Showing posts with label Palm Warbler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palm Warbler. Show all posts

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Trip to the Keys

 Sunday May 11th


Fort Jefferson and the Yankee Freedom in the Dry Tortugas

Florida Key Deer

Conducted my annual
springtime trip to Florida Keys. Four days and three nights on the birding trail. Day one was spent checking out birding venue in the Miami - Everglades area. Missed a lot of the Miami specialties, but did add White-tailed Kite, Swallow-tailed Kite, Egyptian Goose, Chestnut-fronted Macaw, Common Mynah, Scaly-breasted Munia, Brown-headed Cowbird, Peafowl and Gray Kingbird. Missed on any other parrots, bulbul and spot-breasted oriole. Will have to return soon.

Inside the fort

Day Two was spent investigating the Keys. Made stops on Key Largo, Marathon, Big Pine Key and on Key West. My attempts at locating a black-whiskered vireo this year have been futile so far t and that status continued this weekend.  Should have had several sightings. It goes that way sometimes. Did have several White-crowned Pigeons, Gray Kingbirds and pair of Rosette Terns, Least Terns, lots of White-eyed Vireos, American Redstart, Short-billed Dowitchers Biggest miss was not getting any Antillian Nighthawks. 

My eBird Trip Report

Mike Perrin's Dry Tortugas eBird Report

Mike Perrin's Whimbrel eBird Report

Mike Perrin's Flamingo eBird Report

Sooty Tern with chick





Day three featured a trip to the Dry Tortugas National Park, where an abundance of Sooty Terns, Brown Noddies, and Magnificent Frigatebirds provided excellent photo opportunities. Bush Key serves as the sole nesting location for these terns within the United States, hosting thousands of them. A Masked Booby and a few Bridled and Rosette Terns were also observed. The highlights for visiting birders included a pair of rare-to-the-U.S. Black Noddies and a Red-footed Booby, which was among the nesting frigatebirds on Long Key Without a scope, locating these were challenging. Another visiting birder from Boston, Mike Perrin, captured remarkable photographs of the Black Noddy and reported sighting a White-tailed Tropicbird. To my knowledge, no one had previously reported a tropicbird from the Fort Jefferson. Other sighting at the fort included Sharp-shin and Broad-winged Hawk, Cattle Egrets, Palm, Hooded, American Redstarts, Northern Parula, Blackpoll and Black-throated Blue Warblers, Barn Swallows.
Brown Noddy

Brown Noddy

Spent the ride out and back scanning the waters for any seabirds. Sargasso shearwaters were expected, but instead a flock of six Whimbrels flew past the boat as we were nearing the dock at Fort Jefferson. But even better was a large flock of American Flamingos that flew past by the boat near to the Marquesas Keys on the way back to Key West.  Way Cool...

Day Four made a few stops on my way home.  Went looking for Key Deer on Big Pine Key and checked out the Cave Swallow colony south of LaBelle. Added Crested Caracara today too.

Probably will return to Keys soon to find the elusive black-throated vireo and antillian nighthawk.


Bridled Terns


Palm Warbler



Agami Lizard in Coral Gables. 
Becoming very common across Florida

Northern Curly Tailed Lizard at Blue Hole - Big Pine Key

Florida Tree Snail on Key Largo
The shell coloration varies from Key to Key

Black-necked Stilt
near LaBelle

Marathon



Sunday, March 16, 2025

Myakka River State Park

 Thursday March 6th

Wild Turkeys on Display


Visited Myakka River State Park near Sarasota on a rather breezy day. Windy days can sometimes make birding more challenging but today was okay.

https://ebird.org/checklist/S216885229



Palm Warbler

American Avocets





Thursday, January 30, 2025

Chinsegut Wildlife and Environmental Area

 Wednesday January 29th

Scott's Oriole feeding on some jelly

https://ebird.org/checklist/S211139040

I was unfamiliar with the Chinsegut Wildlife and Environmental Area near Lake Linsey in Hernando County. But a rare to Florida avian visitor is wintering here. It's a Scott's Oriole. A western species and is way outside of the species normal range and a Lifer for me.


Chipping Sparrow

 This conservation area is managed by Florida Fish and Wildlife and has an outstanding bird feeding station at the nature center featuring water features and several feeding offerings including a feeder offering jelly.  Orioles and other species enjoy fruits and jellies and that is where anyone wanting to experience this rarity must wait. The Scott's Oriole was making very short visits to the feeder and my not return for as long as an hour. 

A Pine Siskin bathing with a House Finch

While waiting a nice variety birds came in and offered some nice photography opportunities

Carolina Chickadee




Yellow-rumped Warbler


Yellow Palm Warbler

American Goldfinches

Pine Warbler



Red-bellied Woodpecker


House Wren



House Finch


Red-winged Blackbird




Pine Warbler

Grey Catbird


Sandhill Crane

Tufted Titmouse


Northern Cardinal











Sunday, March 12, 2023

Birding From Home

 Saturday March 11th



A Short-tailed Hawk showed up in my yard,
 were it made a meal of a dove.


At my home, in Fort Myers there is a huge ficus tree. iNaturalist identifies it as a Chinese Banyan and
it's been dropping ripening fruit for the past couple of weeks. This can be quite messy, but this year all this fruit has attracted a lot birds. Large flocks of Cedar Waxwings, plus American Robins and Gray Catbirds, Red-bellied Woodpeckers and Northern Flickers, a one day only visiting Summer Tanager was seen, dozens and dozens of yellow-rumped Warblers were actively eating the fruit, as were Starlings and Fish Crows



Other birds attracted to the feeders are Brown-headed Cowbirds, Northern Cardinals, Common Grackles, Muscovy Ducks, Morning, White-wing, Eurasian and Common Ground Doves, Blue Jays, Painted Buntings and a Indigo Bunting.



Additional we had Northern Parulas, Palm Warblers, a Yellow-throated Warbler, Great Crested Flycatcher a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, White Ibis, Red-shouldered Hawk and a Crested Caracara roosting in a neighbor's tree.


Yellow-rumped Warbler

Even had a Short-tailed Hawk grab a dove in my yard. Not a bad couple of weeks.  The fruit is about spent, so most of these species will start departing to other interesting places and will be heading north soon on the Spring Migration


Short-tailed Hawk

Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher

Cedar Waxwing

Northern Flicker

Northern Flicker



Gray Catbird

American Robin

Mourning Dove

Yellow-rumped Warbler

American Robin

Blue Jay

Muscovy Duck

Common Grackle

Yellow-rumped Warbler

European Starling with a fig

Yellow-rumped Warbler

Red-bellied Woodpecker

Red-bellied Woodpecker

Brown-headed Cowbird

Palm Warbler