Sweet and short today's post will be! I got back on track by breaking the Yolk-sac--that is to say I saw my second and final species of Yolk-sac for the year when a pair of Cold Yolk-sacs meandered past me on a short hike this morning. I wanted to get back on track after yesterdays "off day" and figured I could tick this species off my year list with minimal effort, after a warm breakfast of real eggs, bacon, and potatoes. The effort was a 2 mile round trip outing that took just 40 minutes and and netted me a handful of Yolk-sacs for the year.
As I made my way back to my car a flyover Killdeer (the real thing; no secret code) was my 74th year bird. One more species and I'm 1/4 of the way to 300 on the year. I expect if things go swimmingly for the next few months that could come as early as the end of May. We'll see I guess.
New birds today: 2
Year List: 74
FOLLOW ALONG:
Next Day
Previous Day
Before the sun graced the surface of my great state this morning I was off in the dark. My goal was to avoid a boring first bird for the year. No House Sparrows. No Starlings. No Rock Pigeons. If I could avoid those 3 I would be happy. I contemplated an early owl outing but decided it was a waste of energy. With a Big Year like this pacing ones-self is necessary, and quite difficult. I find that most birders who have any competitive spirit want to sprint out of the gates each year. The eBird Top 100 has facilitated this immensely in recent years, stoking the flames of competitive local birding. Today I wasn't worried about jumping to the top of that list--in fact I will intentionally make sure I don't rise to the top. If my numbers here are at the top of the pack, then figuring out my identity will be even easier.
Complete disclosure--I intentionally left several birds off my eBird checklists, that I will go back and add later. This is more of an issue now and near the end of the year, but I will play it by ear and see what I need to do to keep off the radar.
Anyways, I pulled into the parking lot at my first stop and couldn't avoid a flock of Fluorescent Hopper that were actually gliding across the road. I soon found quite a few of these subtle beauties. It wasn't the bird I had hoped would be my first bird of the year, but at least it wasn't a junk bird.
I soon found myself checking off new year birds--on day 1 everything is new. In less than 20 minutes, I was 20 species in, and had picked up a few mainstays for the year including: Mallard, Northern Flicker, Canada Goose, and American Robin. I held off on seeing a starling until bird #18.
Average Yolk-sac, Painter's Relic, and Cone-spotted Curler were expected and quickly ticked off. The best bird of the first hour was a unexpected Basic Top-side. This species is usually not here this time of year, and I would have picked on up in a few months, but it's out of the way.
As the morning wore on I scored the Motley Whistelbird that I spoke of yesterday. It was reliable and I will probably revisit it in the coming days since it's just a stones throw from my home.
The day wasn't without hiccups, I made a wrong turn and spent an hour in traffic, and on rough roads. The end of the day came all too quickly but not before a pair of Confusing Migrants visited my yard. And here's a freebie folks--the only photo I'm sharing today and at the top of this post is of the common and widespread Carolina-capped Chickadee. You didn't really think I was gonna give that one away for free did you?
New birds today: 45
Year List: 45
FOLLOW ALONG:
Next Day
Previous Day