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Showing posts with label First Bird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Bird. Show all posts

Saturday, January 01, 2022

Happy New Year

 


From all of us to all of you. Hoping and praying for a happier year than the last two, although perhaps that is arrogant and delusional.

Meanwhile, first bird for 2022 was a Canada Goose, as was the last bird for 2021. Not surprising I suppose with the thousands plying the air up and down the valley, flying from the river to the cornfields and back every day. 

Today begins a new slate for bird listing. Will I see anything cool today? Or tomorrow?

Will I get to go gull glancing? Checking the big flocks down on the river for anything unusual mixed in with the big three...Great Black-backed Gulls, Herring Gulls and Ring-billed Gulls?

Only the Shadow knows.

Anyhow, have a great day, a great year, all the best from us to you.



Wednesday, January 01, 2020

Reset Recap

Laughing Gulls on the Outer Banks

Sometime in the middle of last night, eBird statistics reset. All those amazing birds we found over the past 365 days were relegated to last year's old news and it's time to start again.




It is still dark so first bird of the day, year, and decade has yet to be counted.

Winter Wren


What will it be, what will it be? In Florida a few years back I was so excited for the opportunity for first bird to be something incredible and wonderful. Maybe an ibis or a Boat-tailed Grackle. We set out before dawn for the beaches and bays, eager for manatees and magical new birds....

Merliln


Only I wasn't paying enough attention to not looking and got a starling in the pink lights of the predawn parking lot. Last year it was a Canada Goose flyover. This year, who knows? The sun isn't really up yet and there were no owls calling at dog walking time...although I surely was hoping. 


Sandhill Crane at Montezuma

2019 saw us traveling to the Outer Banks for the first, but hopefully not the last time. A couple of runs out to Montezuma, where we lucked out and got the White Pelican, which showed up as a life bird for me, although I have seen them many times on trips to the South. Real honest-to-gosh first time life birds included Lapland Longspurs, an Olive-sided Flycatcher, Winter Wren, and Short-ear Owls....man, did we ever work hard to get the latter!

Common Yellowthroat


Yesterday for the first time in ages the boss and I actually got out and drove around some of our favorite spots and had a high time. Lots of nice raptors!




Anyhow, I am eager for another year of pursuing birds in the county, state and country. Hope we are healthy and wealthy enough to keep playing the game. Wish us luck...and thanks for being patient with our adventures.




***Update: As I was typing this, waiting for the washing machine to jingle the little tune that tells me that it is done, I heard my first bird of the '20s. What are the odds that just as the sun came up on the first day of the new year my favorite bird would begin to shout to all the neighbors that he was up and hitting the ground running or the air flying as the case may be when you are a bird? I do love me those Carolina Wrens.