Superbowl results - Kestrels team report (77 species, 159 points)

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Phil Brown

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Feb 2, 2026, 6:25:02 PM (7 days ago) Feb 2
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The ‘Birding University - Harris Center Kestrels’ (Katrina Fenton, Steven Lamonde, Nate Marchessault, Will Stollsteimer, and myself) participated in the Superbowl of Birding on Saturday, with sponsorship from Birding University and The Harris Center for Conservation Education. Chad Witko was unable to join us in the field this year, but he provided key support leading up to the event. Each teammate contributed to what amounted to an excellent day of birding. We were particularly pleased with our total, as none of us had been able to scout this year. The Kestrels tallied 77 species and 159 points this year (down from our record high 88 species and 198 points in 2024, when we did scout and access was a bit easier). Amazingly, we bested the 4th and Longspurs species total by one, but fell a single point short of their tally. Still, our species total led us to claim the David Larson Award for the entire event, as the team with the most species.

For the fourth straight year, the Harris Center has used the Superbowl to fundraise for our raptor conservation projects, raising several thousand dollars to grow our American Kestrel Conservation Project (we now have 50 nest boxes installed across 20 Monadnock Region towns) and track the movements of migratory Broad-winged Hawks between their breeding range in NH and wintering grounds as far as Bolivia. This year, we’re raising funds to expand research on rodenticide levels in our American Kestrel population, tracking their movements through the use of transmitters, and investing in new monitoring technologies to bring our work closer to people. We’re more than halfway to our goal, and you can help us reach it! Support Kestrel Conservation | Harris Center for Conservation Education

Our team of five assembled the evening prior to the event to devise a plan, utilizing eBird reports (including many sightings contributed by Steve and Jane Mirick, our friends and perennial ‘competitors’) and a sophisticated planning template with detailed spreadsheets and maps. This strategy, combined with our game day decisions, knowledge of the area, and highly attuned eyed and ears, led us to success – and a really fun day in the field!

Below is our species list as well as a list of the misses:

Canada Goose

American Wigeon – 1 male at North Hampton State Beach

Mallard

American Black Duck

Northern Pintail – 2 females at Gilman Park

Greater Scaup

Common Eider

Surf Scoter

White-winged Scoter

Black Scoter

Long-tailed Duck

Bufflehead

Common Goldeneye

Hooded Merganser – Route 1 tidal creek

Red-breasted Merganser

Rock Pigeon (Feral Pigeon)

Mourning Dove

Sanderling

Purple Sandpiper

Black Guillemot – 4 from two different locations on the north coast

Ring-billed Gull

American Herring Gull

Great Black-backed Gull

Iceland Gull – 1 at Bicentennial Park

Horned Grebe

Red-necked Grebe

Red-throated Loon

Common Loon

Great Cormorant

Black Vulture – 3 at the roost in Hampton

Turkey Vulture

Cooper's Hawk

Northern Harrier

Bald Eagle

Red-shouldered Hawk – 1 stunning adult terrorizing Horned Larks in Rye Harbor

Red-tailed Hawk

Rough-legged Hawk – 1 dark morph bird spotted perching off Landing Road in Hampton late in the day

Eastern Screech-Owl – 1 calling at Chapman’s Landing at dawn

Barred Owl – 1 calling at Osprey Cove

Red-bellied Woodpecker

Downy Woodpecker

Hairy Woodpecker

Pileated Woodpecker

Northern Flicker

Merlin – Hampton Marsh

Peregrine Falcon – 1 late day find by Will at Hampton Harbor

Blue Jay

American Crow

Common Raven

Black-capped Chickadee

Tufted Titmouse

Horned Lark

Golden-crowned Kinglet

White-breasted Nuthatch

Brown Creeper – Hampton Falls

Carolina Wren

European Starling

Northern Mockingbird

Eastern Bluebird

American Robin

Cedar Waxwing

House Sparrow

Evening Grosbeak – 2 along Autumn Lane, previously reported (and our first of two early 5-point birds)

House Finch

American Goldfinch

American Tree Sparrow

Fox Sparrow – Hampton Falls feeder

Dark-eyed Junco

White-throated Sparrow

Savannah Sparrow

Song Sparrow

Eastern Towhee – Hampton Falls; previously reported bird

Rusty Blackbird – Kimball Road; previously reported bird

Pine Warbler – Exeter feeder (thanks, Karen!)

Yellow-rumped Warbler – 1 picked out by Nate at Jenness/Sawyers Beach

Northern Cardinal

Painted Bunting – the one and only green bird in Rockingham County!

 

Misses:

Common Merganser – didn’t bird Great Bay area during daylight

Wild Turkey

Dunlin – shorebirds flying across Hampton Harbor at low tide at dusk were almost surely these! But conditions were just too poor to be sure

Great Blue Heron

Sharp-shinned Hawk

Great Horned Owl

Belted Kingfisher

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker – missed at least two reported birds

Red-breasted Nuthatch

Winter Wren – wren chittered briefly from marsh at Blake’s Lane, but couldn’t rule out Carolina

Hermit Thrush – we didn’t scout any or chase known birds

American Pipit – scanned a lot of tidal wrack, but came up empty

Purple Finch – only a couple of us heard one calling

Snow Bunting

Chipping Sparrow – one picked out at a feeder by Will, but it disappeared and aggravatingly never resurfaced!

Baltimore Oriole – we won’t even talk about how many of these we missed

 

Phil Brown

Captain, Birding University - Harris Center Kestrels

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