Showing posts with label Bolivar Peninsula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bolivar Peninsula. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Looking for Migrants (1)

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We arrived at Boy Scout Woods only to be told by several people who were leaving that there were no birds around. Luckily, this turned out not to be true and I had my first bird - a Wood Thrush - within two minutes of entering the site.



We spent an hours walking the trails and compiled a nice if fairly small list of birds. Prothonotary Pond had a couple of Prothonotary Warblers and a Black-and-White Warbler as well as two more Wood Thrushes. The main drip had Hooded Warbler, Red-eyed Vireo, Swainson's Thrush, Summer Tanager, Rose-breasted Grosbeak and several Gray Catbirds. The latter were the most numerous species overall and we soon lost count of how many individuals we came across.

The best bird was a Kentucky Warbler which strolled about on the trail  right in front of us.



We crossed the road to check out the garden of the guides' house and immediately added an Inca Dove to our list.



The trees there had a score of Cedar Waxwings while a bottlebush plant was hosting a Nashville Warbler.


An open patch nearby had not one, not two but seven Indigo Buntings.






By the time we had finished watching the Buntings, it was noon and so we set off on the guided trip to Bolivar.

We got to Rollover Pass before the rest of the group and parked as close to the far end of the beach as possible. Although there were plenty of birds in the air - including many Brown Pelicans - the water seemed to be largely empty except for a group of maybe 150 American Avocets in the far distance.  



Then a couple of Laughing Gulls landed near us.






They were followed by a Ring-billed Gull.



I pulled the car forward a little and we realized there were a lot birds gathered on a parch of beach that hadn't been visible. We quickly IDed five Tern species: Royal, Forster's, Sandwich, Black and Least.



We were delighted to see that the group also included several dozen Black Skimmers.









Unfortunately, as we and our fellow birders were scanning the beach for other birds, we spotted this Royal Tern with a broken wing.



The water now had a couple of Snowy Egrets (below) and a Great Blue Heron.






A Tricolored Heron was fishing further away, along with some Black-necked Stilts.

A Black-belllied Plover posed by the water's edge while a Semipalmated Plover explored the sand.






Three Ruddy Turnstones were living up to their name and turning over most stones that they came across.





A group of Short-billed Dowitchers marched past.



A single Sanderling pottered about nearby.






Two Western Sandpipers also appeared.



Willets patrolled the shallow water in numerous places.






However, the best sighting of all was of a Clapper Rail that walked across the beach right in front of our car, in clear view of the whole group of birders. 


From Rollover the group went to Yacht Basin Road, which had a nice selection of birds including Whimbrel, American Golden Plover, Wilson's Plover and Gull-billed Tern.
We left the grup there and headed up to Winnie to check into our motel, the excellent Winnie Inn & Suites. Dee wanted to rest while I was planning to drive back to High Island to take part in the afternoon birdwalk at Smith Oaks. I was hopeful that more migrants would appear - and they did!
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Sunday, April 08, 2012

Back to High Island

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On Thursday I took a day's vacation to drive a colleague's dad around some birding sites.

Our first main stop was at the rookery at High Island. As on Sunday, the main birds there were Great Egrets, Neotropic Cormorants and Roseate Spoonbills.










However, this time there were also several Anhingas, including a female and male perched near each other on a snag.


Sunday's large alligator in the parking area had moved on but a 3-foot youngster had taken its place.


After the rookery we tagged along with the noon guided bird tour of Bolivar, stopping first at Rollover Pass. As usual, the birding was excellent and this time most of the birds were on the beach rather than further away on sandbars.




The most numerous species was probably Black Skimmer.






Mixed in with the Skimmers, Terns, Short-billed Dowitchers, Marbled Godwits and American Oystercatchers were Laughing Gulls.


A pinkish reflection in the water resolved itself into the pink breast a Franklin's Gull in breeding plumage.


A Black-bellied Plover and a Wilson's Plover scuttled around on the sand.




Some Willets, a Yellowlegs and a Dunlin wandered nearby.








A small flock of American Avocets fished in the shallows.








The next stop was the shorebird sanctuary on Bolivar Flats. Among the comparatively few birds here were several Reddish Egrets, busy fishing in the shallows.




We left the group at the flats while we headed west to the Bolivar ferry and Galveston Island. There were still a few species I wanted my companion to see, including White Ibis, Rocky Turnstone and Tricolored Heron. Surely we would spot these if we drove along Sportsman Road!
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