WIR 1/30-2/5

Wednesday 1/30: BBN had a couple bluebirds and lots of mud.

Thursday 1/31: Nothing different along the riverwalk.

Friday 2/1: Forest Grove: 2 creepers, lots of the usual ducks but too windy to search through them. About 30 coots at Norumbega.

Saturday 2/2: Started with a quick scan of Hardy Pond (nothing of note) and Cambridge Res (coyote towards the Trapelo end but no birds). Flint’s Pond was similar, so on to Farm Meadow. Nothing exciting there but a nice flock of waxwings at Codman was good. At the gardens I found a big flock of starlings and picked out a few cowbirds. Hoping for more, I started scanning but a fire engine left the station right then and everything flushed. I moved on to Lindentree and found nothing, so I continued to School St and had 5 crows. A quick stop at Norumbega (no coots) and Forest Grove (gulls, mallards, and geese) was not productive, but an adult Bald Eagle was flying over as I drove off. Quick trip from Prospect to Moody had a male Bufflehead but not much else.

Waxwing

Sunday 2/3: Walked to Rock Meadow and had absolutely nothing.

Monday 2/4: Prospect Hill: windy and barely any birds.

Tuesday 2/5: Couldn’t find the snipe reported yesterday at Forest Grove (and the river was frozen so I didn’t expect the scaup). A couple Red-bellies, a Hairy, and not much else.

WIR 1/23-1/29

Wednesday 1/23: Too cold to get out at the duck ponds and there was nothing in sight. No fruit trees with any birds either in a quick drive around.

Thursday 1/24: Still too cold but did manage to zip through Norumbega (which was frozen, so 3 gulls, 3 geese, and 6 pigeons).

Friday 1/25: River walk again, about the same except for a young Bald Eagle flying up Newton St.

Saturday 1/26: Quick check of the res (frozen today, was open Thursday) then a short walk around Cat Rock Park (nuthatches, a creeper, and lots of Red-bellied Woodpeckers). Forest Grove: no gulls worth getting the scope out for. Moody St: lots of gulls including the Iceland but not much else.

Sunday 1/27: WLT Duck walk. Big crowd and cold wind. Lots of mergansers and Ring-necks and a second (or even third) goldeneye.

Monday 1/28: Nothing different at the duck ponds.

Tuesday 1/29: Ended up at Beaver Brook and immediately remembered why I stopped going here. Over 20 dogs in front of the parking lot (and no more than 7 owners/handlers). Needless to say, I didn’t see much of note.

Also, only publishable didn’t refer to quality. Plenty of better photos around, but here’s a similar shot.

WIR 1/16-1/22

Wednesday 1/16: Went to the river walk in crappy weather. About 9 Ring-necks, 1 Hoodie, and 2 coots were about it.

Thursday 1/17: Nothing exciting at the duck ponds.

Friday 1/18: Moody St. again. Two Bufflehead and not much else. Gull was present and was just a Herring.

Saturday 1/19: Pretty slow at Dunback and elsewhere.

Sunday 1/20: Started with a Charles tick, 2 Canvasbacks at Norumbega. Continued to finally try for the chat behind the Kohl’s in Burlington. No luck with that but I finally got a Red Crossbill for the county flying over. Horn Pond next was fairly quiet, one flock of redpolls was about it. On to Silver Lake and hopefully another county bird. No luck with the Glaucous Gull however and not many gulls to scan through. That turned out to be good as I got to the coast just in time for the Mew Gull show, would have missed it if I had lingered at all.

Monday 1/21: Lazy start, eventually heading to Merriam’s Corner (Red-tails everywhere but not much else) and Kaveski Farm (nothing exciting). Great Meadows after that had a few goldeneye, bufflehead, and a Ring-neck plus a very cooperative redpoll and the screech-owl was in the usual hole.

Redpoll

Tuesday 1/22: River walk finally had a goldeneye. Otherwise about the same (2 coots, 9 Ring-necks, 10ish Hoodies, no Common Mergansers).

Worth the Sand

Some shots of the Mew (Common) Gull at King’s Beach on the Lynn/Swampscott line on Sunday:

Mew Gull

Gull lineup

Flying off after 20 minutes (by which point almost everyone else had left):

Mew Gull

Mew Gull from below

Even hiding beside the steps, the wind was blasting sand all over. Still cleaning it out of everything.

WIR 1/9-1/15

Wednesday 1/9: 250 Mallards, 100 geese, 35 coots, 25 black duck, a Pied-billed Grebe, and a Golden-crowned Kinglet off Forest Grove and Purgatory Cove.

Thursday 1/10: River walk had nothing different.

Friday 1/11: Only had time for a quick stop at the Woerd Ave boat ramp, a few Ring-necks and Hoodies were it.

Saturday 1/12: No good gulls at Moody St. Purgatory Cove: 3 Ruddy, more of the same. No coots. Forest Grove: Hairy, nothing else of interest. About 11 coots at Norumbega, Charlesbank still frozen. Cambridge Res fogged in (plus I dropped the eyepiece to the scope and wouldn’t have been able to scan anyway).

Sunday 1/13: Walked to Lot 1, West Meadow, and down the parkway. Two bluebirds, 3 deer, not much else.

Monday 1/14: Nothing out of the ordinary at Rock Meadow (although I thought I heard one peep of a peeper).

Tuesday 1/15: Quick run around Moody St had a Bufflehead and an interesting 1st year gull that I need to see again.

WIR 1/2-1/8

Wednesday 1/2: River walk: coot, Bufflehead, few mergansers. Flock of finches was very interesting but got away.

Thursday 1/3: Woerd Ave: 100+ Ring-billed Gulls, mallards, geese. Moody St: same plus a few Herring Gulls.

Friday 1/4: Planned on Cambridge Res but decided it was best to avoid that, so went to Prospect Hill instead. The helicopters at the res were rather loud and I didn’t find much.

Saturday 1/5: Hit the Charles pretty hard. Started at Forest Grove where a Swamp Sparrow popped up by the pump house. Little bit of open water had lots of coots, a Ring-neck, and a Ruddy. Probably more that I couldn’t see. Creeper along the edge of Purgatory Cove was an overdue tick on the Charles (wish the thing that sounded like a pipit going over circled or something). Iceland Gull at Moody St along with a distant falcon. Mergansers and 15 Ring-necks behind Shaw’s and not much at Watertown Square rounded out the morning with 40 species. 

Creeper

Iceland

Cambridge Res in the afternoon, hoping for an eagle or raven on a carcass. No carcass but an eagle flew over 128 as we arrived and there was a bit of open water with some scaup, Ring-necks, Ruddy, mergansers, and a Bufflehead.

Sunday 1/6: Fresh Pond had continuing everything except Redhead plus a Peregrine on the ice. The loon looked to be in bad shape, although I see later reports of it swimming so it might be ok. Spy Pond quickly had nothing and then the Mystic Lakes. Sandy Beach was quiet. I then walked from the few parking spots on the parkway down by the rotary up to the boat club. Two Pied-billed Grebes, a Red-breasted Mergansers, Great Cormorant, and 2 Greater Scaup were highlights. And a quick stop at Dunback on the way home turned up another Rusty Blackbird.

Breakfast

Loon

Mergansers

Monday 1/7: Nothing doing at the duck ponds.

Tuesday 1/8: Not much at West Meadow.

WIR 12/26-1/1

Wednesday 12/26: BBN was pretty quiet. Eventually dug up a creeper but not much else.

Thursday 12/27: Almost too nasty to check Hardy and the res and nothing of note at either.

Friday 12/28: Still one cormorant at Prospect St but not much else.

Saturday 12/29: Had to take my father to pick up his car, so started at Purgatory Cove. River was starting to freeze, but tons of Mallards flying around in addition to a big flock of Ring-necks (75 plus a Lesser Scaup), coots (40+), and a couple Ruddy and other things. Big surprise was found while trying to get a better angle on the Ring-necks: a cormorant on the far shore. First impression was that it was the Double-crested we had on the CBC on the cove, but it started to look a bit white on the belly from the side. Kept moving until I got a full view and, sure enough, it was a Great.

Great Cormorant

Then headed up to Silver Lake in Wilmington where a Glaucous Gull had been. Spent about 40 minutes scanning and didn’t find any good gulls  (other than a presumed Lesser Black-back that disappeared before I got more than the back). Made a quick trip to the industrial park where Pine Grosbeaks had been seen regularly, I must have been there in between feedings and didn’t care to stay. Quick stop at the Mystic Lakes had nothing much, then more coots and Common Mergansers at Spy Pond.

Gulls

Decided to check the res before heading home. Coots were in the corner again. Huge flock of Hoodies with a few wigeon way out in the middle. Further down was a small flock in close. Expected it to be the Ring-necks and a couple of the scaup, it turned out to 32 scaup and 4 Ring-necks. The rest of the wigeon flock was way off. Trapelo end was mostly frozen.

Sunday 12/30: Stayed in with the storm.

Monday 12/31: Started at Dunback: Fox Sparrow, 3 Rusty Blackbirds, nice Sharp-shinned, flyover Redpolls. On to Rock Meadow (4 Waxwings) and BBN (Raven). Cardinal ended the year.

Tuesday 1/1: Cardinal also started the year. Annual BBC walk around Newburyport. Started with a White-winged Crossbill in the parking lot, then Red Crossbills in Salisbury. Wind got in the way after that, but a few good things. Details will be on the BBC blog eventually.

YIR 2012

January:

January Wood Thrush

Plus continuing Lark Sparrow, Cassin’s Kingbird, Barnacle Goose, etc.

February:

Spotted Towhee

March:

 

Roseate Tern

FOY for the country I think.

Frigatebirds

Swallow-tailed Kite

Phantom DarnerGreat PondhawkAntillean Saddlebags

April:

Bonaparte's

With 4 Horned Grebes too

May:

IMG_0818.jpg

Clapper

Great Blue

June:

Chestnut-collared

July:

Least Tern

and

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck

August:

Olive-sided Takeoff

September:

Horned Grebe

Great Cormorant, Arlington Res

Sparrow 1

Sparrow 2

October:

Wood Sandpiper

Grebes

Blue Grosbeak

And a second Connecticut

Lapwing 1

And a bunch of New Mexico stuff.

December:

Pine Grosbeak

 

For the year, 18 lifers (9 FL, 1 SC, 1 ME, 1 RI, 1 MA, 5 NM), 3 state birds, 2 county birds, 6 new for Waltham, and 4 for the yard. For the bugs, 24 new dragonflies (11 FL, 13 SC) and 1 for the state, 11 new butterflies (maybe more, still sorting through a few FL ones I think but 7 FL, 3 SC, 1 MA) and 2 for the state.

Birds of the year: Wood Sandpiper nationally, Black-bellied Whistling-Duck for MA, Least Tern locally.

Bug of the year: Phantom and Swamp Darners, Giant Swallowtail.

Patch 2012

Going back to the Beaver Brook/Rock Meadow patch this year. Target is 106 birds and 150 things (where additional things include mammals, butterflies, odes, and tiger beetles). All-time total: 252 (152, 9, 53, 41, 1).

Last update 12/21 (118%, 137%):

9/17: well above the 106 now (and 112 matches my highest total), so let’s go for 125.

Birds

  1. Canada Goose (1/7)
  2. Wood Duck (3/14)
  3. American Black Duck (1/6)
  4. Mallard (1/6)
  5. Hooded Merganser (1/6)
  6. Common Merganser (3/4)
  7. Wild Turkey (1/5)
  8. Double-crested Cormorant (5/20)
  9. Great Blue Heron (3/24)
  10. Green Heron (8/29)
  11. Turkey Vulture (4/4)
  12. Osprey (8/13)
  13. Cooper’s Hawk (3/4)
  14. Sharp-shinned Hawk (9/8)
  15. Broad-winged Hawk (8/20)
  16. Red-shouldered Hawk (10/28)
  17. Red-tailed Hawk (1/5)
  18. American Kestrel (4/10)
  19. Merlin (9/22)
  20. Killdeer (3/4)
  21. Solitary Sandpiper (5/10)
  22. American Woodcock (3/18)
  23. Ring-billed Gull (2/1)
  24. Herring Gull (2/19)
  25. Great Black-backed Gull (2/19)
  26. Rock Pigeon (1/7)
  27. Mourning Dove (1/7)
  28. Yellow-billed Cuckoo (9/4)
  29. Black-billed Cuckoo (10/12)
  30. Great Horned Owl (1/7)
  31. Chimney Swift (5/10)
  32. Ruby-throated Hummingbird (5/20)
  33. Belted Kingfisher (9/13)
  34. Red-bellied Woodpecker (1/7)
  35. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (10/7)
  36. Downy Woodpecker (1/5)
  37. Hairy Woodpecker (1/7)
  38. Northern Flicker (1/5)
  39. Eastern Wood-Pewee (5/17)
  40. Willow Flycatcher (5/20)
  41. Eastern Phoebe (3/19)
  42. Great Crested Flycatcher (5/17)
  43. Eastern Kingbird (5/9)
  44. Blue-headed Vireo (9/17)
  45. Warbling Vireo (5/8)
  46. Red-eyed Vireo (5/15)
  47. Blue Jay (1/7)
  48. American Crow (1/7)
  49. Common Raven (8/26)
  50. Tree Swallow (3/20)
  51. Barn Swallow (4/30)
  52. Black-capped Chickadee (1/5)
  53. Tufted Titmouse (1/5)
  54. White-breasted Nuthatch (1/7)
  55. Red-breasted Nuthatch (8/14)
  56. Brown Creeper (3/4)
  57. Carolina Wren (1/5)
  58. House Wren (4/21)
  59. Winter Wren (1/6)
  60. Marsh Wren (11/3)
  61. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (5/20)
  62. Golden-crowned Kinglet (3/24)
  63. Ruby-crowned Kinglet (10/7)
  64. Eastern Bluebird (3/4)
  65. Swainson’s Thrush (9/17)
  66. Hermit Thrush (4/15)
  67. Wood Thrush (5/10)
  68. American Robin (1/5)
  69. Gray Catbird (5/10)
  70. Northern Mockingbird (1/7)
  71. Brown Thrasher (5/20)
  72. European Starling (1/7)
  73. American Pipit (10/2)
  74. Cedar Waxwing (1/5)
  75. Ovenbird (5/20)
  76. Northern Waterthrush (5/16)
  77. Blue-winged Warbler (5/10)
  78. Black-and-white Warbler (5/10)
  79. Orange-crowned Warbler (10/16)
  80. Nashville Warbler (9/17)
  81. Common Yellowthroat (5/15)
  82. American Redstart (5/15)
  83. Northern Parula (5/16)
  84. Magnolia Warbler (9/17)
  85. Blackburnian Warbler (8/26)
  86. Yellow Warbler (5/10)
  87. Chestnut-sided Warbler (8/17)
  88. Bay-breasted Warbler (8/30)
  89. Blackpoll Warbler (5/16)
  90. Black-throated Blue Warbler (9/17)
  91. Palm Warbler (9/13)
  92. Pine Warbler (4/15)
  93. Black-throated Green Warbler (8/30)
  94. Yellow-rumped Warbler (4/17)
  95. Canada Warbler (9/8)
  96. Black-throated Green Warbler (9/8)
  97. Eastern Towhee (9/17)
  98. American Tree Sparrow (1/10)
  99. Chipping Sparrow (4/14)
  100. Field Sparrow (6/14)
  101. Savannah Sparrow (4/15)
  102. Song Sparrow (1/7)
  103. Lincoln’s Sparrow (9/17)
  104. Swamp Sparrow (1/7)
  105. Fox Sparrow (11/6)
  106. White-throated Sparrow (1/7)
  107. White-crowned Sparrow (10/7)
  108. Dark-eyed Junco (1/5)
  109. Scarlet Tanager (5/15)
  110. Northern Cardinal (1/5)
  111. Rose-breasted Grosbeak (4/30)
  112. Indigo Bunting (5/15)
  113. Bobolink (8/17)
  114. Brown-headed Cowbird (3/15)
  115. Red-winged Blackbird (3/4)
  116. Common Grackle (2/19)
  117. Rusty Blackbird (1/7)
  118. Baltimore Oriole (5/10)
  119. Orchard Oriole (5/20)
  120. Common Redpoll (12/15)
  121. Purple Finch (9/27)
  122. House Finch (1/5)
  123. Pine Siskin (10/7)
  124. American Goldfinch (1/5)
  125. House Sparrow (1/6)

Mammals

  1. Red Squirrel (1/7)
  2. Gray Squirrel (1/7)
  3. Eastern Chipmunk (3/24)
  4. Eastern Cottontail (1/7)
  5. Muskrat (2/19)
  6. Mink (7/22)
  7. Whitetail Deer (8/16)

Butterflies

  1. Silver-spotted Skipper (6/14)
  2. Common Sootywing (5/20)
  3. Juvenal’s Duskywing (4/14)
  4. Wild Indigo Duskywing (10/6)
  5. Pepper-and-salt Skipper (5/20)
  6. Least Skipper (6/30)
  7. European Skipper (6/8)
  8. Delaware Skipper (6/30)
  9. Peck’s Skipper (5/20)
  10. Hobomok Skipper (5/20)
  11. Zabulon Skipper (8/13)
  12. Dun Skipper (6/30)
  13. Broad-winged Skipper (7/22)
  14. Fiery Skipper (8/16)
  15. Black Swallowtail (5/20)
  16. Giant Swallowtail (8/7)
  17. Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (4/19)
  18. Spicebush Swallowtail (5/20)
  19. Cabbage White (4/2)
  20. Clouded Sulphur (4/4)
  21. Orange Sulphur (6/30)
  22. American Copper (5/20)
  23. Henry’s Elfin (4/30)
  24. Eastern Tailed-Blue (4/30)
  25. Spring Azure (4/19)
  26. Cherry Gall Azure (4/26)
  27. Summer Azure (6/30)
  28. Banded Hairstreak (6/30)
  29. Gray Hairstreak (8/29)
  30. Great Spangled Fritillary (7/4)
  31. Monarch (5/20)
  32. Red-spotted Purple (5/29)
  33. American Lady (4/19)
  34. Painted Lady (8/7)
  35. Red Admiral (4/19)
  36. Eastern Comma (4/4)
  37. Question Mark (4/26)
  38. Mourning Cloak (3/19)
  39. Pearl Crescent (5/20)
  40. Common Buckeye (8/4)
  41. Common Wood-Nymph (7/5)
  42. Appalachian Brown (8/7)
  43. Little Wood Satyr (5/15)
  44. Common Ringlet (5/20)

Dragonflies

  1. Ebony Jewelwing (5/24)
  2. Slender Spreadwing (6/30)
  3. Spotted Spreadwing (8/30)
  4. Eastern Forktail (4/25)
  5. Fragile Forktail (5/20)
  6. Skimming Bluet (7/3)
  7. Aurora Damsel (6/14)
  8. Common Green Darner (4/17)
  9. Green-striped Darner (8/30)
  10. Swamp Darner (7/22)
  11. Fawn Darner (8/1, have found exuviae in the past)
  12. Common Baskettail (5/20)
  13. Prince Baskettail (6/19)
  14. Clamp-tipped Emerald (6/12)
  15. Mocha Emerald (7/5)
  16. Eastern Amberwing (6/30)
  17. Painted Skimmer (6/8)
  18. Twelve-spotted Skimmer (6/12)
  19. Slaty Skimmer (7/22)
  20. Common Whitetail (5/15)
  21. Eastern Pondhawk (5/24)
  22. Blue Dasher (6/12)
  23. Halloween Pennant (7/22)
  24. Spot-winged Glider (6/30)
  25. Autumn Meadowhawk (8/7)
  26. Cherry-faced Meadowhawk (6/30)
  27. Band-winged Meadowhawk (7/25)
  28. Black Saddlebags (6/19)

Tiger Beetles

  1. Six-spotted Tiger Beetle (4/26)