Jane and I joined up with Paul Lacourse yesterday for the "Superbowl
of Birding" sponsored by the Joppa Flats Education Center of
Massachusetts Audubon. Unlike recent years, our "running back" Kurk
Dorsey was placed on "personal leave" and we picked up Stuart Varney
on waivers who performed more than just admirably filling in for
Kurk. His hearing reminds me of a hound dogs sense of smell.
Stuart was hearing birds that were beyond the frequencies and range
of most human beings! Even better than Jane's hearing and far
beyond the abilities of Paul and I. :-( He also makes great
breakfast sandwiches!!!!
This is the 23nd anniversary for this competitive event. The event
is a fun way of beating the winter cold and getting out and finding
birds in Essex County, MA and Rockingham County, NH. Our team name
is the "4th and Longspurs". We've now competed in NH for 20 years
of this event having missed 3 due to a broken elbow and covid. As
we've done in the past years, we participated in the category of
"Rockingham County, NH only". A weighted valuation system determines
the winner, where the rarity of the species determines the number of
points awarded.
Similar to last winter, this winter has been very cold....more like
the older days. But in contrast to last year, we had LOTS OF SNOW
after last week's 20" storm. This made things very difficult for
roadside birding and even worse on the coast, where snow banks and
drifting snow caused lots of troubles. Ragged Neck was plowed out,
but most coastal pullouts were NOT and that limited our offshore
scans. Our car thermometer bottomed out at -3 and I heard others
report down to -7. A very light wind in the morning made it just
that much worse. There was plenty of sun, however, and the morning
breeze died down quickly. The temperature, however, barely got up
to 20F for the day. The seas were flat and visibility offshore was
great, but we covered it at low tide which, combined with limited
access, made finding alcids difficult.
After receiving our breakfast sandwiches at Stuart's at 4:45 AM, we
started out with our Owling in Portsmouth and Rye. We struck out
(as usual) with owls off Little Harbor Road, but we got Screech Owl
and Great Horned Owl off Brackett Road. Unfortunately we arrived
just a bit too late to get the Saw-whet Owl that others had on Love
Lane and we had no luck with the Barred Owl that wouldn't call back
at the Rye Recreation area.....others SAW this bird later in the
day! My dawn strategy worked very well as we were able to find the
roosting Vultures in Hampton Falls and easily pick out 2 Black
Vultures in the Pine Trees as an 8-pointer. The morning rhythm
worked reasonably well as we picked up Wild Turkey, Northern
Pintail, Rusty Blackbird, and Fox Sparrow. We then headed out to
Evy Nathan's feeders and got another easy 8-pointer as her Baltimore
Oriole was sitting in the tree as we pulled in!! Back to Exeter, we
had terrible luck with the ducks at Gilman Park (frozen!) and
Sapsucker....we went 0 for 3 on scouted locations. So......north to
Stratham and Newmarket where Jane picked out a "stop-light" Cedar
Waxwing and we easily got Savannah Sparrows, Common Mergansers, and
OUR THIRD 8-pointer of the day with a scouted Chipping Sparrow in
the same thickets of Newmarket where we had one last year!
We kept things going with a nice pace in Greenland; missing ducks on
Great Bay, but picking up a scouted Yellow-rumped Warbler and
finally getting a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker. Now down to Hampton
where we got (on our 2nd attempt) the INCREDIBLE PAINTED BUNTING
seen by so many this day. THANK YOU to Grace McCullough and
Alicia McLaughlin for
setting up this ONE DAY ONLY visitation. Things continued
on a roll.....Paul whistled in a scouted Eastern Towhee
while Stuart picked out a surprise flyover Fish Crow in
Hampton Falls and Hooded Mergansers continued in the creek.
A side trip to the Hampton WTP failed to produce any new
birds, but it did provide us with perhaps the rarest
sighting of the day. A falconer was flying/training an
adult EURASIAN GOSHAWK! While I'm not in favor of falconry,
I respect this man's love and respect for birds of prey.
And these birds are incredible to see up close.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stevemirick/55071218336/in/photostream/lightbox/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stevemirick/55072436059/in/photostream/lightbox/
Off to Hampton Harbor in Seabrook where things continued to
go well. Jane picked out a nice adult Peregrine Falcon
sitting in the saltmarsh and when I put up my scope for a
(rare for location) Greater Scaup, I was shocked to see a
nice adult male Barrow's Goldeneye. While the Lakes Region
and downtown Manchester have enjoyed these annual winter
visitors, they are (for some reason) rare on the seacoast.
The whole day then went downhill fast when we hit Hampton Beach
State Park!!!!! I'm not sure what happened, but the day was never
the same! First there were the snow drifts, I struggled to walk
through them to get to the beach to scan offshore, but when I turned
around, only Stuart followed me! 5 minutes later, Jane showed up,
panting and exhausted. But Paul never appeared! We almost sent out
a rescue dog to search for him, but it turns out he just said "screw
this"! After post-holing down to his thighs for the 3rd time in the
snow drifts he just went back to the car! But that wasn't the worst
of it! We filled in a few gaps with common offshore
birds....nothing we didn't see later. But as we were leaving, we
noticed a poor, confused, elderly, French-speaking man who had
gotten his car stuck in the snow! What were we to do?!?!? I spent
10 minutes trying to push him out and then, because he spoke very
poor English, and was very old and confused, I spent another 20
minutes using his cell phone to try to call AAA to come and pull him
out......by the way, I don't know what the heck has gone wrong with
AAA, but now you can't get directly connected to a human voice any
more!!!! They send you a text message so you can click a link that
leads you to a confusing on-line questionnaire!!!! What the heck is
going wrong with society! :-(
We probably wasted a solid hour at Hampton Beach State Park with no
significant birds. Stuart suggest that this act of goodwill would
give me good Karma. HE WAS WRONG! We traveled up the coast,
filling holes, and ticking off some common coastal birds, but we
missed Pipit, Snow Bunting and Razorbill. We even missed "Mr. and
Mrs. Piney" the Pine Warblers that have been hand-fed meal worms at
a feeder in Rye. Despite the fact that "Mrs. Bud" came out with
fresh meal worms! And the final shoe to drop was missing Swamp
Sparrow at the Portsmouth Hospital marsh at 5 PM......where we had 7
on January 11th before the storm.
We ended the day with a total of 76 species. This is well below our
record high of 87, and below our average for recent years, but I
think an excellent total considering the horrendously cold and snowy
winter. Phil Brown's team beat us with 77 species, BUT we beat them
by a single point! (160 to 159). We'll have to wait and see
whether either of us wins any awards as the final results will be
announced tonight.
Total species - 76
------------------------
Canada Goose
Mallard
American Black Duck
Northern Pintail - Female at duck pond in Hampton Falls
Greater Scaup - Great Bay frozen as far as you could see. But a few
around Great Boar's Head and in Hampton harbor.
Common Eider
Surf Scoter
White-winged Scoter
Black Scoter
Long-tailed Duck
Bufflehead
Common Goldeneye
BARROW'S GOLDENEYE - One of the surprises for the day. This may be
my first Coastal record of an adult male since March 2014!
Hooded Merganser - Taylor River along Rt. 1
Common Merganser - Newfields Landing on Squamscott River
Red-breasted Merganser
Wild Turkey - Groups in Hampton and Greenland.
Horned Grebe
Red-necked Grebe
Mourning Dove
Rock Pigeon
Sanderling - A couple of spots on seacoast.
Purple Sandpiper - Scarce this winter. Small flock from Little
Boar's Head picked out by Stuart.
Black Guillemot - FOUR at Odiorne.....but no Razorbills.
Ring-billed Gull
American Herring Gull
Great Black-backed Gull
Red-throated Loon - One at Hampton Beach SP and 3 more at Odiorne.
Common Loon
Great Cormorant - Rye Ledge
BLACK VULTURE - Two perched up in roost trees at dawn in Hampton
Falls.
Turkey Vulture - Didn't count. Perhaps 20+ at roost.
Cooper's Hawk
Bald Eagle - 7 total for the day
Red-tailed Hawk
Eastern Screech-Owl - One off Brackett Road
Great Horned Owl - At least 3
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker - FINALLY got one in Greenland. After
dipping at 3 spots in Exeter.
Downy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker
Northern Flicker - One at Autumn Lane in East Kingston only.
Peregrine Falcon - One adult in Seabrook marshes.
Blue Jay
American Crow
FISH CROW - Only our 2nd ever for Superbowl. Nice bird calling very
vociferously as it flew over our heads in Hampton Falls.
Common Raven - Two for the day
Black-capped Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
Horned Lark - Ragged Neck
Golden-crowned Kinglet - Nicely picked out by Stuart Varney by call
note from 1/2 mile away!
Cedar Waxwing - Incredible single bird in fruit trees in Stratham.
Spotted by Jane at stop light! Rare on seacoast this winter.
Red-breasted Nuthatch - At Bud's feeders. Rare on seacoast this
winter.
White-breasted Nuthatch
Carolina Wren
Northern Mockingbird
European Starling
Eastern Bluebird
American Robin
House Sparrow
House Finch
American Goldfinch
CHIPPING SPARROW - 8 pointer at feeder in Newmarket. Took a little
effort and a lot of pisshing, but finally came in!
FOX SPARROW - Cooperative bird at Dave Kellam's house in Exeter.
American Tree Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
White-throated Sparrow
Savannah Sparrow - Very easy at Stuart Farm in Stratham.
Song Sparrow
EASTERN TOWHEE - Cooperative female staked out in Hampton Falls.
BALTIMORE ORIOLE - Female nicknamed "Shirley" at Evy Nathan's feeder
in Kingston. Wish they were all as easy as this drive-up bird!!
Red-winged Blackbird
RUSTY BLACKBIRD - Cooperative bird at Painted Bunting feeder.
Yellow-rumped Warbler - Surprise that this bird has made it through
the storm. Scouted by Stuart in Greenland.
Northern Cardinal
PAINTED BUNTING - Female in Hampton reported at feeders for the
first time only 2 days earlier!!!! Where was it before then???? OUR
FIRST EVER for a Superbowl and our 162nd (!!!) species recorded for
this event over the years by our team! Thank you Grace McCullough
and Alicia McLaughlin!
The infamous list of birds MISSED included:
---------------------------------------------------------
Snow Bunting - They've been widely scattered and common lately along
coast
Lapland Longspur - Four today at Hampton Beach SP. None yesterday.
Pine Warbler - Mr. & Mrs. Piney
Merlin - Two recently in Hampton area. None.
Northern Harrier - Not sure why we've had such bad luck with this
Red-shouldered Hawk - Apparently there was one in Rye. No luck
Brown Creeper - Stuart heard one at dawn, but we failed to work for
it and never had another one.
American Pipit - Recent rarity could not be found
Razorbill - Disappointing miss. I scanned for several minutes at
Odiorne, but no luck.
Green-winged Teal - I don't know of any recent reports of the male
that had been seen in Gilman Park.
Iceland Gull - No luck
Great Blue Heron - We generally get these about 50% of the time. It
is actually no surprise that we missed one this winter!
Pileated Woodpecker
Winter Wren - No luck with scouted bird at Blakes Lane.
Steve Mirick for "4th & Longspurs"
Bradford, MA