This BirdingPI.com Millcreek Bird Alert(TM) brought to you by Mountain Dew(R) CODE RED(R) beverage. Looking for something cool and refreshing for the upcoming spring and summer? Look no further than the effervescent, cherry-burst flavor of CODE RED(R)! Nothing refreshes more after a hard day of nature.
Dateline: 2 April 2022
Much excitement today spotting the season’s first Brown-headed Cowbirds in Millcreek Twp (“Gateway to Presque Isle State Park”)! Four individual birds, three males and what appeared to be a female. (Other possibility, juvenile.)
All photos taken at a considerable distance, but hopefully close enough to see the distinctive brown head and iridescent black body (of the males). Looks like Erie is back in action for spring!
The last few mornings, well before sunrise (e.g., 5:00 AM – 6:00 AM), staff have noticed a recurring, almost insect-like call outside BirdingPI.com headquarters in Millcreek Twp, at a time of year in the Erie area when no, or few, insects are present (due to recent and ongoing below-freezing temperatures). A call very similar to that recently audially witnessed out at Presque Isle State Park and identified (via two sightings and the ChirpOMatic iOS app) as an American Woodcock.
Audio capture and analysis again this morning, again using ChirpOMatic, quickly indicated American Woodcock, in the “Almost Certainly” category:
A clip of the recording is copied above – much better quality than at Presque Isle. (Turn the volume way up.)
No reason American Woodcock wouldn’t be present in Millcreek Twp, but it’s still unprecedented for BirdingPI.com. This is very exciting.
Breaking out a Nikon Z5 with a Nikon 200-500mm f5.6 lens, staff tried to capture some low-light shots in case the bird in question was perched in the open. Which, admittedly, is unlikely considering that Woodcocks mostly stick to the underbrush. The following are ‘dialed all the way up’ for brightness and exposure in post-production:
Further investigation and research is warranted for confirming – hopefully via pictures – this fascinating occurrence!
[Editor’s note: despite appearances, this post is not an April Fool’s joke. That being said, handheld use of a Nikon Z5 for ‘night vision’ photos is completely ridiculous.]
[Photo Editor’s note: to avoid confusion, the Nikon Z5 takes excellent low-light photos when used with a tripod/stabilization, an appropriate lens, and the right settings.]
Next up, the beautiful Northern Cardinal, Erie’s “reddest bird you’re likely to see.” (Sorry, lovely-but-elusive Scarlet Tanager.) Staff pictures taken at various times over the last couple months.
A windy day at West Pier, Presque Isle State Park:
They say if you see a one-legged gull on Lake Erie, it’s rough seas ahead. So it was with a sense of foreboding that the following were captured at West Pier on Saturday (26 March 2022), at Presque Isle State Park:
Lots of debate at BirdingPI.com whether pictures of a physically-challenged gull are exploitative. Finally, decided it falls into the “things in nature” category, and is therefore journalistically relevant. If it makes folks feel better (yes, seeing a one-legged gull is distressing), the gull seemed to be doing just fine.
Anyway, the weather Saturday in Erie was generally poor. Overcast/cloudy, periodic rain and light snow, heavy wet snow later in the day. Cold and windy. Conditions at Presque Isle as expected – locally muddy or flooded in the wet spots, e.g., as reported last week.
Bird activity as expected – gulls, geese, ducks. Very little activity in the interior.
After some time at West Pier, and a brief stop at the Pine Tree Trail (no activity to speak of), time to hit Thompson Bay. Various ducks on site (e.g., Mergansers, Buffleheads, and Canvasbacks), plus a Belted Kingfisher flying about in the snow:
Next, on to Long Pond, but conditions were rough with the overcast, wind, and snow/rain. Happy to see a pair of Northern Shovelers still!
Thankfully, there was no boating involved, but Saturday night turned colder, with freezing rain, snow, and wind, which persisted into Sunday. Sunday was overcast, cold, windy, and snowy all day long – hints of sun and blue sky periodically, in between the whiteout and snow squalls. Quite a winter storm, although perhaps a bit “warmer” than it would have been back in January.
Bird activity very sporadic – Cardinals, Blue Jays, Robins, Crows, etc.
Now on to part 2 of BirdingPI.com’s occasional spotlight on Erie’s more common bird denizens. In this case, the lovely American Robin! Always lots (and lots) of Robins around during the winter-to-spring transition.
These pictures mostly taken near Thompson Bay at Presque Isle State Park over the last few weeks.
Following from Millcreek Twp during the last snow:
Wow, so much going on in Erie, PA generally, and Presque Isle State Park in particular, don’t even know where to begin. BirdingPI.com “PI Bird Alert”(TM)? Weekend update? Wishes for a happy spring?
As a preview of sorts, the birding notables: (i) American Woodcock (WHAT???); (ii) Green-winged Teal (!); Red-breasted Merganser (also !)
But first, with spring here and the snow melted, time to get back to regular trail updates. Plus weather; always about the weather in Erie. Friday, seasonably warm, mostly sunny, spring-like, nice day; Saturday, rain, an hour-and-a-half of sunshine around 11 AM (and humid), then periodic rain the rest of the day; Sunday, colder, rain and sleet in the AM, windy. Eased up with hints of hazy sun and blue sky after noon, windy, still cold, mostly sunny by evening. Everything rather waterlogged, moderately brutal wind chill off Lake Erie. Lake Erie totally unfrozen.
Trails, locally muddy and flooded:
Canoe Portage Trail: good shape
Duck Pond Trail: locally very muddy
Long Pond Trail, east trailhead: two large downed trees, but passable; swamp crossing easily passable
Long Pond Trail, west trailhead: very muddy, flooded
Sidewalk Trail, west trailhead: good shape
Marsh Trail: flooded
Sidewalk Trail, east trailhead: flooded and impassible at pond crossover
Dead Pond Trail, west end: muddy and locally flooded
Dead Pond Trail, east end: locally muddy
Pine Tree Trail: good shape, except for downed tree by east trailhead
Thompson Bay access trails: good shape
B-Trail: flooded
A-Trail: Muddy and slippery across swamp ‘bridge:’
Finally, on to some birds. First up, the back bay by Feather Observation Platform. Ducks on the bay, and a lovely Belted Kingfisher on the lagoon:
Of note, Red-breasted Mergansers on both the back bay and lake. Might have seem some previously, but this is the first confirmation via pictures. See ID hint below.
Next, time to hit the beach for some wind chill! By one of the rock breakwaters by Presque Isle Lighthouse (see above), startled a Red-breasted Merganser. Might have gotten better shots but for removing the lens cap, picking up the lens cap after dropping it by the water, turning on camera, focusing, etc. (Expect the unexpected!)
Time for a BirdingPI.com “bird ID” moment(TM). Red-breasted Merganser, male. Note the tufts on the back of the head (downwards-facing arrow), distinct white spots on black field on shoulder (upwards-facing arrow), and dark-ish/red coloration on breast (right-facing arrow):
Next up, Thompson Bay. Many Canada Geese out and about, including this one at Thompson Circle:
Traversing past the Thompson Bay swamp/pond by Access Trail #1 (https://birdingpi.com/872-2/), no better happy tiding of spring than amazing Green-winged Teals! Maybe a dozen in total.
Distinguishing feature from Common (Eurasian) Teals: distinctive vertical white stripe on the male’s shoulder.
The following is obscured and slightly out of focus, but shows where “green-winged” originates:
The Teals flew off north; time to head along the Duck Blind Trail towards the north end of the swamp/pond. Of all things, what flushes out of the thick underbrush but an American Woodcock! Barely out in the open for several seconds, but saw it long enough to note the buffy color and distinctively long bill, like a Snipe or Dowitcher. Heard its call soon thereafter, ID confirmed via Chirp-o-matic. (http://www.chirpomatic.com/ – no affiliation, although Chirp-o-matic is great).
Audio above is super noisy with the wind, but including it for full coverage + no pictures. Flushed the Woodcock again for a brief glimpse later, but if you can see the Woodcock, it’s seen you already and isn’t hanging around. (Time to set up camp off Thompson Circle!)
After seeing a Woodcock, pretty much the day is already an “A+,” poor weather notwithstanding. Even so, ‘icing on the cake’ to sneak up on a female (or juvenile?) Bufflehead on a log, preening and enjoying the afternoon sunshine:
Even bad Bufflehead video! (Sound is off since it was only wind noise.)
It’s like whipped-cream icing at this point (mmm….), but startled some American Coots on Thompson Bay, including a bit of water running:
Started off crummy, but wow, what a day, and what a great way to kick off spring! No better way to end the post than with another Song Sparrow, by Thompson Bay.
Last day of winter 2022. A rainy day here in Erie, Pennsylvania, but better that than snow. (Understatement.)
Time to greet spring and wave goodbye to peak waterfowl migration season. There’s Tundra Swans, there’s ice – it’s Swan Luge Part 2!
[Editor’s note: Isn’t “Swan-a-thon” bad enough?]
Following are mostly from 5-6 (Saturday and Sunday) March 2022, on Thompson Bay at Presque Isle State Park:
Saturday, there was some sort of cavalcade/convention happening on Gull Point. And a lovely day for it. Hope those folks on the observation platform were paying attention to the weight limit – #balcony collapse.
Switching over to Sunday, 6 March 2022, still on Thompson Bay, but mostly looking north. Another lovely day.
On another day, on Long Pond:
Finally, Tundra Swans and Ring-billed Gulls on Marina Lake:
Hopeful to see more Tundra Swans this season, but no better way to end the Swan-a-thon than with more bad Swan video!
[Editor’s note: To hear the Swans, turn the sound way up and listen past the gulls. Pretty cool.]
Nothing newsworthy to report on here, just some decent digital photographs of one of our favorite Erie regulars, the lovely Golden-Crowned Kinglet. Taken recently along the Long Pond Trail at Presque Isle State Park.
Now back to our regularly-scheduled programming (ahem), with the BirdingPI.com ‘Weekend Update.’
Snow Friday into Saturday, colder, then very windy and very cold into Sunday. Partially clear Sunday morning, remaining cold, turning overcast with lake-effect snow later in the day. Brutally cold Sunday on the back bay (e.g., looking at gulls at West Pier) with the wind chill, elsewhere just cold. As we’ve said, in Erie, if you think the cold weather’s over, think again.
Big news: first sighting of Northern Shovelers at Presque Isle State Park this season (for BirdingPI.com at least). Following are on Long Pond:
The problem with Northern Shovelers at Presque isle is the distance, e.g., they’re usually seen on the opposite side of the pond, bay, or whatever. With that in mind, seems like a good time for some photos from the BirdingPI.com trip to BiRDS field station (Tucson, Arizona) back in February. https://birdingpi.com/greetings-from-the-field-station/
Sweetwater Wetlands is sandwiched between Interstate 10 and the Santa Cruz River (usually dry) on the northwest side of Tucson. https://www.tucsonaz.gov/water/sweetwater-wetlands. No birding trip to Tucson is complete without at least one visit to Sweetwater, preferably multiple visits. It’s a tertiary wastewater treatment facility, meaning reclaimed wastewater is pumped into a series of ponds and marshes for final treatment plus establishing natural habitat. See https://www.epa.gov/wetlands/constructed-wetlands. Anyway, great place for seeing any number of local birds (stay turned for future posts), but in particular migratory waterfowl, sometimes relatively close. Like these amazingly beautiful Northern Shovelers (females are mostly brown, males are white/russet/iridescent head):
Back to Erie for a final bit of exciting news from Sunday. In addition to the Shovelers, spotted what appears to be two Pied-billed Grebes on Long Pond. First shot on the left foreground, with Pintails (on left and right) and what might be American Black Ducks in the middle:
And two in the center/center-left, with Ring-necked Ducks on the right:
In this crop, note the distinctive white bill with black band: