Showing posts with label Short-eared Owl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short-eared Owl. Show all posts

Saturday, August 2, 2025

2025 - What a spring it was!!

 

Northern Lapwing - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. March 12th, 2025. 

Spring birding in the Pioneer Valley is generally pretty special but 2025 seemed to be well above the norm as far as I could tell. I was leading a trip for Naturalist Journeys LLC in Belize in early March but as reports from home filtered through, it became pretty clear that exceptional numbers of geese and waterfowl were passing through the Pioneer Valley. Impressive reports from the Sunderland/Montague area involved up to 4-6000 Canada Geese feeding in the corn stubble fields close to the Connecticut River. Having literally just returned from travel and preferring to stay close to home, my first local field outing of the month found a Pink-footed Goose at Munn's Ferry Road in Gill on March 11th. It was a distinctive individual with notable amounts of white flecking around the base of the bill, worthy of mention simply because the next day Hector Galbraith found a different individual a couple of miles further upriver in the Northfield Meadows. 

Pink-footed Goose - Gill, Franklin Co., MA. March 11th, 2025. 

Pink-footed Goose - Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. March 12th, 2025. 

Impressive as these birds were, and the thousands of geese they were with, nothing prepared me for the events of the evening when a routine check of the gulls at Barton Cove revealed a Northern Lapwing! The poor bird looked distinctly out of place standing alone on the ice slightly adrift of the gulls. Every once in a while, a gull from the flock would chase it off but it always settled back down and remained into the evening long enough for a handful of local birding friends to see it. Alas, I couldn't be there the following morning but from what I understood, the ice flows at Barton Cove had changed completely overnight and neither the gulls or the lapwing were present. We learned a day or so later that a visiting birder had also photographed the lapwing around noon on the 12th opening up the intriguing possibility that the bird had spent the entire day at the cove without being noticed! As it happens, March was a pretty good month for seeing Northern Lapwings in the north-east US with well-watched individuals reported from Newburyport, MA, Long Island, NY and Jamestown, RI in the days before the Barton Cove sighting. But, at least according to ebird, the Barton Cove bird was the last Northern Lapwing to be seen anywhere in North America in the spring of 2025. 

Northern Lapwing - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. March 12th, 2025. 

The impressive numbers of waterfowl passing along the Connecticut River Valley continued to feature throughout March with Snow and Cackling Geese turning up among the Canadas and an early Red-throated Loon at Barton Cove, but I was genuinely surprised on the 20th when a swan resting on an obscure marsh off the Mohawk Trail caught my attention while driving. Since I'd never seen a Mute Swan anywhere near that marsh I turned around for a closer look and was a bit disappointed to see the bird already in flight and getting ready to depart. Luckily for me, its departure plan included a nice, close fly-past along Rt 2 before it disappeared off to the West - a Trumpeter Swan! The following day a flock of 10 Sandhill Cranes passed over Northfield Meadows, the largest single gathering I've seen in the Pioneer Valley. Although well established as a low destiny breeding species in the western hill towns of Massachusetts, these birds were clearly migrants and ultimately continued heading north. 

Trumpeter Swan - Mohawk Trail, Shelburne, Franklin Co., MA. March 20th, 2025.


Sandhill Cranes - Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. March 21st, 2025. 

April opened with inclement weather on the 3rd inducing a huge waterbird fall-out at Barton Cove/Turner's Falls. Outstanding counts were recorded in several species including Bufflehead, Red-necked and Horned Grebes, and Long-tailed Duck but were neatly capped off by a female Tufted Duck found by Ted Gilliland. The latter was initially found at the Turner's Falls power canal with a few Buffleheads, Lesser Scaup and Ring-necked Ducks allowing for close study and ruling out the specter of an aythya hybrid. By the end of the day the Tufted Duck had moved over to Barton Cove, the whole event furnishing just the third record for the Pioneer Valley, the previous two also being found by Ted! 




Tufted Duck (female) - Turner's Falls power canal, Franklin Co., MA. April 3rd, 2025. 
Super find by Ted Gilliland. 

Long-tailed Ducks - Barton Cove, Franklin Co., MA. April, 2025.

Horned Grebes - Barton Cove, Franklin Co., MA. April, 2025.

Red-necked Grebes - Barton Cove, Franklin Co., MA. April, 2025.

An early Great Egret (in full breeding plumage) turned up at the old Pilgrim Airfield in Whately on the 4th, about two weeks ahead of my previous earliest. As impressive as these April highlights were, the next bird completely caught me off-guard. While driving home from an evening bike ride on the 10th, I noticed a 'raptor' teed-up high in a roadside tree in Gill. It was along a stretch of Main Road that I'd driven a thousand times and an area which I knew to be frequented by a pair of Red-tails. I very nearly drove on but there was just something about this bird that made me turn around and take a second look, and I was so glad that I did....it was a Short-eared Owl! It's high perching posture had initially thrown me for a loop but it soon flew off with characteristic moth-like wing beats and began quartering over the field of rough pasture below. Then, in what seemed like a bizarre move, it flew across Main Road, over a new construction site and into the NMH Campus! It was clearly a migrant on the move and, not surprisingly, never seen again. 



Short-eared Owl - Gill, Franklin Co., MA. April 10th, 2025. 
Inexplicably rare in Franklin County, this being the first since Lynn Pelland's
observation in Deerfield Meadows, January 2014. 

Another weather event on April 26th brought a full breeding plumage Laughing Gull to Barton Cove, found by Ted again, and only the third county record. At some point during the morning it was joined by a Caspian Tern, both species together and looking resplendent in full breeding plumage resting on an exposed sand bar. By 10am, the Laughing Gull had already departed but the Caspian Tern lingered for the whole day as they often do at Barton Cove. 

Laughing Gull and Caspian Tern - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. April 26th, 2025. 
Found by Ted Gilliland. 

Laughing Gull and Caspian Tern - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. April 26th, 2025. 


Caspian Tern - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. April 26th, 2025. 


Brant - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. May 2nd, 2025. 


Common Loons - Barton Cove, Gill, Franklin Co., MA. May 6th, 2025. 

May was good for Brants at Barton Cove with flocks of 14 on the 2nd, and 15 on the 9th when torrential rain grounded four Short-billed Dowitchers at the former Pilgrim Airfield in Whately providing a rare opportunity to photograph them. Historically, all of the local Short-billed Dowitchers I've noted have been flyovers. Impressive numbers of 'grounded' Common Loons spent some time resting at Barton Cove early in the month when I tallied 61 on the 5th, the largest gathering I've seen there. And, the last day of May brought a small arrival of shorebirds to the Caldwell Road fields in Northfield including a White-rumped Sandpiper along with several Semipalmated Sandpipers and Semipalmated Plovers

Short-billed Dowitchers - Whately, Franklin Co., MA. May 9th, 2025.

As most local species settled down for the breeding season in June, I 'settled down' accordingly and did very little birding though the first few days of the month produced some late, roaming migrants with a singing Wilson's Warbler at Pauchaug Brook boat ramp in Northfield on the 3rd, and a singing Kentucky Warbler in Gill on the 5th. Though July would hardly qualify as a 'spring' month, over the years it's been a good time to look for Acadian Flycatchers in the hemlock woods of northern Franklin County and this year came up trumps when Daniel Shustack found a singing bird at Mohawk Trail State Forest on the 10th. Trips to the tropics prepared me well for the hike involved as it was incredibly warm and humid on both the dates I visited, but I did meet with success on the 15th and the 21st. The bird was typically aloof and difficult to locate in the sub-canopy but the patch of forest it chose was beautiful and was absolutely no hardship to be there. I got the impression the flycatcher was an unattached male searching for a niche. 


Wilson's Warbler - Pauchaug Brook, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. June 3rd, 2025.


Acadian Flycatcher - Mohawk Trail State Forest, Franklin Co., MA. July 21st, 2025.

Finally, as a postscript of sorts and scrolling back to the winter. I was out of the country tour leading in Trinidad when I learned from a friend of a Harris's Sparrow visiting private land in Deerfield during the harshest days of a severe cold snap in late January. Unfortunately, this bird had chosen a feeding spot that couldn't accommodate birding visitors. It was accompanied by a tiny handful of juncos, cardinals and White-throated Sparrows and could really have turned up with any feeding flock just about anywhere in Franklin County, so why that spot?! Ironically, according to ebird, the only other acceptable Franklin County record also comes from Deerfield, found by the legendary Harvey Allen way back in Jan/Feb 1999. 

Harris's Sparrow - Deerfield, Franklin Co., MA. January 28th, 2025. 










Monday, February 27, 2017

NY - one or two Short-eared Owls


Short-eared Owl - Washington County Grasslands WMA, February 21st, 2017

Last week I made the two hour journey west to the Fort Edward Grasslands IBA in extreme eastern New York State. The site had been recommended to me some years ago by a birder that I'd met at Turner's Falls and had always been at the back of my mind for a winter visit. More recently, Laura Gaudette and JoAnne Russo made the journey from Putney, Vermont and spoke so highly of the experience that I could hardly resist the opportunity for a visit before the winter petered out. 

On reaching the area, I found numerous birders cruising the quiet country roads looking for raptors and it wasn't too long before I encountered my first Rough-legged Hawks and Northern Harriers. But having driven for over two hours to get the site I didn't want to stay in the car and decided to stretch my legs by walking down to the public viewing deck in the center of the IBA. Despite the birder traffic along the roads I was genuinely surprised to find myself alone on the deck, perhaps a little unnerving since I could a see a concentration of birder's cars on a nearby street leaving me to wonder if I was in the right place after all!

But, raptors were on view all the time from the deck as Rough-legs, Red-tails and harriers hunted around the area and sparred with each other. As dusk approached, I began to get to concerned that the hoped-for Short-eared Owls had already moved out for the winter. Then thankfully around 17:10hrs, the first owl appeared and, after briefly sparring with two harriers, flew right past the deck at close range. Moments later, another flew past me. I was surprised how vocal they were and watched them chasing over the fields barking and screaching, surprsingly audible at distance. With these two birds still in view, I quickly became aware of more owl vocals behind me and turned around to see a concentration of nine owls in a tight swirl remaniscent of a flock of migrating nighthawks. I could hardly believe it, 11 Short-eared Owls in the air simultaneously! At the same, and seemingly out of nowhere, the fields were suddenly 'cloaked' in quartering in Northern Harriers with at least 12 in view including three gray males. From then on, the owl and harrier activity continued until it was almost too dark see, though the owls remained vocal well into the dusk. On the other hand, the Rough-legs had dispersed early with around a one hour pause between the last Rough-leg sighting and the appearance of the first Short-eared Owl.

All in all, a wonderful experience and special thanks to Laura and JoAnne for encouraging me to give it a go - what an amazing place for raptors!

Short-eared Owls - Washington County Grasslands WMA, February 21st, 2017.
Four of the flock of nine visible from the viewing deck. 






Northern Harrier - Washington County Grasslands WMA, February 21st, 2017.
Minimum of 12 individuals during the afternoon, including three males.







Rough-legged Hawks - Washington County Grasslands WMA, February 21st, 2017.
Minimum of six individuals seen from the viewing deck. 









Short-eared Owls - Washington County Grasslands WMA, February 21st, 2017.

Sunday, December 6, 2015

MA - owl evening

Short-eared Owl - West Meadows, Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, Northampton, Hampshire Co., MA. December 6th, 2015. 

The events of the day took the family south towards Easthampton in the afternoon. At the back of my mind I couldn't help but think about the one or two Short-eared Owls that have been consistently reported from Arcadia Massachusetts Audubon Sanctuary over the last month or so. So with our business out of the way, the whole family headed towards the West Meadows of the sanctuary. Immediately two juvenile Northern Harriers appeared and kept us entertained until dusk started creeping in. All of a sudden, three birds were sparring over the meadows and one of them was a Short-eared Owl. Despite the fading light, the owl put on a prolonged show, quartering over the the managed fields close enough for an eight-year old to have good naked-eye views! The owl settled out of view in the meadow but remarkably, just I was about to climb into the car to leave, two owls appeared together on the opposite side of the road and seemed to be engaged in a dispute. It was all over in seconds and whilst one was a certain Short-eared Owl, the other which I saw again a few minutes later, could have been a Long-eared Owl or, at the very least, I couldn't rule out Long-eared Owl for the third bird. The habitat looks appropriate for both species so hopefully future visits will reveal more.

It was a classic, damp, chilly winter's evening and a real joy to watch these predators quartering over the meadows. I've seen very few Short-eared Owls in the Pioneer Valley and all of them have been in Hampshire County close to the Connecticut River. Sadly, I've yet to find a similar 'sweet spot' in Franklin County. Many thanks to Larry Therrien for tips on how best to observe the owls at Arcadia.

All images taken at dusk, Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, West Meadows, Northampton, Hampshire Co., MA. December 6th, 2015.