Showing posts with label falcon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label falcon. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2022

Yellow-Crowned Night Heron Mason County 4/18/2022

   

    Yesterday Donna and John Haack found a Yellow-crowned Night Heron in Grant Township.  It is the first record of this southern bird in Mason County. Today with Brian Brosky guiding me by texts I got to the correct location on Nurnberg Rd, where I was fortunate enough to find another birder Joe Lipar, who was able to point me right at the seemingly glowing yellow crown of the wayward heron about 50 yards from the road.

  That's enough road birding.  Here's what has been visiting me at my house lately...
April 11 brought...
Belted Kingfisher

Ruby-crowned Kinglet

Peregrine Falcon
 On April 12 I saw...


Northern Flicker

Purple Finch

Flock of Scoters

Mostly White-winged but not always 
Black Scoter in yellow circle and Surf Scoter in the red.

And on April 13 the south wind brought the first of the year....
Northern Harrier

White-Crowned Sparrow

Brown Thrasher
As well as a Common Loon.
  So far for the year I've seen 95 bird species from the yard which puts me about 2 weeks ahead of last year when I didn't hit that total until May 1.

Monday, October 11, 2021

Peregrine Falcon 10/11/2021

 


    October is becoming Peregrine month around here.  Since the first of the month I've seen five of them fly by my yard.  The one today offered the best photo-ops by far.  I spotted it low over Lake Michigan a few hundred feet off shore.

   It proceeded to fly almost straight toward me....

...before resuming its southerly trajectory.


   A stiff headwind played a roll in slowing it down enough for me to fire off 40 shots of the world's fastest bird. 


  Since Thursday a female Ruby-throated Hummingbird has been visiting my feeders.




Monday, February 1, 2021

Merlin 1/31/2021

 


    Yesterday morning a commotion occurred at my back window as a Mourning Dove franticly sought shelter under my second story deck.  When it found a secure hiding spot, the Merlin that tormented it chose to keep a watchful eye on it from a shepherd's hook at my bird feeding station. Ultimately patience paid off for the dove as the Merlin flew off seeking easier prey elsewhere.

  Only other birds of interest that I've been able to photograph since my last post were a flock of Redheads offshore at the end of December.


   Back on December 22 a freighter passing by at night caught my attention.  A quick check on Boatnerd.com ID'd it as the Arthur M Anderson.  The Anderson's historical significance is that it was the last freighter to have contact with the Edmund Fitzgerald on its ill-fated journey in November 1975.



Friday, August 14, 2020

Unofficial, Unsanctioned, Unqualified Hawk Watcher 8/14/2020


     A year ago yesterday Matt McConnell noticed a movement of Red-tailed Hawks passing over the city of Ludington.  The next day I drove up to vantage point at my work and saw 50 more migrate by in an hour. 

  Since then I have moved from a house in the woods to a lake house with a great expanse of sky.  I have been looking forward to the late summer raptor migration since the day we moved in. I spent a little while in the yard yesterday afternoon but only saw 1 Red-tailed, along with a Merlin and an American Kestrel (which was a new yardbird #137).  

   Today was a different story as I saw 138 migrating raptors.   I initally thought all the distant buteos were Red-tails but later when I reviewed the photos I noticed some were Broad-wingeds which were also new to the yardlist.

Redtail and Broadwing

                                               Red-tail and Immature Bald Eagle


Two Upper birds are Broadwings the lowest one is a Redtail.



   Seems whenever two Bald Eagles ride the same thermal one will have to remind the other to social distance.


   An Osprey was also an unexpected surprise. 
 

   Here are some photos from the last couple of days.

The Bluebirds are wreaking havoc on the local butterflies and moths....



They only laid two eggs in their new nestbox, after their first nesting effort was cut short when a storm blew down their previous box in June.  Only one egg has hatched.

Eagle with its lunch.

Yesterday's new yardbird.  American Kestrel

   What appears to be a monstrous Walking Stick......

......looks less formidable when placed on a more natural setting. 

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Peregrine Falcon 5/7/2020

   Added Peregrine Falcon to the yard list after work this morning, when this beautiful specimen soared north riding the wind rising above my bluff.
Number 94 on the yardlist

   A little later an adult Bald Eagle drifted by also.

  Common Loons are also still zipping by almost every day.

Sunday, April 12, 2020

558 Flickers,This Must Be Some Sort of Record.


     Last Tuesday morning I counted 110 Northern Flickers migrating over my yard.  According to Dave Dister, compiler of the county bird records and author of recently published Birds of Mason County, the previous high daily count in Mason County was 89.  
   This morning as I was walking around my yard just before 8 AM, I started counting as Flickers once again were flying over in a steady stream of one or two at a time. When I got to 30 I looked at my phone and saw that only 10 minutes elapsed since I started counting. So I set up a chair on the north side of my yard and kept track of the number of Flickers traveling in the south to north migratory direction.  Within an hour I had beat the county record which I set on Tuesday and headed into uncharted territory, possibly a state record (at least according to ebird). Whitefish Point may have something to say about that.  By 11:30 the pace slowed dramatically but not until I had counted 542 of the yellow-shafted woodpeckers.  Over the early afternoon hours I added 16 more to bring the daily total to 558.

     The heavily overcast skies made it difficult to get any decent photos early on.......

......but in the 10 o'clock hour the Sun poked through momentarily and gave me some decent lighting to work with.

  For the second time this month I was able to observe 6 of the 7 woodpecker species that normally occur in Michigan's lower peninsula. On Friday the 3rd I missed the Pileated...but not today.
Pileated Woodpecker

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Downy Woodpecker

Red-bellied Woodpecker.
   The only woodpecker that I missed today was the Hairy, which I usually see a couple of times per week.

  Woodpeckers weren't the only birds of interest that I took poorly illuminated photos of today..
Common Loon

and another

Belted Kingfisher.
   A pair of Kingfishers may be nesting about 100' below my yard, down the bluff.  I frequently see them when I look over the edge.

    Last but not least.
Merlin