Subject: RFI: Visiting WA, Feb 7-9 - followup (long)
Date: Feb 18 08:15:36 2003
From: B&P Bell - bellasoc at isomedia.com


Good Morning Roy

Glad your trip went well.

If the small bird you saw was brownish gray all over with a tail
disproportionately long for its small body it was likely a Bushtit. This
time of year there should have been more than one, they can be in flocks
of up to 25-30.

The Wrentit doesn't make it into Washington. The most northerly
occurrence is at Fort Stevens State Park, just south of the Columbia
River mouth in Oregon (out near Astoria).

Cheers and good birding

Brian H. Bell
Woodinville WA
bellasoc at isomedia.com

Roy Harvey wrote:

>I've finally had time to put the sightings from my three days of
>birding in Washington into Birder's Diary and get out some tallies, so
>now I can give you all a brief (well it was supposed to be brief, but
>is not) recap of the trip.
>
>At the end I have two questions about possible identifications, so
>some of you might want to skip over my blatherings and go to the end.
>
>On Thursday night I stayed in Mt Vernon at the Comfort Inn as someone
>suggested; it was comfortable, reasonably priced and well located. I
>hit Wal-Mart that night for the F&W parking permit and a Delorme
>atlas.
>
>Friday morning I was out early in a terrible fog, looking for Frances
>Rd. After driving it from one end to the other I finally realized I
>had been on it all along! Along the way I had my life Trumpeter Swans
>(near the corner parking-sticker area), my first Bald Eagles of the
>trip, and plenty of other birds. Then I crossed the river and headed
>inland on 20, stopping here (Spotted Towhee) and there (both Kinglets)
>until I reached the main eagle viewing area, where the fog was gone.
>Some nice views of cooperative eagles there, though I didn't yet
>realize just how many eagles I was eventually going to see.
>
>Around mid-day I headed back on 20, and then took Bayview-Edison north
>to the Samish Flats, where I wandered until sunset. My target bird
>was the Prairie Falcon, but I had to settle for some Peregrines, lots
>more eagles, lots of Northern Harriers, and both light and dark morph
>Rough-legged Hawks. And I got to learn a bit about your Washington
>versions of the Red-tailed Hawk, including dark red ones and one
>Harlan's. About 29 species for the day.
>
>After staying at the same place in Mt Vernon on Friday night, I was
>out early again, and again in the fog. I returned to Samish flats,
>and continued to learn the back roads, but didn't turn up anything new
>or unusual. Then I went up to Samish Island, to the overlook where
>the two outhouses are. The Pigeon Guillemot I picked up was not a
>life bird, but it was the first of many great looks at a bird I had
>barely seen on one prior occasion. I also had my only Chestnut-backed
>Chickadee of the trip, and one bird I will ask about at the end.
>
>Eventually I left and headed toward Anacortes, stopping to bird March
>Pt. Here I searched and searched among the Common Goldeneyes for a
>Barrow's, but never did find one. Then off to Washington Park, where
>I drove the loop and scoped out from the points. More guillemots, and
>probably (but not quite good enough to count) a Common Murre, as well
>as Eared Grebe and dolphins with back and fin arcing out of the water.
>
>After that I went to Deception Pass, which I did not bird very
>effectively, and then returned back to March Pt where I still didn't
>find the Barrow's but did get Pelagic Cormorants. From there I
>returned to Samish Flats for my third try at the Prairie Falcon.
>After wandering all over, I stopped where two birders from Seattle
>were watching the Prairie atop a pole, and they provided nice looks
>through their scope as well as plenty of good advice. That was life
>bird number 2 for the trip! Staying until sunset again did not yield
>any Short-eared Owls, but at least that is a bird I can find at home.
>About 35 species on day 2.
>
>I was determined to try for the Snohomish Gyrfalcon, so I drove there
>after dark and stayed at the local motel. Out early again on Sunday
>morning, south to where the gyr had been reported at various times.
>Over the course of the morning I met lots of local birders after the
>same bird, but no gyr for me. I did get a good lesson in telling
>Tundra from Trumpeter Swans, as they were both feeding in the same
>field and several of us had great looks at two facing each other in
>the scope. Of course by the third day I was in Bald Eagle overload,
>so it seemed no big thing for an immature to land in a tree less than
>50 yards away, ignoring both myself and three more cars of birders
>that arrived.
>
>Filled with lots more advice from the birders I met, I headed up to
>Skagit flats by mid-day. Lots of birds, as expected. I saw one of
>the clouds of Snow Geese at a great distance, but never got a close
>view. One great trip bird was an American Bittern, which flew across
>in front of me before landing and promptly disappearing. One group I
>ran into was four Trumpeter Swan researchers; one of them urged me to
>go back to where I started the trip on Frances Rd and check out the
>swans in a field there - which I did. This was back to the corner by
>the permit parking, but instead down the side road through a gate that
>had been locked on Friday morning. Hundreds of trumpeters - my guess
>was 300+ - all at close quarters and making an amazing racket! (I
>even got out my digital camera and took a short resolution-free video
>just to get any kind of recording of the sound.) There were also
>quite a few eagles across the field, and a huge flock of ducks (mostly
>Mallards).
>
>Finally I had to start back, with the fishing pier by the Edmonds
>ferry as my last stop. (Hint to visitors: the signs on I-5 do not say
>Edmonds ferry, they say Kingston ferry. If you wait for a sign that
>says Edmonds you end up in Seattle wondering what you did wrong!)
>Once I reached the pier I quickly saw my life Barrow's Goldeneye
>(third life bird of the trip)! And lots more, including Common Murre
>and what was probably a Rhinoceros Auklet, but I never re-found it
>after the second dive. And lastly, since I am very poor on Gulls,
>having realized that there was a gap in my list that should be easy to
>fill, I spent a few minutes nailing down a Glaucus-winged Gull for my
>fourth and last life bird of the trip. Day three had about 35
>species.
>
>Before the trip I had a tremendous response to my request for
>information here, and the trip could not have been the great success
>it was without everyone's advice. (In fact I've got enough advice
>unused still for at least three more trips!) And the many birders I
>ran into helped even more, and added a lot to the enjoyment and
>success of the trip. Total species for the trip was a modest 58, but
>I was concentrating on a few target birds and not trying for a long
>list.
>
>Now for two bird ID questions. First, when I was up Skagit valley at
>the eagle viewing spot, there were a good many gulls. I can handle
>the common eastern gulls, but I just don't have any confidence with
>the western ones. To my eye the appeared to be herring gull size, but
>I had no basis for comparison. Can anyone say what common gull would
>be expected in that place?
>
>The second is more interesting. When I visited the outhouse overlook
>spot on Samish Island on a foggy Saturday morning there was one bird
>in among the kinglets and Bewick's Wrens that I could not identify.
>It was - very roughly - of similar size to the kinglets. I saw no
>markings at all, it was quite plain all over. The tail reminded me of
>a gnatcatcher in that it was narrow and held up a bit. Searching the
>books made me wonder if it might be a Wrentit or Bushtit. I'm curious
>what the odds might be on either of these, or on any other candidate.
>
>In closing, thanks to all who helped both before and during the trip.
>It was great!
>
>Roy Harvey
>rmharvey at snet.net
>Beacon Falls, CT
>
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