Iceland in Waltham!

Today was an early release day, so school got out right about when I normally head for lunch. I waited a few extra minutes and in that time my boss came over and told me to go pick up a computer at Plympton that appears to have a virus.

That wasn’t a big deal and got me over to Prospect Hill instead of the Paine Estate for a change. Not that there was much more doing there, but I did finally get a Golden-crowned Kinglet for the year (think it’s at least 2 years running now I’ve managed Ruby-crowned first). I then headed over to Plympton, and as I walked in, noticed that although the name of the computer was for Plympton it was labeled Stanley and had a moved to ST (temp) note. A quick walk through the library and a call back to the office confirmed that, so off to Stanley.

I grabbed the computer pretty quickly and headed back out. Walking to the car, I noticed a handful of crows with something above them. They didn’t seem to be that interested in it, but I still hoped for an eagle and figured it was a Red-tail. A couple seconds later, it turned and I could see the grayish upperwing of a gull.

I got to the car and started digging the keys out (not easy with a big tower in your hands). The gull came in closer and I was rather shocked to see that there was no black in the wingtips! Very definitely an Iceland Gull although I would have been much happier with an extended view. Unfortunately, it completely disappeared while I was getting into the car, so I couldn’t find any justification to chase it while I was supposed to be heading back to work. Suddenly the wild goose chase was worth it.

Forty Twelve-Monthers

At lunch today, a Turkey Vulture flew overhead. Not only did I get a great view of it, but it was the first one I’ve seen in Massachusetts in January.

A few years ago, I started making spreadsheets of how many birds I had seen in each half of a month. The original idea was to get a sense of when birds were around. Pretty quickly, I realized that a single lingering bird ruined the yes/no aspect of that. I don’t think it’s worth adding in actual counts or number of sightings to make that more accurate (I can always make a bar graph if I really want to know). However, I soon found that adding birds to each half month was a lot of fun.

With some shoddy record-keeping I had some really obvious holes in there. For example, I didn’t have a Rock Pigeon for September. Of course, this was when I was going to school and therefore wasn’t around to see one. I debated about making a trip across the border just for that purpose, but luckily I found a slightly better reason. I’ve eliminated most of those holes now (at least at the Massachusetts and Middlesex county levels, Waltham has a ways to go), but it’s still fun to look for birds bordering on the edge. And there’s quite a few on the edge. I dug through my stack of Bird Observers and Birds of Massachusetts and think I ended up with 70% of all possible blocks checked off.

Back to today, not only was the vulture a new month bird, but January was the only month I was missing. I’ve now seen one in all 12 months, and as you can probably guess from the title, this is the 40th bird that I’ve done that with. Only 100 to go. And then it’s the halves.

2006 in Review

A few highlights from 2006.

Birds

  • 272 birds, 243 in MA, 184 in Middlesex county, 129 in Waltham, 60 in the yard
  • 16 lifers, 12 state birds, 9 Middlesex county birds, 11 for Waltham, 4 yard
  • Favorite birds:
    • Overall:
      1. Black-tailed Godwit
      2. Black Rosy-Finch
      3. King Rail
    • Mass:
      1. Black-tailed Godwit
      2. Marbled Godwit
      3. Dovekie
    • Middlesex:
      1. King Rail
      2. Le Conte’s Sparrow
      3. Ruffed Grouse
    • Waltham:
      1. Northern Saw-whet Owl
      2. Eastern Bluebird
      3. Fox Sparrow
    • Yard:
      1. Eastern Screech-Owl
      2. Fox Sparrow
      3. Yellow Warbler
  • Big Misses:
    • Mass:
      1. Baird’s Sandpiper
      2. Alder Flycatcher
      3. Philadelphia Vireo
    • Middlesex:
      1. Orange-crowned Warbler
      2. Glossy Ibis
      3. Olive-sided Flycatcher
  • Favorite Trips:
    • Jan: 1/21 Plum with MBC (4 Snowies)
    • Feb: 2/19 Waltham/Lexington (3 owls 45 minutes, 5 miles)
    • Mar: 3/11 NAC, GMNWR (fun early spring day)
    • Apr: 4/2 Belle Isle and more (Stilt, Oystercatchers, late Snowy)
    • May: 5/17 GMNWR (King Rail)
    • Jun: 6/21 Minuteman Survey
    • Jul: 7/15 Stellwagen (huge shearwater show)
    • Aug: 8/26 South Beach with MBC
    • Sep: 9/2 Dunback/Waltham St. with MBC (8 hummingbirds, Dickcissel and Yellow-bellied Flycatcher later)
    • Oct: 10/1 Rock Meadow with MBC (Blue Grosbeak)
    • Nov: 11/9 Bosque del Apache
    • Dec: 12/17 Greater Boston CBC

Bugs

  • 68 dragonflies, 66 Mass, 28 new
  • 65 butterflies, 60 Mass, 20 new
  • Favorite Odes:
    1. Ski-tipped Emerald
    2. American Rubyspot
    3. Citrine Forktail
  • Favorite Butterflies:
    1. Harvester
    2. Common Buckeye
    3. Mulberry Wing