Monday
afternoon I found four short-eared owls and a northern
shrike at Salisbury Beach without even trying. All I did
was drive in the entrance road and there they were. Three
of the owls were hunting over the marsh right next to the
road with the northern shrike perched on a bush in front
of them. The fourth owl was flapping its way along the
dunes between the Beach Boys' house and the state
reservation parking lot. So I figured with the fabulous
weather today and plenty of time to spend, I'd turn up
lots of birds both there and at Plum Island today. No
such luck. It was a quiet day birdwise.
Today there were few enough herring
gulls in the Salisbury State Reservation parklng lot that
I could actually sort them out by age. I guess I've
actually made progress on that resolution I make every
year to learn the immature plumages of all the gulls that
winter here. There were more horses than herring gulls.
You don't see that every day.
Over
on PI at the refuge, there was actually a line at the
gatehouse. The parking lot at Hellcat and the one at
Sandy Point were full. Everybody and his brother sister
mother father and large broods of children wanted to be
outdoors today. It's that kind of day. Sparkling. Bright.
Brilliant. So sparkling, bright, and brilliant that birds
to the west of the road looked like mounds of grass if
they were on the water and dark paper cutouts if they
were in the air. Not that there were that many birds in
the air as it was very windy. I was surprised at how
windy it was. It made my nose run.
I zipped into the one free parking
space at lot 7 and walked out on the beach by Emerson
Rocks. There was some weird kind of duck hunting vehicle
out by the rocks. I mean it really didn't look like a
boat exactly. I don't think too many ducks were fooled by
it because all I saw for the longest time was one grebe
that dove every time I got my binoculars on it. I
couldn't get a good enough look to identify it despite
repeated tries. Birders with serious scopes were looking
at the same grebe but not getting any better looks than I
was. I think the thing spent more time underwater than a
fish.
A long line of common eiders flew
by low over the water and fairly far out from shore. The
way the sun highlighted them they seemed lit up from
inside. A small flock of white winged scoters put in an
appearance once the strange duck hunting vehicle left.
More and more birders with bigger and bigger scopes
checked out the grebe. I guess they were looking for the
western grebe that was here a few days ago. A flock of
horned larks flew by overhead right into the sun so there
was no way I could check for snow buntings or lapland
longspurs hanging out with them. I didn't write any of
these birds down in my notebook -- no list for today.
Listing felt all wrong for a holiday walk on the
beach.
Some
arty person has assembled driftwood installations along
the beach. Well, at least two. One is right near the
platform by lot 7. The other one, which I didn't
photograph, is further north near lot 6. If I'd had the
energy to the beach at each access point I may well have
found one at each of them. Hmm, maybe that could be a
project for the new year (besides learning those gull
plumages). I wonder how long they'll stay put.
Somebody was waiting for my parking
space when I walked back to the car. The refuge is never
this busy in winter. When I stopped to use the latrine at
Hellcat, I'd barely closed the door when a little girl
who desperately had to pee started banging on it. There
is never a wait for the evil smelling pit toilets at
Hellcat. Never. And on the way out of the refuge I
counted 12 cars in line at the gatehouse. Did somebody
flip the calendar to July by mistake?