Thursday, June 11, 2020

SSBC Social Distancing KEEP CALM AND BIRD ON! Virtual “Walk,” JUNE 7, 2020


 

Note: To those who are unfamiliar, these social distancing “walks” are not in-person walks but rather a group chat where members share their experiences for the morning and stay connected. South Shore Bird Club is strict about (and very impressed by its members) adhering to social distancing guidelines, which includes avoiding populated areas, large groups, and close social interaction. We fully support members enjoying the healing and mindfulness that nature can provide and want to foster a social environment for those who may feel isolated- these walks are intended to achieve both of these goals with safety at the forefront of our mission.

 

On a day marked by ongoing protests against racism in the U.S. and a persistent global coronavirus pandemic, 20 of us birded mostly apart and yet shared our experiences through text messages. This was our 10th virtual walk and we collectively identified 124 species (2,534 individual birds) and submitted 31 checklists to ebird. 

 

Our sightings spanned from Cape Cod to Maine, or as Mary Jo put it, “a nice stretch of territory!”  The change of pace, from exhilarating migration madness to the liberating days of summer, was palpable. 

 

The team quickly started to spot breeding birds.  Glenn confirmed two new breeding birds for his Bird Street Conservation Area list in Stoughton: Northern Waterthrush and Hermit Thrush.  Pete snagged looks at a Barred Owl in Hockamock Swamp, the largest freshwater wetland in Massachusetts, and heard 11 singing Northern Waterthrush. 

 

On Cape Cod, Keelin enthused about the “gorgeous morning” while listening to an Acadian Flycatcher “conversation” near a nest at the South Sandwich Conservation area.  Mary Jo had nesting Willets, Osprey, Least Terns and Piping Plovers on West Dennis Beach.  Nate chimed in that he had fallen and was temporarily out of commission but would bird vicariously through our chats. Had he been climbing a cell tower to peek at Raven babies?! We may never know.  

 

Three of us--Kathy in Hingham and Carol and Moe in Middleboro-- inspected substantial woodpecker holes that might have been used for nesting, feeding young or extracting food. 

 

There was high drama at Allen’s Pond in Dartmouth: Steven and Christine watched as two Great Black-backed Gulls “were feeding on Willet hatchlings, gobbled up one after the other whole and seemingly alive.” Then a Herring Gull flew by with a {Willet’s??} egg in its bill!  Avian aggression was also front and center at Brownfield Bog in Maine where Joe saw an Eastern Kingbird drive off two crows by “sitting right on their backs in flight.” The crows did not return.  

 

Last week we heard about a dog running amok off leash in the Central Park Ramble.  This week, Lisa posted a photo of unleashed deer meandering across a beach after sunrise in Plymouth County.  

 

For me, one of the best parts of birding is keeping eyes peeled for other forms of life. Elizabeth gets the humanitarian award for her efforts to rescue an Eastern Box Turtle from its likely demise on a busy Falmouth road.  Our collective gaze honed in on an architectural masterpiece of a mushroom, a Rosy Maple Moth, a Bald-faced Hornet the size of a hummingbird (kidding, sort of), a Mourning Cloak Butterfly, a Lady’s Slipper Orchid and a dazzling native thistle that supports bees and birds.  

 

Happy birding, 

Kim 

 



             Pleated Inkcap Mushroom, Parasola plicatilis, Kathy Rawdon  

                In the life-is-short category, this tiny mushroom appears after rain, releases spores, and within 24 hours is gone.  





Rosy Maple Moth, Dryocampa rubicunda, Kathy Rawdon 





                                                                                     I see you, Kim Wylie





                                                

                                                               Eastern Box Turtle, under threat in Massachusetts from habitat destruction, Elizabeth Clemmey




     

                                                                                 EpiPen, anyone?   Mike Nolan




                                                                          

                                                                                      The egg thief!  Steven Whitebread  




                                                        

                                                                Yellow Thistle, Cirsium horridulum, Kim Wylie

                                                           A native plant found in New England, especially near salt marshes. 







Species Name

Species Count

Sample Size

Canada Goose

94

8

Mute Swan

24

3

Wood Duck

2

1

Mallard

17

6

American Black Duck

6

1

Common Eider

36

4

Common Merganser

1

1

duck sp.

1

1

Wild Turkey

8

5

Mourning Dove

45

18

Yellow-billed Cuckoo

4

4

Black-billed Cuckoo

1

1

Chimney Swift

12

6

Ruby-throated Hummingbird

5

5

Sandhill Crane

1

1

Piping Plover

2

1

Killdeer

7

3

White-rumped Sandpiper

3

1

Semipalmated Sandpiper

2

1

Willet

34

4

Laughing Gull

7

2

Herring Gull

55

11

Great Black-backed Gull

18

5

Least Tern

11

1

Roseate Tern

8

1

Common Tern

25

1

tern sp.

22

1

Common Loon

5

2

Double-crested Cormorant

50

9

Great Blue Heron

10

5

Great Egret

14

4

Snowy Egret

11

5

Green Heron

6

4

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron

1

1

Black Vulture

1

1

Turkey Vulture

8

6

Osprey

34

12

Cooper's Hawk

1

1

Bald Eagle

1

1

Red-shouldered Hawk

1

1

Broad-winged Hawk

3

3

Red-tailed Hawk

6

5

Barred Owl

1

1

Belted Kingfisher

5

5

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

2

2

Red-bellied Woodpecker

13

9

Downy Woodpecker

7

6

Hairy Woodpecker

4

3

Pileated Woodpecker

1

1

Northern Flicker

13

7

Eastern Wood-Pewee

21

7

Acadian Flycatcher

2

1

Alder Flycatcher

1

1

Willow Flycatcher

6

3

Eastern Phoebe

5

5

Great Crested Flycatcher

31

15

Eastern Kingbird

12

9

flycatcher sp. (Tyrannidae sp.)

1

1

White-eyed Vireo

1

1

Warbling Vireo

6

4

Red-eyed Vireo

39

17

Blue Jay

40

14

American Crow

49

19

Fish Crow

6

5

Common Raven

1

1

Black-capped Chickadee

71

17

Tufted Titmouse

57

16

Northern Rough-winged Swallow

22

3

Purple Martin

2

1

Tree Swallow

57

11

Bank Swallow

20

2

Barn Swallow

42

11

Red-breasted Nuthatch

2

2

White-breasted Nuthatch

19

11

Brown Creeper

5

2

Blue-gray Gnatcatcher

13

7

House Wren

22

10

Carolina Wren

18

13

European Starling

41

4

Gray Catbird

107

17

Brown Thrasher

1

1

Northern Mockingbird

5

3

Eastern Bluebird

1

1

Veery

38

9

Hermit Thrush

3

2

Wood Thrush

4

4

American Robin

77

20

Cedar Waxwing

65

11

House Sparrow

9

6

House Finch

11

7

American Goldfinch

54

17

Chipping Sparrow

46

13

Field Sparrow

2

1

Seaside Sparrow

1

1

Saltmarsh Sparrow

4

3

Savannah Sparrow

1

1

Song Sparrow

67

20

Swamp Sparrow

1

1

Eastern Towhee

64

16

Bobolink

7

2

Orchard Oriole

1

1

Baltimore Oriole

28

15

Red-winged Blackbird

133

22

Brown-headed Cowbird

22

11

Common Grackle

135

19

Ovenbird

125

13

Worm-eating Warbler

1

1

Northern Waterthrush

15

3

Louisiana/Northern Waterthrush

1

1

Blue-winged Warbler

6

3

Black-and-white Warbler

21

10

Common Yellowthroat

43

17

American Redstart

17

6

Northern Parula

1

1

Blackburnian Warbler

5

1

Yellow Warbler

65

16

Chestnut-sided Warbler

1

1

Black-throated Blue Warbler

1

1

Pine Warbler

17

10

Prairie Warbler

8

3

Black-throated Green Warbler

2

2

Scarlet Tanager

10

5

Northern Cardinal

45

18

Rose-breasted Grosbeak

2

2

 



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