of its checkered history, Latvia has produced a remarkable number of major figures in the arts, most especially in music and dance. Because of its this history, it also produced some major emigrations – particularly to North America – during its times of crisis. Laila Salins’ father was Gunar Salins, a major Latvian poet, who fled the Soviet invasion to come to New York where he became part of an expatriate community in New York’s Hell’s Kitchen (now Chelsea/Clinton). Laila was born in the U.S. but learned Latvian as a child and has ‘returned’ to Latvia as a student and mature artist.
Birding as we know it is relatively new in Latvia and there are perhaps a couple of dozen dedicated birders in the entire country with perhaps a half a dozen ‘serious’ birder types. In Soviet times, the study of birds was virtually restricted to professional ornithologists. Many of the best birding areas were restricted; travel and access was difficult (there are stories about hiding in the back of trucks and bribing guards to gain entrance). The result is that birding, as we know it, really only goes back to most recent period of Latvian independence and the biggest steps forward have been the past decade or so. Even today, some of the best birders are also young, professional ornithologists. Karlis Millers, my Latvian contact, fits this description perfectly. He was recommended to me as the best and most knowledgeable birder in Latvia as well as a professional ornithologist, working on his Ph.D., and familiar with the places and cast of characters, avian and human, throughout the country. I can say that he fully lived up to his reputation! His e-mail address is .
Partly as result of this history, the country has a mostly undisturbed coastline and there are forests, bogs and wetlands everywhere. The whole countryside has a kind of fairy-tale atmosphere only partly disturbed by the poverty of much of the rural population or the problems of the cities. Whatever the reality, what you see has no relation to the misery that you find in third-world countries. Amazingly enough, most of the traces of the oppressive Soviet regime have been eliminated. The Latvians are extremely friendly people, at least some English is widely spoken and, even if birdwatching as a pursuit is still unusual, there is a deep and abiding love of nature in Latvians (the traditional pursuits are hunting as well as berry- and mushroom-picking, all of which are widely practiced at this time of the year). Additionally, the shops (often small supermarkets) are full of goods, the people dress well, drive cars that are decently maintained on roads that, paved or unpaved, are also well maintained. In spite of many stories of corruption and mismanagement, the cities as well as the towns and villages are green and well cared for compared with similar places in other countries. Riga is the cleanest and greenest large city I have ever seen and even the smallest towns and villages are neat as a pin. Yet the economic crisis hit Latvia hard and inflation is rampant. How the Latvians manage is beyond me.
Monday, August 30
The first week I stayed in the apartment of Gundega Smite, a composer and director of the Latvian Composers Union, in an old area of villas and dachas across the Daugava River in Riga. Karlis picked me up there at 5 am on this, my first free day, and we started our birding adventures in Kemeri National Park right outside of the capital. It is astonishing to find such a major national park so close to the country’s principal city but this was only the first of the many unspoiled forests, meadows, bogs, lakes and shores that we explored. Half of the country’s population lives in Riga (or its environs) and the rest is scattered among three or four fair-sized towns and many small villages and farming settlements that alternate with the truly wild areas. Although the Soviet occupation had many ugly aspects, it actually prevented development in many key areas with the result that much of Lativa – the seashore in particular – remains unspoiled. The sparsely populated countryside – probably never densely populated and perhaps now further depopulated because of the economic crisis – suggests an America or Western Europe that has long since disappeared.
The forests of Latvia are mostly of the northern or boreal type, dominated by Scot’s Pine Pinus sylvestris and birch with spruce and alder as the principal backups.. Where the pine is dominant, the understory is often covered in mosses and is quite open; it is possible to walk right into the forest and (in typical fairy-tale fashion) get quite lost. Growing in the moss are many trolls, water sprites and woodland spirits hiding under the mushrooms and berry bushes. At this time of the year, the forests also also sprout mushroom collectors and berry pickers. This is, famously, the way Latvians help to survive hard times – by picking for their own consumption or to sell (there are roadside stands everywhere selling garden produce along with these wild fruits of the forest). The argument that gathering from the wild helps poor people in bad times would be more convincing if such a high percentage of the mushroom- and berry-pickers did not arrive in their automobiles. I have yet to work out the exact cost of fuel but I can say that a typical fill-up of an ordinary passenger car runs to $60 or $65.
Besides the woodlands, a typical Latvian forest also contain major wetlands in the form of bogs. Such areas feature dead standing trees and dead standing trees attract woodpeckers. The piciforms of Kemeri and environs include all the major species that are common in Latvia except for Wryneck (which may be present somewhere but seemed to have already left the country) and the Green Woodpecker (in any case, rather uncommon in Latvia). Just in this one area of Kemeri, we found the magnificent White-backed, the Grey-headed, the Eurasian Three-toed and the Great Spotted; the Middle Spotted was not very far away. The only major Latvian woodpeckers that I did not see here were the Black (which I saw later) and the Lesser Spotted which I was assured was everywhere to be found (so, of course, I never found it in the wild).
After all this woodpeckering, we went to the shores of Lake Kanieris, a coastal lagoon with a bird tower and major stands of reeds that harbor Bearded Reedlings (formerly known as Bearded Tit; we got a glimpse) and open water areas with Caspian Terns as well as various ducks, herons and gulls. A brief stop on the bay shore (this is Bay of Riga) to look for shore birds produced some Ruffs, Redshanks and Common Sandpiper (the spitting image of our Spotted).
Later we headed east following the River Daugava (Latvia’s principal river) to the town of Plavinas, the home of Gaidis Grandans, a young colleague of Karlis, and Gaidis’s girl friend Gundega. We stayed in their charming old house without running water. The water closet was an old-fashioned outhouse and all household water came from an old-fashioned well in the garden. Besides the pixies and trolls (here in the form of Black Redstarts, Nuthatches, flycatchers, tits, etc.), the garden also featured a traditional sauna and a picnic table with attached grill. After an outdoor dinner, sauna was on the menu. This was a traditional type in its own building with a wood stove stoked up to a good high temperature, heated stones splashed with water and, yes, birch switches for post-sauna flogging. I lasted c. 5 minutes in the heat (thus cleverly avoiding the birch flogging). Afterwards there was shashlik (the local version of what we would call shish kebab) on the grill, eaten like a second dinner after the sauna and washed down with copious amounts of vodka and that ubiquitous Latvian specialty, Black Balsam (don’t ask).
Tuesday, August 31
Day 2, with Gaidis now aboard, began with a visit to the Livani ponds (lots of Eurasian Coot and Least Grebe) and Rozupe, an area of open fields that afforded us great looks at a family of Lesser Spotted Eagles, both shrikes (Great Grey and Red-backed) and Honey Buzzard. A visit to Lake Lubans, Latvia’s largest lake, and a whole series of nearby fish ponds nearby was disappointing in that the ponds were extremely full from the recent rains. However we did find a Red-necked Grebe family, some waterfowl, waders and a few warblers. The high point was undoubtedly when a Reed Warbler – usually one of the most secretive and difficult to observe of birds – popped out of hiding and landed at Karlis’ feet, seemingly stunned. When Karlis tried to catch it, it jumped up, banged against his leg, fluttered around him and then dove back into the reeds. A surrealistic moment of sheer ecstatic surprise.
As I was under the impression that we were going to return to Plavinas, I had left everything except my binoculars there and we had to make a detour back to Gaidis’ house to rescue my things. The day ended at the Mednu Riesti (‘Capercaillie Lek’), a hunting lodge in a remote location bordering Teici Reserve, a National Reserve of forests, bogs and meadows. We were greeted by no less than three calling Pygmy Owls and, later that night and the following morning, by howling wolves.
Wednesday, September 1
The Mednu Riesti Lodge, although somewhat simple in appearance and set-up, has all the comforts: electricity, running water, hot water and even a shower (and a sauna too although we did not investigate this amenity). Gaidis and I took an early morning walk on a track that penetrated the forest (a pair of Black Woodpeckers, a flock of Long-tailed Tits, distant calling Black Grouse). Heavy rain was predicted for later in the day and, as water from a beaver dam was backing onto the track coming in, there was concern that, if something were not done about it, the road would become impassable. Karlis and Gaidis were self-deputized to hack away at the dam to prevent this dire extremity from coming to pass while I passed the time trying to decide if the pipits on the wires coming in were Tree or Meadow..
The rest of the day was spent visiting various sides of the reserve including forest areas and some beautiful open meadows, dry and wet. Hazel Grouse was seen on one of the forest roads but we never did find Black Grouse or Capercaillie, both very tough at this time of the year. Alas, no Capercaillie at Capercaillie Lek or its environs. We did find a variety of open area birds including warblers and even waders. Afterwards, back to the lodge for a second night.
Thursday, September 2
The rain, which had been threatening all day Wednesday, arrived in the evening and continued through until the next morning and we decided to leave the area. Our route back to Plavinas went through Metriena where I spotted (from the car!) a Eurasian Kingfisher perched on a parapet overlooking a pond. Gaidis was dropped off in Plavinas as Karlis and I began the long drive across Latvia to the Baltic coast. After a stop at Engure harbor (a lost Shelduck in the wind and rain) and Mersrags (various shore birds), we called ahead to the guest house in Kolka so that they would have dinner waiting for us. At this guest house, set in a lovely garden and small fruit orchard, we were surprised to look out the window and see a Grey Partridge hen leading her brood across the lawn, first on foot and then in flight. Karlis counted 11 and he tells me that it’s a first record for the species in Kolka. It was also a first record for me for this charismatic bird.
Friday, September 3
Although the rain had stopped, the weather was extremely windy producing a wild scene at the cape. Cape Kolka, where the Baltic meets the Bay of Riga, is considered the exact center of Europe, something of a surprise to those of us who thought we were in Eastern Europe (the explanation is, of course, that Europe extends all the way to the Ural Mountains in Russia). The most surprising birds here (to a North American) were the Sandwich Terns which are common in the North and Baltic Seas. There were just a handful of migrants (the most surprising was a Eurasian Kestrel battling the winds to come in from the bay). Afterwards we took the coastal road from Kolka south, looking – once again without success – for Capercaillie. Although this road goes through a sandy coastal habitat it is, in fact – like so many areas in Latvia – covered with major forests. These forests, dominated by Scotch Pine and birch, have the same open floor covered in mosses and, at this time of the year, also sprout wild berries and wild mushrooms as well as Latvians filling up baskets and pails with these wild fruits of the forest. The return to Riga took us through the Uzava fields and Uzava river delta where we found no less than nine Red-footed Falcons and a few Golden Plovers. Our final stop was at the Satini fish ponds near Saldus where we joined another birder, Janis Jansons, who was able to direct us (by phone with Karlis) to the one pond that had been drained. This pond had exposed mud flats that provided habitat for dozens of Grey Herons, various waterfowl and shore birds including the elusive Temminck’s Stint, another lifer for me. As we were looking at the stint, there was a persistent call coming from the vegetation fringing the pond. It was a rare case of a call that Karlis did not recognize so I decided to try and track down the mystery bird. After managing to get a couple of fleeting glimpses, I decided that the bird was an unusual Phylloscopus warbler (i.e. not a Chiff-chaff or Willow Warbler, the most common Phylloscopus migrants). The contrast between the grayish-green back and the whitish front was notable (there was also a light eye stripe or supercilium but then every Phylloscopus known to science has nearly the same supercilium). “Could this be a Greenish Warbler?”, I asked Karlis. Greenish Warbler (Phylloscopus trochiloides ) is a basically Asian bird that gets into Europe in Latvia but that had presumably already left for its winter home in India. Said Karlis, “We’ll have to listen to the recording back at home to check the call”. Upon which his friend chimed in. “I have the recording right here” and he produced an iPod with an immediate Greenish Warbler playback. Bingo! Not only was it the right call but the playback succeeded in pulling the bird into the bush right next to where we were standing. This particular bush was, as it happened, already occupied by a Chiff-chaff which immediately tried to chase off the intruder. A split second aerial combat ensued bringing both warblers definitively into the open for a moment or two – long enough to confirm the ID! Karlis phoned in the sighting and it was determined that this was the latest record of the species for Latvia, thus putting me, along with my two companions into the Latvian record books.
Sunday, September 5
Fast forward a few days to the weekend when I am once again free. First comes a delightful lunch with Karlis’ family (his mother, his wife and his daughter) in a medieval restaurant in Old Riga. I order a pork haunch which turns out to be a giant piece of pig on a spit covered with pork rind, fat and all. Even after hacking away at it and removing most of the fat and rind, there is enough left over for us to take along for another meal. We will need it for dinner that evening as Karlis and I set off for his hometown of Liepaja on the Baltic and Pape on the southwestern coast by the Lithuanian border. Just back of the port city of Liepaja is a large lake and the extensive Vitini meadows through which we tramp in the (vain) hope of putting up some Great Snipe, one of my target birds that seems, alas, to have left the country. The main challenge here was avoiding the aurochs (a primitive form of cattle including some fierce-looking bulls) and tarpans (wild horses) which graze in these meadows. After putting up a couple of Common Snipe and staggering back to the car, we proceeded to Pape where there is a major ringing (i.e. banding) station and a guest house right next door where we stayed the night. Ham for dinner.
Monday, September 6
I was up at sunrise and walked out into the garden of the guest house to witness the biggest migration movement it has ever been my privilege to observe. There were literally thousands and even tens of thousands of birds moving through at every level from high in the sky to the grasslands, scattered bushes and trees that divided the guest house garden from the birding station. The spectacle was already well underway at dawn and continued all morning although eventually with diminished intensity. Identifying these birds was no easy challenge (I was determined to figure out as much as possible by myself although eventually I needed help from Karlis). The flocks moving through the bushes and trees included warblers (among those that I was able to identify, there was, notably, Barred Warbler and a pair of Marsh Warblers); tits (many flocks of Coal Tits as well as Great Tit, Blue Tit and Crested Tit); flycatchers (Spotted, Red-breasted and Pied); chat thrushes (Common Redstart, Black Redstart, Robin); Tree Creepers; finches and buntings (Yellowhammer, Bullfinch, Chaffinches); Red-backed Shrike. Overhead the birds were equally exciting: a Golden Oriole, Great Spotted Woodpeckers, Honey Buzzard, Sparrow Hawks, etc. Perhaps the most astonishing of all was a count of 130 Nutcrackers, the highest number ever recorded in Latvia (see http://www.ornitofaunistika.com/lvp/lvp_nuccar.htm). All around were dozens of White Wagtails and an occasional Yellow Wagtail. As the migration finally slowed down, Karlis took me to visit the nearby station with its Heligoland trap and mist nets (among the birds in the nets were a Firecrest, a Garden Warbler, and a Lesser Spotted Woodpecker, all birds that I had not succeeded in seeing in the wild).
Afterwards, we crossed the road on the other side and worked our way into the wetlands on the edge of Lake Pape in the ever forlorn hope of finding Great Snipe. No Great Snipe but, to our surprise, a Spotted Crake ambled into view, looked us over and ambled out of sight and back into the reeds. Also seen here: Whitethroat, Lesser Whitethroat and Sedge Warbler.
After taking leave of Pape, we went north through the fields around Nicas (Northern Wheatears, Common Kestrels) and then to Liepaja, the only breeding place for Crested Lark in Latvia (yes we found one on a major road right in town). Then, after making our way through a region of abandoned Soviet installations to a ruined dock area, we found Slavonian Grebe (sounds exotic but it turns out to be the same as our Horned Grebe) and Goosanders aplenty. North of Liepaja, we found a handsome juvenile harrier (almost certainly Montagu’s Harier) and then went to our final stop, Akmenrags or Stone Cape. This turned out to consist of beautiful white sand dunes (not stones at all), a handsome old-fashioned red lighthouse, a White-tailed Sea Eagle, some Little Gulls offshore, and a few waders or shore birds.
On the way back to Riga, Karlis, who is in almost constant telephonic communication with the entire Latvian birding community suddenly announces “that was Gaidis that just went by.” A quick phone call confirms that we did indeed cross paths at the same moment that a Grey Heron came floating majestically overhead. Gaidis was on his way to Pape to spend a week or two working at the banding station at the height of fall migration. He also informed us that he had seen that same Grey Heron.
A footnote: two days later Karlis, Gaidis and a fellow worker netted a Short-toed Tree Creeper (Certhis brachydactyla) at Pape, a first for Latvia. I myself saw several Tree Creepers at Pape; I didn’t dare call any of them Short-toed. But who knows?....
SPECIES LIST
This list follows the Birds of Europe, Second Edition, by Lars Svensson, Killian Mullarney and Dan Zetterstrom (Princeton/HarperCollins 2009).
Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) – the common swan in most locations

Whooper Swan (Cygnus cygnus) – fish ponds near Lubans Lake 8/31/10; fish ponds on way back to Riga 9/3/10

(Common) Shelduck (Tadorna tadorna) – Engure 9/2/10

Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) – on water almost everywhere

Gadwall (A. strepera) – Kanieris Lake 8/30/10

(Northern) Pintail (A. acuta) – Kanieris Lake 8/30/10

(Northern) Shoveler (A. clypeata) – Kanieris Lake 8/30/10

(Eurasian) Wigeon (A. penelope) – widespread

(Eurasian) Teal (A. crecca) – several localities

Garganey (A. querquedula) – one bird in one of the Kvapani fish ponds near Lake Lubans 8/31/10

(Common) Pochard (Aythya ferina) – Kanieris Lake 8/30/10

Tufted Duck (A. fulifula) – Akmenrags

Common Scoter (Melanitta nigra) – flocks off Kolka 9/3/10

(Common) Goldeneye (Bucephala clangula) – coast off Liepaja 9/6/10

Common Merganser (Goosander) (Mergus merganser) – coast off Liepaja 9/6/10

*Hazel Grouse (Tetraste bonasia) – forest near Teici Nature Reserve (near Lubana) 9/1/10

*Grey Partridge (Perdix perdix) – from window of Kolka guest house; hen with brood of 11 chicks; a new record for Kolka 9/3/10

Horned (Slavonian) Grebe (Podiceps auritus) – coast near Liepaja 9/6/10

Red-necked Grebe (P. grisegena) – fish pond near Lake Lubans (Zvejsala) 8/31/10

Little Grebe (Tachybaptus ruficollis) – Livani Ponds 8/31/10

Great Cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo) – on all larger bodies of water

Great Egret (Casmerodius or Ardea alba) – quite common in wet areas

Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea) – common, even numerous, on or by all larger bodies of water and sometimes in upland fields

[White Stork (Ciconia ciconia)] – nests everywhere but only one bird seen flying by Karlis on road from Riga to Plavinas 8/30/10]

White-tailed Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) – several places on Baltic coast including Lake Kanieris 8/30/10; Alkmenrags 9/6/10

Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) – Zvejsala fish ponds 8/31/10

*Lesser Spotted Eagle (Aquila pomarina) – 3 birds (a family) well seen on road to Teici (Rozupe area) 8/31/10; 2 other birds seen in the next day or two in E. Latvia

(Western) Marsh Harrier (Circus aeruginosus) – nearly all major wetland areas

Montagu’s Harrier (C. pygargus) – 2 birds seen; one in fields near Lake Lubans, the second in fields n. of Liepaja [in the case of this latter bird, the possibility of Pallid Harrier, C. macrourus, was not entirely ruled out) 9/6/10

Common Buzzard (Buteo buteo) – most common raptor; open fields everywhere

(European) Honey Buzzard (Pernis apivorus) – road to Teici 8/31/10; Pape 9/6/10

(Eurasian) Sparrow Hawk (Accipiter nisus) – widespread; numbers in migration at Pape 9/6/10

(Common) Kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) – off Kolka Cape 9/3/10; Nicas fields south of Liepaja 9/6/10

Red-footed Falcon (F. vespertinus) – numbers in many open localities (in migration)

(Eurasian) Hobby (F. subbuteo) – numbers in many open localities (same fields as preceding)

Spotted Crake (Porzana porzana) – Pape Lake marsh 9/6/10

Eurasian Coot (Fulica atra) – several locations, notably Livani ponds 8/31/10

Common Crane (Grus grus) – flocks flying and on ground in open fields in several locations

(Common) Ringed Plover (Charadrius hiaticula) – wet ponds in open fields in several locations

Black-bellied (Grey) Plover (Pluvialis squatarola) – shore at Alkmenrags 9/6/10

European Golden Plover (P. apricaria) – 2 or 3 upland locations; 5+ in Uzava fields 9/3/10

Northern Lapwing (Vanellus vanellus) – flocks at several upland locations

Sanderling (Calidris alba) – shore at Akmenrags 9/6/10

Dunlin (Calidris alp;ina) – widespread at upland locations

Curlew Sandpiper (C. ferruginea) – widespread at upland locations

*Temminck’s Stint (C. temminckii) – 2 birds at Satini fish ponds 9/3/10

Little Stint (C. minuta) – widespread in small numbers at various upland locations

Common Sandpiper (Actitis hypoleucos) – several birds at upland locations

(Common) Redshank (Tringa totanus) – several birds on Riga Bay shore near Jurmala 8/30/10

(Common) Greenshank (Tringa nebularia) – Riga Bay shore near Jurmala 8/30/10; Nicas fields south of Liepaja 9/6/10

(Eurasian) Curlew (Numenius arquata) – several upland locations including fields next to Lake Lubans 8/31/10

(Common) Snipe (Gallinago gallinago) – several wetland locations including Vitini meadows 9/5/10

Ruff (Philomachus pugnax) – common on many upland locations

Black-headed Gull (Chroicocephalus ridibundus) – very common everywhere except forest

Common (Mew) Gull (Larus canus) – Latvia is one of the few places I have been where the Common Gull is truly common; seen in many environments particularly upland agricultural areas; the equivalent of our Ring-billed Gull

(European) Herring Gull (L. argentatus) – common species in Latvia (now separated from the American Herring Gull which is L. smithsonianus)

Great Black-backed Gull (L. marinus) – one juvenile-plumaged bird seen on coast

Lesser Black-backed Gull (L. fuscus) – a few seen on coast

Little Gull (Hydrocoloeus minutus) – some numbers seen off coast at Alkmenrags 9/6/10

Sandwich Tern (Sterna sandvicensis) – several birds @ Cape Kolka 9/3/10 [note that in Europe this tern is a northern species]

Common Tern (S. hirundo) – some numbers seen @ Cape Kolka and on Baltic coast

Caspian Tern (Hydroprogne caspia) – numbers @ Lake Kanieris 8/30/10

Rock Dove (Feral Pigeon) (Columba livia) – common urban bird as everywhere

Stock Dove (C. oenas) – several birds in various locations

Wood Pigeon (C. palumbus) – common in many locations

(Eurasian) Turtle Dove (Streptopelia tutur) – 2 or 3 sightings of birds sitting on wires

Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) – 2 or 3 birds in Lake Lubans area 8/31/10?

H(Eurasian) Pygmy Owl (Glaucidium passerinum) – heard only; 3 birds at the edge of the forest at the Teici Reserve, evening of 8/31/10

(European) Nightjar (Caprimulgus europaeus) – one bird flushed up from the road on the road to Pape 9/5/10

(Common) Swift (Apus apus) – small numbers seen in several locations

(Common) Kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) – one bird seen sitting on a parapet jutting out from a bridge at Metriena 9/2/10

Black Woodpecker (Dryocopus martius) – a pair at the edge of the Teici forest by the hunting lodge 9/1/10

Grey-headed Woodpecker (Picus canus) – flooded forest at Kemeri 8/30/10

Great Spotted Woodpecker (Dendrocopos major) – most common woodpecker; many locations from Kemeri to Pape

Middle Spotted Woodpecker (D. medius) – forest @ Kemeri 8/30/10

White-backed Woodpecker (D. leucotos) – flooded forest @ Kemeri 8/30/10

HLesser Spotted Woodpecker (D. minor)] – supposedly a very common woodpecker but the only one seen was a mist-netted bird at Pape! Heard at Teici 9/1/10

*Eurasian Three-toed Woodpecker (Picoides tridactylus) – forest @ Kemeri 8/30/10

(Common) Skylark (Alauda arvensis) – fairly common in open fields

Crested Lark (Galerida cristata) – a single bird seen on a busy street in Liepaja (this is the only known breeding locale for this species in Latvia)

HWoodlark (Lulula arborea) – at least two birds heard passing over our heads on road to Teici (Rozupe area)

Bank Swallow (Sand Martin) (Riparia riparia) – a few seen in large swallow flocks

Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica) – everywhere; perhaps the most common bird seen

(Common) House Martin (Delichon urbicum) – a few seen in large swallow flocks

Meadow Pipit ( Anthus pratensis) – common in open areas

Tree Pipit (A. trivialis) – fairly common in open areas

White Wagtail (Motacilla alba) – abundant everywhere on or near open ground

Yellow Wagtail (M. flava) – small number seen or heard in open areas

HDunnock (Prunella modularis) – at least one bird heard at Teici Hunting Lodge 9/1/10

(European) Robin (Erithacus rubecula) – widespread

(Common) Redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) – Riga, Pape

Black Redstart (P. ochruros) – several locations (Plavinas, Pape, etc.)

Northern Wheatear (Oenanthe oenanthe) – widespread, mostly on roadsides in open areas

Whinchat (Saxicola rubetra) – 2 birds on wires @ Degumnieki fields near Lake Lubans 9/31/10

Song Thrush (Turdus philomelos) – 2 or 3 locations

Redwing (T. iliacus) – Pape 9/6/10

Mistle Thrush (T. viscivorus) – several locations

Fieldfare (T. pilaris) – half a dozen birds on wires on a road north of Liapaja

(Common) Blackbird (T. merula) – common and widespread

Barred Warbler (Sylvia nisoria) – one bird seen at Pape (without noticeable barring but otherwise like an adult) 9/6/10

[Garden Warbler (S. borin) – one bird caught in mist net @ Pape 9/6/10]

Blackcap (S. atricapilla) – m. and f. seen at Pape 9/6/10; 1 or 2 birds elsewhere

(Common) Whitethroat (S. communis) – 1 bird seen in bushes at marsh by Pape Lake 9/6/10

Lesser Whitethroat (S. curruca) – 1 bird seen in bushes at marsh opposite Pape Lake 9/6/10

Sedge Warbler (Acrocephalus schoenobaenus) – seen in two places; vegetation by fish ponds near Lake Lubans 8/31/10 and at edge of marsh opposite Pape Lake 9/6/10

(European) Reed Warbler (A. scirpaceus) – 1 bird came out of the reeds by the Zvejsala fish ponds near Lake Lubans and had a scrape with Karlis before vanishing back into the reeds 8/31/10

Marsh Warbler (A. palustris) – two migratory birds in vegetation back of pond at Pape Guest House 9/6/10

Willow Warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus) – common and widespread migrant; many at Pape

(Common) Chiff-chaff (P. collybita) – common and widespread migrant everywhere

Greenish Warbler (P. trochiloides) – 1 calling bird by the Satini fish ponds discovered and ID’d by me; subsequently verified by Karlis and his friend with an iPod; this was the latest record for Latvia and put me in the Latvian record book! 9/3/10 See www.ornitofaunistika.com/lvp/lvp_phydes.htm

Goldcrest (Regulus regulus) – widespread in pine forests

[Firecrest (R. ignicapilla) – mist net @ Pape 9/6/10]

(Eurasian) Wren (Troglodytes troglodytes) – widespread

Spotted Flycatcher (Muscicapidae striata) – widespread; many migrants @ Pape 9/6/10

Red-breasted Flycatcher (Ficedula parvus) – widespread; migrants @ Pape 9/6/10

Pied Flycatcher (F. hypoleuca) – at least one @ Pape 9/6/10

Great Tit (Parus major) – widespread; common migrant

Coal Tit (Periparus ater) – many flocks of 20-30 birds moving through Pape, perhaps many hundreds in all 9/6/10 (this bird is considered resident in Europe but Siberian birds are known to migrate in large numbers in certain years)

(European) Blue Tit (Cyanistes caeruleus) – common; many birds @ Pape 9/6/10

Crested Tit (Lophophanes cristatus) – flocks in pine forests @ Teici 9/1/10 and elsewhere

Willow Tit (Poecile montanus) – widespread

Long-tailed Tit (Aegithalus caudatus) – flocks seen in 2 or 3 places including Teici forest 9/1/10

Bearded Reedling (Tit or Parrotbill) (Panurus biarmicus) – seen in reeds @ Kanieris Lake 8/30/10; heard elsewhere

(Eurasian) Nuthatch (Sitta europaea) – widespread in wooded habitats

(Eurasian) Treecreeper (Certhia familiaris) – Kemeri Forest 8/30/10; several birds at Pape, presumably all this species, in the great migrant rush 9/6/20. P.S.: a Short-toed Treecreeper was netted by Karlis, Gaidis and a co-worker two days later, a first for Latvia

Great Grey (Northern) Shrike (Lanius excubitor) – seen in several places, most notably @ Rozupe 8/31/10; very closely related to our Northern Shrike and generally considered the same species

Red-backed Shrike (L. colluria) – Most common shrike; populations are falling elsewhere but are apparently stable in Latvia (however many of the birds seen may have been migrants)

(Common) Magpie (Pica pica) – common and widespread

(Eurasian) Jay (Garrulus glandarius) – very common and widespread in all wooded areas; often seen flying in pairs or small groups

(Spotted) Nutcracker (Nucifraga caryocatactus) – seen in 2 or 3 places, notably at Pape where 130s birds were counted by Karlis (a record for Latvia) flying at medium to high levels 9/6/10; in Europe this is usually considered a resident bird but it would appear that the seed crop failed in the north (in Scandinavia, European Russia or Siberia) provoking this invasion

(Western) Jackdaw (Corvus monedula) – common in towns and villages

Rook (C. frugilegus) – least common of the local crows but seen in agricultural areas in several places mostly in W. Latvia

Hooded Crow (C. cornis) – Abundant everywhere

(Common) Raven (C corax) – Abundant everywhere; almost as common as the Hooded Crow

(Common) Starling (Sturnus vulgaris) – Abundant; in large flocks everywhere

(Eurasian) Golden Oriole (Oriolus oriolus) – one bird flying over Pape in migration 9/6/10

House Sparrow (Passer domesticus) – Abundant near human habitation

(Eurasian) Tree Sparrow (P. montanus) – not as common as above but often found in villages and agricultural areas in small flocks or colonies

(Common) Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs) – Very common to abundant and widespread in many habitats

(Common) Linnet (Carduelis cannabina) – flocks in many places

(European) Goldfinch (C. carduelis) – flocks in many places

(European) Greenfinch (Chloris chloris) – widespread

(Eurasian) Siskin (Carduelis spinus) – many flocks seen or heard in various locations including forest edge

(European) Serin (Serinus serinus) – birds seen on a wire on road north of Liepaja 9/6/10

(Eurasian) Bullfinch (Pyrrhula pyrrhula) – birds heard in several localities; well seen by me only @ Pape 9/6/10

Hawfinch (Coccothraustes coccothraustes) – 2 or 3 birds flushed at roadside on road north of Liepaja; seen by me (without binoculars) flying away; the pattern of the upper parts in flight is unmistakeable 9/6/10

HCommon Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra) – heard only in flight over Pape 9/6/10

Reed Bunting (Emberiza schoeiclus) – seen and heard in several wetlands

Yellowhammer (E. citrinella) – most common of the buntings; many @ Pape 9/6/10

146 species

5 heard only

5 life birds

OTHER ANIMALS

Red Squirrel

small unidentified rodents (voles?)

Roe Deer

Red Fox

Raccoon Dog

Grey Wolf (heard only)

a European Beaver dam was partially dismantled by Karlis and Gaydis to avoid flooding the entrance road into the Capercaillie Lek Hunting Lodge

PO Box 775

East Quogue NY 11942
631 653-5236
www.ericsalzman.com