About twenty of us enjoyed the first Audubon
Society of Corvallis Bicycle Birding trip of the season, at E.E.
Wilson. We split up into two groups, and both groups took the same loop in
opposite directions, starting at the pheasant cages, up to the angler
pond, up the east side, to the northern marsh and then down the west
side (west of the angler pond and nearby marsh) and back to the pheasant cages.
The trip lived up to its subtitle, "Chat-O-Rama," as everyone saw and
heard YELLOW-BREASTED CHATS in various locations. It was a productive
day, but the worst miss was a Willow Flycatcher.
East leg of loop (by
Don):
At the angler pond and nearby marsh we watched the OSPREYS catch fish
and then protest the arrival of a juvenile BALD EAGLE who flew by without
incident. A very tame KILLDEER was gleaning bugs in close proximity to the
anglers on the shore of the pond. Further north a GREAT HORNED OWL flushed from
grove of tall cottonwoods. In the ash swales and cottonwoods were YELLOW
WARBLERS and WARBLING VIREOS. There were many WESTERN WOOD-PEWEES and we had to
double take on the pair of OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHERS. They didn't call so we had
to identify them by sight.
North end (by Don):
There were a few LAZULI
BUNTINGS singing in the fields with hedges of roses and blackberries. I was
surprised to watch a Spotted Towhee singing like a Bewick's Wren. At
the north marsh we had success with SORAS and VIRGINIA RAILS responding to
our recordings. It was one of those situations when you start them off with
recordings and then the two species call back to one another for a
while. Some of us got a close look at a BOBCAT carrying rabbit prey.
The bobcat was about the size of a female, and I presumed she was
hunting in the the middle of the day to feed her kittens. Some of us got to
see a WRENTIT come close and investigate when I imitated its song.
West leg of loop (by Lisa):
We watched TREE, VIOLET-GREEN and CLIFF
SWALLOWS at nestboxes near some of the office buildings. A few Tree
Swallows were brown first-year females. We had some great looks at singing
BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAKS and listened to a few SWAINSON'S THRUSHES shyly singing
just a little. At the marsh west of the angler pond, a VIRGINIA
RAIL came out in response to calling, and a couple of people got to see a
long red bill poke out of the cattails, while a MARSH WREN sang. Some
CANADA GEESE goslings were nearly the size of their parents, while others were
still fuzzballs. YELLOW WARBLERS were abundant although we only got a look
at one. RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRDS were buzzing around
everywhere. Two YELLOW-BREASTED CHATS were singing close by, and
one popped out to sing in plain sight. I checked for snakes
under a piece of corrugated metal, and found two beautiful RING-NECKED
SNAKES warming up underneath. As we approached the northern marsh, a pair
of SPOTTED SANDPIPERS came out and strolled around on the road near some
KILLDEER and MOURNING DOVES. A pair of CINNAMON TEALS were quite
pretty in the sunshine.
We rode our bikes back to Corvallis, and on
Hwy 99W we spotted a RED-TAILED HAWK (bad picture, sorry) nest with 2 fuzzy
chicks, and a WILD TURKEY hen. While in Corvallis we went home by way of the
Campus Way/Covered Bridge path. We spotted a WESTERN KINGBIRD (another crummy
picture!) in the snag east of the covered bridge.
Don Boucher & Lisa Millbank
www.neighborhood-naturalist.com