A walk to Sunset and Starker Parks today was pretty
good for birds, considering we were less than half a mile from home.
At Sunset Park there were a couple of WILSON'S SNIPES who were out in the
open enough to get a good look from the boardwalk. They were preening,
eating, and even tucking their long bills into their back feathers to take a
little nap, very cute (in the picture I attached, the right snipe is snoozing so
you are looking at the back of his head). At Starker Park some starling
sentinels raised the alarm when a MERLIN dashed through the park and continued
on. At least 2 WHITE-THROATED SPARROWS, an adult and an immature, were at
the community garden. 4 COMMON RAVENS flew over doing some acrobatic
flying and soaring, we don't see them all that often from our immediate
neighborhood. We thought we saw one of the Red-shouldered Hawks but didn't
get a good enough look, and never heard any Red-shouldered sounds. A MARSH
WREN is hanging out with some BEWICK'S WRENS near the Old Mill Center
school. NORTHERN FLICKERS seemed to be playing around with one another,
there must have been at least 5 of them. If you like an easy WESTERN
BLUEBIRD-watching spot, they are there almost every day, and are easy to
approach. A good variety of other birds were there today too, feeling
perky in the nice weather.
At the duck pond, someone has probably dumped an
unwanted Chinese Goose. Sad to say, a lot of people abandon their
waterfowl there. In the last few years we have seen some kind of
domesticated Greylag Goose breed, a Muscovy Duck, Indian Runner Ducks, Pekin
Ducks, etc., some of whom have not survived very long, while others have managed
to breed and produce some charmingly odd hybrids. Mr. Chinese
Goose is getting along with the motley domestic x Mallard
hybrids, wild MALLARDS and AMERICAN WIGEONS in the pond. He looks pretty
cool with a big knob on his head and a weird-sounding honk, and I hope
he does OK there at the duck pond. Chinese Geese are descended from the
wild Swan Goose of Asia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_goose
Lisa