This blog exists to help me document and describe my birding and natural history experiences in Canada throughout the year of 2012 [and January and February 2013 in the states]. 2012 will see me on teaching exchange to Nakusp, in beautiful British Columbia. I'm hoping to see many great new birds and animals as well as showing my family some great scenery. You may be wondering why I mentioned birds twice - I like them.
Monday, 22 October 2012
And now for Something completely Different
Pete and Glenys Cross, my folks, have been travelling around Victoria and have sighted a Canadian bird in Paynesville on the 9 October. A reasonably rare Franklins Gull. Perhaps there have been some twenty recorded sightings for Australia. Here are the pics.
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Okanagan Long Weekend
I had looked forward for a while to getting across to the
Okanagan to do some birding and this weekend past I had had the opportunity to
do just that.
Chris Siddle, a friend of Gary’s, ex English School teacher,
birder and all round good guy had kindly [very kindly] offered to host not only
me but my entire family for a couple of nights. This was an opportunity that
was too good to refuse.
So on Friday I was driving to Vernon in the north of the
Okanagan well pleased with having just scored the Cackling lifer and content
that I had some good birding to look forward to with some good company.
The weekend did not disappoint. Friday was a transit day
with some necessary winter shopping before red wine and pizza with the Siddles
at their well stocked library of a house. Conversation established, among other
things, cunning plans for the following day. Sonja, Chris’s wife and Megan and
the kids would enjoy the Halloween tradition of visiting a Pumpkin Patch to
purchase pumpkins. The pumpkins would be then carved with knives to within an
inch of their life but would be left smiling with an idiotic evil grinning expression
that children find so attractive, especially when illuminated from within by a
candle. Chris and I on the other hand would escape such domestic duty and go
birding.
Chris S and Chris C |
The birding called for an early start. And by Seven am we
were on the road south to Kelowna. A
Harris’s Sparrow had recently been found by Munson’s Pond in Kelowna and that
was the main target. The Sparrow had, it seems flown however we enjoyed the birds
on the pond itself. Canada Geese, Canada Geese and Canada Geese. Lots of them.
A variety of Canada and yet, here and there among them were some more Cackling
Geese. Definitely. But there was a
bewildering variety of geese intermediate in size between the Large Canada and
the very small Cackling Geese. [The Cackling were only very slightly larger
than the nearby Mallards.] Me thinks that the final word regarding the
identification of the larger races of Cackling Geese and the smaller races of
Canada Geese is yet to be written. Wood Ducks, Ring necks and Blue Herons were
also on the pond. Also of interest at Munsons was the sight of the quietly
spoken Chris Charlesworth, a birding legend in these parts and owner / chief
guide of BC birding company Avocet Tours, who arrived obviously oblivious to
the coooool temperatures in shorts.
Chris Charlesworth in BC birding atire |
After checking out some Song Sparrows and Juncos in the hope
that they had some other Sparrow buddies we made our way north to Robert Lake.
Chris Charlesworth, like the big bad wolf of Little Red Riding Hood, had got
there first. And like the big bad wolf he was wearing a disguise. Standing in
front of his telescope he stood wrapped un-manfully in a blanket, his still
naked large calf muscles protruding unprotected below the blanket’s tassled
hem. It seemed clear that the temperature or something had gotten to him.
It must be said though that his get-up was soon forgotten as
we turned our attention to what he had his telescope trained towards. Gulls.
Hundreds of Gulls. Now I’m an Australian, trained, by reason of their poverty
of numbers [in species at least], to ignore Gulls. But here their numbers and
variety demand attention. And study. Under the expert tuition of Chris and
Chris I began to get my eye in. Chris Charlesworth, the clear expert in the
subject, patiently and clearly explained differences in plumages, bills, feet
colour, head shape, colour and pattern in wing tips, that allowed me to
identify man yof the gulls present. Six species in total; Ring-billed,
Californian, Herring, Glaucous-winged, Bonaparte’s and, perhaps most exciting for me, Thayer’s as
it was a lifer. Of the latter two first year birds plus three adults were
found.
Chris Siddle and I then abandoned ‘the other Chris’ and
headed north towards the Glenmore landfill. What decent day’s birding does not
deserve a trip to a dump? Here, near the entrance, we spotted two Greater White-fronted
Geese and a large flock of tiny Cackling Geese. At Okanagan Landing were
Greater and Lesser Scaups, Redheads, and Ring-necked Ducks,
as well as all four usual grebes. At the south end of Goose Lake were American Goldfinches,
a Rough-legged Hawk, and a few hundred waterfowl, including about 75 American
Wigeons.
At Swan Lake we scanned for Scoters but saw little but frozen
tears. Chris too looked uncomfortable. The lake had Gadwall, Mallard, Loons, Western
Grebe and, across the lake, two Harriers.
Long-tailed Duck - going? |
Long-tailed Duck - going? |
Gone |
Another stop at O’Keefe’s pond yielded the expected
Long-tailed Duck whose earlier non-PC name again reminded me of Chris
Charlesworth at Robert Lake. The
Long-tailed duck was energetically diving again and again and again. I must say
that the plumage and appearance generally of the Lt Duck impresses me –
occasionally one sees a species that seems designed by a team of animators. The
long tailed duck fits this bill – pun [sadly] intended.
Salmon Arm |
At the northern end of Otter Lake we saw no otters but a
host of Widgeon and a few Pintail and two more Greater White-fronted Geese.
Salmon Arm Great Blue Heron |
Finally we travelled further north to Salmon Arm to try to
grab another Gull lifer – a recently reported Sabine’s Gull. WE found no such
Gull however we met Ted Hilary who had originally found it with some Bonaparte’s
Gulls. He had not seen it either. We enjoyed some Common and Hooded Mergansers
and, in particular, the antics of a family of Otters who had decided the board
walks of a mariner were a great place to work, rest and play and..poop. [Please
feel free to insert your favourite verb].
Otters at Salmon Arm |
All in all it was a great day. Particularly so for the
company of Chris Siddle who, I am beginning to believe, is a long lost brother.
Perhaps like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny Devito. You know the kinds of
brothers that only their parents can tell apart. Anyway the brother theory;
wildlife, birding, nature, books, politics, English teaching and it wanting to
end, suspicion of sporting elites, cynicism of the ultra religious, married to attractive women from exotic places [Chris married to Sonja from Denmark, and I'm married to Megan from the exotic apple isle of Tasmania] down to
remarkably similar true stories of our youth all suggested some spooky genetic
linkages. It was nice to be with family.
And so it was at the dinner table on Saturday evening. A
good supper of Sweet and Sour was followed by a spooky safari through a Haunted
House with the boys in down town Vernon. And then a bit of a chat until quite
late.
I must admit that night I slept too soundly and I did not
surface until after seven thirty on Sunday morning.
Sunday morning saw an early winter expedition to Silver Star,
the Ski Resort near Vernon. It had snowed and the car park was covered in a
thin layer as was the surrounding hills. We strolled through the snow along
Paradise Trail with Chris and Sonja and my family. All were happy except for
Millie who decided that it was far too cold to be cool and she let all know her
displeasure. Despite her protests we found a Rough-legged Hawk, Pine Grosbeak,
Mountain Chickadee, Stellers and Grey Jays and Northern Pygmy Owl. The latter
was my third lifer in as many days and Chris, in quiet astonishment, had called
it in. We got great views to a moaning
Millie soundtrack.
Silver Star |
Sonja at Silver Star |
Millie and I - note Millie's socks for gloves. |
Lifer number 3 - Northern Pygmy Owl |
Group Shot! - Chris Siddle, Sonja Siddle, Millie, Tom, Me and Matt! |
The trip home was another reminder that winter is upon us as
snow whirled around our vehicle and, at times high in the hills, it had fallen
to make a thin white veil across the ground and even the waters of some small
lakes.
Winter returns on the drive home |
A final word. A sincere
thank you to Chris and, in particular, his wife Sonja for hosting my family and
I. We certainly appreciated their hospitality.
Wild Goose Chase
Thursday morning.
18 October, 2012.
Six o’clock in the
am. It is cold and it is dark and I am in bed. But not for long! Forty minutes
and a cup of coffee later I am crawling into the vehicle of Gary Davidson for a
highish speed drive to Burton, some thirty minutes south of Nakusp for a pre-dawn
pre-school wild Goose chase.
No, really.
Gary had been away from Nakusp on a Vancouver to Florida
cruise via the Panama Canal and, if that wasn’t enough he had the extra rudeness to spot
some rare birds adjacent to the Highway at the Burton Flats on the return trip home. The birds in
question were Cackling Geese. These birds were only recognized a few years ago
to be separate species from Canada Goose and are, in the Arrow Lakes Valley at
least, quite rare. And for me they represented not only an interesting species
but a lifer.
So after Gary had dutifully informed me of their presence
the chase was on. Teaching responsibilities prevented me from racing straight
down as Nakusp Secondary had inconveniently planned an Open Night so hence the
early Thursday morning start.
Now to make a short story even shorter; we arrived to see a
small group of Geese near where Gary had left them. Excitedly but cautiously we drove in their direction. Sadly
the birds took off and flew south [to coin a phrase] along the lake. They weren’t
seen again. Other Geese sighted turned out to be clearly Canadian –their large
size and, in particular, their long bills giving them away.
So I dipped. Again. How I had hoped for a happy ending.....
PS – The following day, Friday, all was forgotten. For a Professional Development
I had arranged a meeting of sorts with an ex-English Teacher Chris Siddle in
Vernon. Enroute I scored the Cacklers – five at least of them on the Fauquier Golf
Course in the company of many more Canada Geese. They were very clearly smaller
with darker backs and shorter pushed in bills. To my eye they may have had
proportionally smaller areas of white under the tail and onto the belly. At any
rate they quite stood out. So another North American species falls to my list……………A very Happy beginning for a weekend away!
Cackling Geese in the foreground and Canada Geese in the background |
The picture above, kindly supplied by Gary Davidson, demonstrates the difference between the two species. Check out the near identical plumage but also note the clear difference in size and bill length.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TOM
Monday, 8 October 2012
Fall Birding
Downtown Nakusp in Fall |
Maple Leaves - obviously.... |
And I got a Harrier out at Cresent Bay Road. Not a lot of
birds but some quality!!!
Monday saw a foggy start to the day and a quick search for the Blue Jays at the top of town proved fruitless however there was heaps of noise from the southern end of Sixth Street. Robins! In Australian parlance; heaps of 'em! Nice to see as the majority of the town's Robins had long since departed. In among the Robins there was a beautiful female Downy Woodpecker with perfect plumage. And nearby a single White-rumped Myrtle Warbler.
A quick visit to Spicers again revealed Song and White crowned Sparrows but the Tree remained invisible. Pacific Wren, Common Yellowthroat were in the company of the Song Sparrows adjacent to the compost there. Decorating the area were two large piles of Black Bear Dung but no [other] sign of the bruins.
Went for a little drive up into the hills - high enough to see sign of American Three-toed Woodpecker but saw only Stellers and Grey Jays plus Northern Flicker.
Nakusp Streets in Fall |
Monday saw a foggy start to the day and a quick search for the Blue Jays at the top of town proved fruitless however there was heaps of noise from the southern end of Sixth Street. Robins! In Australian parlance; heaps of 'em! Nice to see as the majority of the town's Robins had long since departed. In among the Robins there was a beautiful female Downy Woodpecker with perfect plumage. And nearby a single White-rumped Myrtle Warbler.
Another view of Arrow Lake |
Staggering from the wilderness.... |
A quick visit to Spicers again revealed Song and White crowned Sparrows but the Tree remained invisible. Pacific Wren, Common Yellowthroat were in the company of the Song Sparrows adjacent to the compost there. Decorating the area were two large piles of Black Bear Dung but no [other] sign of the bruins.
Went for a little drive up into the hills - high enough to see sign of American Three-toed Woodpecker but saw only Stellers and Grey Jays plus Northern Flicker.
Part of winter Preperation |
High in the Selkirks overlooking Arrow Lakes |
One that got away; Saddle Mtn already with snow making the climb unlikely! |
Thanksgiving 2012
Our very first Thanksgiving! And we would like to thank
North America generally for this holiday, one that Australia should steal. To
celebrate the harvest is worthwhile for anyone who eats or in this case feasts
and to make thanks for all of the blessings of the past year seems especially
appropriate for us this year.
Porcupine in tree - middle of tyhe pic - look for a black spot! |
Now when we arrived on Saturday afternoon the porcupine was
still enjoying the view and the safety of high branches of a nearby conifer. So
we got a few pics and the kids were delighted to collect some spines from the
animal. Hopefully for the porcupine’s sake and that of the dogs the porcy gets
a chance to get well away soon.
Anyway the feast….. Turkey and Ham and all of the trimmings,
salads from us, fresh bread plus a huge assembly of desserts weighed heavily on
the kitchen benches – there not being enough room on the table. The tables, I
should say, as in concert with their small four seat table, a huge bench had
been hastily but Dom assured me safely, assembled to seat the sixteen assembled.
And this dining table dominated [no pun intended] Dom’s Dining room. So the
feast began accompanied by Beer and wine and thanks for family and friends and
especially the cooks.
Now I’m not a great dessert lover however let me say one
word about Pumpkin Cheesecake – ‘Tremendous’. There are other words that could
be used.
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