Saturday, June 7, 2025

Rainy Day in PA

 After the storms of yesterday afternoon and evening, Saturday is just drizzly rain. It isn't just the wet either, it's raining Grackles and Catalpa Flowers. I don't know where all these Grackles came from but  they're taking over the feeder and the Starlings and Blue Jays can hardly get a look in. The Catbirds slipped in occasionally and the Blue Jays just seemed intimidated by the horde of squawky Grackles. I was hoping for the Red-headed but got the Red-bellied instead.

Common Grackle
Common Grackle
Common Grackle
Gray Catbird
Gray Catbird
Gray Catbird
Blue Jay
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Catalpa Flowers
Catalpa Tree

Thursday, June 5, 2025

25 to 1

 I don't mean the time, I mean that's about my rate of acceptable images this morning in trying to photograph the Swallows and Martins at Middle Creek. I am way out of practice, I need to find some slower moving Gulls and Terns to hone my Bird in Flight skills. Saying that, these birds are not the easiest to capture in flight, they're fast, erratic and small. I need to get out more. maybe Monday I'll pop down to Bombay Hook in Delaware with a bit of luck.

Barn Swallow


Eastern Kingbird
Purple Martin
Tree Swallow
Tree Swallow
Tree Swallow
Tree Swallow

Friday, May 23, 2025

If you build it, they will come.

The title is an adapted line from a Kevin Costner movie Field of Dreams about Baseball and this farmer that builds a Baseball pitch in his cornfield. Don't get me wrong, I'd rather sit and watch the grass grow than watch Baseball, or any other ball sports for that matter. In this context it's referring to my revised bird feeder setup. I'm hearing and catching a glimpse of the Red-headed Woodpecker and I was hoping it would come down to the feeder setup as it did a couple of years ago. 

Red-headed Woodpecker

A couple of years ago



I altered the feeder setup using a birch log that has been lying under the deck. It has a hollowed out cup in the top and a couple of bored out holes for the bird suet cake I make. Plenty of visitors but no Red-headed Woodpecker, the Red-bellied Woodpecker came a few times in the hour that I was photographing. One of the Flickers made a flyby but didn't land. There were hordes of gray juvenile Starlings wanting feeding from their parents, Grackles, Blue Jays and an assortment of other residents of the backyard.
Blue Jay
Starling (juvenile)
Gray Catbird
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Blue jay
Mourning Dove
Common Grackle
Common Grackle

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Another Crappy May Migration

 I really look forward to springtime migration through the yard but this year has continued the run of crappy years, 2023,2024 and now 2025. May 2022 was phenomenal, 19 species of warbler in one day and I photographed 12 of them. This year following reasonable overnight migration there have been plenty of birds in the early morning on some days, none of them stick around for me to photograph at the waterfall in the afternoons when the light is behind me. Last evening I gave it a go and an obliging Common Yellowthroat made it 3 warblers for the year 😞 The summer residents were frequent bathers and I did see a Warbling Vireo but it never dropped down where I could photograph it. 

American Robin
Baltimore Oriole
Common Yellowthroat
Common Yellowthroat
Starling
Gray Catbird
Common Grackle

Friday, May 16, 2025

The Quest for the Red Knot (an epic saga).

 I've had it all planned out for months, the Quest for the Red Knot that is. I/we have tried for at least 3 years and failed miserably to see these lovely shorebirds. In the Delaware Bay around the full moon in May at High Tide the Horseshoe Crabs come ashore to lay their eggs. The Red Knot time their arrival in the Delaware Bay to coincide with the Horseshoe Crab spawning which is their final stopover on their Northward migration from as far away as Tierra del Fuego at the very bottom of South America. Brian and I left PA way before the first Sparrow fart at 2:45AM heading South to Delaware’s Slaughter Beach and Mispillion Inlet at the DuPont Nature Centre. The weather forecast was not great when I had looked everyday leading up to our visit which was timed to arrive at low tide which was just before 6AM. What I had not anticipated was the thick fog advisory in the forecast at 2:15AM when I woke. It wasn't too bad and didn’t affect the 3 hour drive down. Slaughter Beach has many beach access point and we stopped at several of them and while we saw lots of shorebirds Red Knot were not amongst them. While walking along the beach we flipped over as many Horseshoe Crabs that we could and it was heartening to see them making tracks in the sand back towards the incoming tide. 

At one point it started raining so we headed up to the nearby DuPont Nature Centre as we knew they had a partially covered deck where we could shelter and continue on the quest. The drive to the Centre alongside the Cedar Creek was heaving with Short-billed Dowitcher, Ruddy Turnstones, and a variety of Sandpipers. The light was not great in the flat lighting due to the cloud cover and fog but it was what it was. No Red Knot unfortunately. When the short lived shower stopped we headed back down to Slaughter Beach as far as we could go but again no Red Knot. Back to the DuPont Nature Centre which opened at 9AM for another scan for the elusive Red Knot. The lovely young ladies in the Nature Centre came to the rescue by finding a couple of birds for us. OK, it was not exactly what we expected as our first glimpse of the birds was via a remote controlled camera on the breakwater beach about 1/4 of a mile away! We knew they were there though and Brian scanning through the shorebirds soon found more so he was a happy bunny. Many thanks to the young ladies at the DuPont Nature Centre 👍

Leaving there we headed North to Port Mahon where we saw a lots of Cormorants, Gulls and a few assorted Shorebirds and noisy Ospreys. 

Next stop on our return journey was at Bombay Hook where the little midges were the proverbial pain in the ass. When the sun did briefly break through the cloud cover out came the flies so we hurried back to the car. Next stop was at Woodland Beach which was nice but apart from a few Grackles and Red-winged Blackbird pretty fruitless. From there home, after an uneventful drive we got there after a 14 hour day and I was eager to see what my several thousand photos were like. 


Horseshoe Crab
Horseshoe Crab

Short-billed Dowitcher
Short-billed Dowitcher
Ruddy Turnstone
Clapper Rail
Ruddy Turnstone
Short-billed Dowitcher
Short-billed Dowitcher
Eastern Kingbird
Dunlin
Short-billed Dowitcher
Short-billed Dowitcher
Least Sandpiper

Spotted Sandpiper
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Snapping Turtle
Marsh Wren
Snapping Turtle