Showing posts with label waterfowl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label waterfowl. Show all posts

Sunday, January 26, 2025

Mud lovers

Back to more local wanderings; a couple of photos of distant birds in Oyster Bay, those birds that to the naked eye squinting from the closest vantage point, on the dike overlooking the inner circle of the bay, are just tiny black shapes against silvery water. Or silvery mud; those will be peeps, also evident because they are all running, all the time, barely pausing to take a quick peck at the mud underfoot. The camera works better than binoculars; in the photos, the birds aren't moving, although they may be standing on their heads.

Wigeons, calmly paddling along, one eating seaweed. The males have the showy green stripe on the head. Pintails, mostly head down, tails up, beaks foraging in the mud below, males with the creamy bellies, females bedecked in patches of brown and cream. The water here is only a few inches deep.

Sandpipers, probably semipalmated. This was about 1/4 of the flock running along where the water turns to mud.

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Regresando a sitios más cerca de casa: aquí hay dos fotos de pájaros en la distancia, en Oyster Bay; esos pájaros que a mis ojos sin ayuda, viéndolos desde donde más me puedo acercar, encima del dique que bordea el círculo interior de la bahía, esos pájaros que parecen nada más que formas pequeñitas negras sobre el agua plateada. O sobre el lodo, también plateado; esos serán correlimos, creo, con más razón porque nunca dejan de correr; hasta para comer pican rápidamente en el lodo, entre paso y paso. 

La cámara me sirve mejor que los binoculares; en las fotos, los pájaros no se mueven, aunque a veces están parados de cabeza.
  1. Silbones, nadando tranquilamente; una está comiendo algas marinas. Los machos tienen la raya verde en la cabeza. Los otros patos son ánades rabudos, Anas acuta; casi todos con las colas en alto, los picos explorando el lodo al fondo. Los machos tienen el abdomen gris claro, y las hembras llevan un diseño de parches cafés sobre crema. El agua en este lugar tiene apenas unos pocos centímetros de profundidad.
  2. Correlimos, probablemente Calidris pusilla. Esto era aproximadamente un cuarto de la bandada que corrían a lo largo de la orilla, donde el agua se vuelve lodo.





Monday, November 18, 2024

Waterfowl, anyhow

Half of the birds in my local guide book (Birds of Coastal British Columbia) are aquatics. But they've separated them into groups: Diving birds, Seabirds (most of these dive), Gulls and kin, Waterfowl (some of which are divers), Wading birds, Shorebirds (who are usually wading). A bit confusing.

These water-loving birds were on or in or over the water around Tyee Spit last week.

Standing on water. Male mallard showing off his speculum, which is usually blue, here faded to pink.

Grebes, probably Horned grebes, Podiceps auritus, in their winter plumage. These are classified as "Diving Ducks". One of the smallest waterbirds.

A gull and his shadow.

Harlequin ducks, male and female. These are surfers, and also dive.

A distant gull with what looks like a fresh salmon head.

Not in my guide book. Little metal water-loving fliers. De Havilland Otters.

And there are more mallards ... 

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La mitad de los pájaros en mi libro guía, son acuáticos; es decir, pasan la vida en o encima del agua. Pero el libro guía los separa entre: Buceadores, Aves Marítimas (la mayoría de los cuales son buceadores), Gaviotas y parecidos, Aves Acuáticas (algunas son buceadores), Aves Zancudas (que buscan su comida en el agua al borde del mar), Aves Costeñas (limícolas, que casi siempre se encuentran buscando su comida en el agua). Un poco enredado.

Estos pájaros amantes del agua se encontraron alrededor de la lengua de tierra Tyee Spit la semana pasada.

  1. Un pato real macho, parado y extendiendo las alas para mostrar su espéculo, que generalmente es azul fuerte, pero en este caso es color de rosa.
  2. Zampullines cuellirrojos, Podiceps auritus, en su plumaje de invierno. Estos son buceadores, y unos de los pájaros acuáticos más pequeños.
  3. Una gaviota con su sombra en el agua.
  4. Patos arlequines, macho y hembra. Les gusta el agua agitada y también son buceadores.
  5. Una gaviota en la distancia, con lo que parece ser la cabeza de un salmón.
  6. Estos no están en mi libro guía. Pajaritos acuáticos metálicos. De Havilland Otters.
Y hay más patos reales. Para mañana será.

Thursday, January 12, 2023

Few and far between

It has been a poor year for birds, at least for me. Fewer on the shore, fewer in my yard, fewer in the tops of the trees. Where I used to count eagles on my way home, a 15-minute drive, finding a dozen or more, this year, I count it a good day if I see one. Along the shore, I see the occasional duck, often all alone. Where are the large flocks I see in my photos from other years?

There are always some, though, in the Campbell River estuary. Distant and elusive, but they're there.

Misty estuary with golden-eyes and mergansers and an underwater loon. (Invisible, of course.)

And a friend's backyard, a well-established bird haven, does attract a fair number of LBBs. And these flickers.

Parent and youngster?

This pair was foraging under the trees, mostly out of sight, and finally flew to a very distant chimney, where they looked to me like two small dots. The camera did a fair job on them. I've been trying to decide if they are a parent and a juvenile still begging for his meals.

And while I'm at it, here are two photos of herons: poor photos, but the herons were indulging in a spot of synchronized flying.

Leaving because I took one step too many in their direction.

5 seconds later.

Maybe this new year will be better. I do miss the birds.

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Ha sido un año de pocos pájaros. Pocos en la playa, pocos en el jardín, pocos en las copas de los árboles. Donde antes contaba águilas camino a casa, unos 15 minutos de viaje, llegando a contar una docena o más, este año tengo suerte si veo uno. En el mar, veo un pato solitario o un par de colimbos. ¿A dónde fueron las bandadas grandes que veo en mis fotos de años anteriores?

Por lo menos en el estuario del rio Campbell, siempre hay aves acuáticas, aunque pocas y distantes.

Foto #1: El estuario en la neblina, con porrones y serretas y un colimbo invisible (bajo el agua).

#2: El jardín de una amiga, ya hace años establecida como refugio para pájaros, si ofrece vistazos a pájaritos entre los arbustos. También hay los pájaros carpinteros, Colaptes auratus. Estos dos buscaban hormigas bajo los árboles, y por fin salieron a la vista, volando hacia la chimenea de una casa distante. Para mis ojos, eran solo dos puntos negros, pero la cámara ve mejor. Sigo tratando de decidir si son un adulto con su cría todavía requiriendo ayuda en encontrar comida.

#3 y 4: Ya que estoy mirando fotos no tan buenas, hay estas. Dos garzas azules practicando el vuelo sincronizado. Me acerqué un paso demás; ni modo.

Bueno, tal vez el nuevo año tendrá más pájaros. De veras los extraño.




Friday, March 31, 2017

Pure white

The gleaming white flanks of Common Goldeneye males dazzle, even at a distance, even on a dull day, even on my pocket Sony.

Two males.

Two seconds later. One male and a ripple.


Sunday, January 01, 2017

Mute swan

The Campbell River estuary is a waterfowl haven, with the Tyee Spit reaching out to protect it from the currents and winds of the Discovery Passage, and the many small islands dotting the delta providing food, nesting and resting sites. Ducks, both dabblers and divers, Canada geese, loons, and gulls spread out over the water, usually too far away for my camera's lens. Inshore, near the docks and a viewpoint, a flock of mallards and wigeons hang out, hoping for handouts from visitors to a small park.

I had been told to watch for swans with the mallards; a couple of trumpeters and a mute swan. I met the mute swan a couple of days ago.

The mute swan, Cygnus olor, is easily identified by the black bulge above the bill.

Swan and female mallard. The swan grows to about 5 feet long, with a 6-foot wing span.

The trumpeter swan is slightly larger, has no lump on the forehead, and prefers to hang out in flocks. The mute swan is a loner.

The raised wings may be a defensive or aggressive display.

Unfortunately, local residents have taken to feeding the swan bits of bread, not a good addition to its diet. Here, it's waiting for the latest handout.

I'll keep on looking for the trumpeters; they are rumoured to have a nest in the area.



Monday, February 06, 2012

Surrey Lake, with distant birds

We were in the mood for something different. Instead of heading west and south towards the afternoon sun, the  Delta farmlands, and one or other of our beaches (or mud flats), we went almost directly east, through the city to Surrey Lake. It had been five or six years since we had visited, when it was a recently gouged-out pond in a reedy wetland, and a muddy path through the adjacent forest. It was time we saw how it had fared.

The old eagle nest in its tree on the edge of the wetland. An eagle waited in a tree nearby. Last time we were here, there were chicks in the nest.

The forest was mostly tangled undergrowth, gloomy and brown at this time of year, but the towering alders are blooming, up there in the sunlight.

And the pussywillows are out!

The path skirts one side of the lake, then curves around the wetland, returning through the forest. We didn't complete the circuit, but spent more time watching the lake. Hundreds of waterfowl were congregated there; mallards, wigeons, coots, pintails, gulls, goldeneyes, and possibly grebes swam and dived, always a good distance away from any of the people walking on the trail. I tossed them some of the Reifel Island duck seed; a few mallards approached, then waited until I had walked on before they would come close enough to feed. Shy and wild, these birds are, maybe because people walk dogs here, not always on leash.

Squinting against the low afternoon sun, we saw a heron and at least one cormorant, far on the opposite bank..

Not much in the way of scenery. One corner of the flock of waterfowl.

A dusting of small, floating specks.

We snuck up on these ones, behind a cattail curtain.

Laurie was trying out a new little camera, bought as a pocket camera. Unfortunately, it doesn't zoom nearly as well as his Pentax; nor does my Sony. What would be best at this lake would be one of those humongous lenses that look right into the eyes of a bird half a mile away. Not for us, though. But at least, next time, we'll bring the binoculars.


Saturday, February 26, 2011

Sudden death on a sunny day

Warning: this is another "dead bird" post. It's not gruesome, at least, but it is still sad; a beautiful bird struck down in his prime.

We were walking along the railway tracks heading in to Crescent Beach, and saw a black heap in the ditch alongside. It was a bird, freshly killed, entire except for the head, which appeared to be whacked off cleanly, as with a cleaver. Nothing else was damaged.

Surf scoter, as we found him.

The feet were intriguing. I had never seen any like that before; a vivid orange-red, with black webbing between the toes. The webbing defined the bird as a waterfowl, but without a head, we couldn't identify it.

Underside. The toes on this side are spotted with black. The flight feathers are grey underneath.

I had to read through the descriptions of black waterfowl in 4 of our guides before I found a description of the feet. This is a male surf scoter, a common bird off-shore, but which we usually see like this ...

Flock of surf scoters, off Centennial Beach. Far off.

They are a distinctive bird, but the defining characteristics are on the head. A white patch on the forehead, another on the back of the neck, and that fat orange, white and black bill. The feet, almost as dramatic, are rarely visible. (But I wish I had learned about them some other way.)

Photo from Wikipedia, by Alan Wilson. Creative Commons.

I found a very few photos showing the entire bird, on the web. Here is a good one, part of a series.

But what killed the bird? Not a predator; an eagle or an owl would have left nothing but feathers behind, a fox would have scattered feathers everywhere and left, maybe a few bones. The head had been cut off, not chewed off.

We have come to the conclusion that it was probably a collision with a train, possibly with some protrusion, something that removed the head with one blow. At least there was no long-drawn-out suffering involved.

The tracks. The trains come along here at a fair clip.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Brand-new old favourite


Beach and jetty, at Iona Beach.

Iona Beach Regional Park. Marsh, logjams, quiet ponds, sandy beach, muddy river banks, dune meadows, concrete jetties. And sewage lagoons; what more could anyone want?

We've been intending to visit for a long time. Yesterday, we finally made it. And I'm stuck for words to describe it; maybe just a hearty "Wow!" will have to do.

A few bird shots, for starters:

One of the ponds, with goose. We saw buffleheads, mergansers, shovellers, as well as the usual mallards and geese on the water.


Three ducks over the river. North Shore mountains in the background.


Canada goose.


Beside the sewage lagoon, a pair of sleepy geese.


Rufous hummingbird.


Same hummingbird. Because I couldn't decide which photo to use.

In this area, between the sewage lagoons and the park proper, a narrow trail leads through and around deciduous forest, blackberry thickets, patches of Scotch broom, banks of purple-pink flowers. The grass is studded with pinpricks of white; two different miniature white flowers. And everywhere, small birds were singing. Redwing blackbirds called in the dried grasses, robins provided rhythm with their repeated "Cheer-ups", birds I couldn't recognize trilled, chirped, whistled. Chickadees, of course, were dee-dee-deeing in the background. Laurie saw a bright yellow bird, unidentifiable. Overhead, tree swallows did acrobatics.

Something about it all seemed so familiar, so right, like a fleeting memory of paradise. I got shivers down my spine.


Tree swallows, by the river bank.


The pilings along the bank are outfitted with swallow nest boxes. One had a long line stretched to a post on the dunes.


Swallow, wings akimbo


Nesting mallards.


Back at the parking lot, there have to be crows.

More Iona photos (I've still got oodles to sort), tomorrow.

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Saturday, December 27, 2008

The after-dinner drowsies

Boundary Bay, after dusk, Christmas Day;

Caught in the flash. They'd been stuffing themselves until the light failed.

The sign said, (a little bird told me):

Christmas Day Banquet
Boundary Bay Beach
Mixed seafood menu
All waterfowl welcome! 
Free!

"The best Christmas gift," said Laurie. Pre-dark photos, tomorrow.
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Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Gateway to ruin

A couple of days ago, I wondered about a luscious red shoot on the Gunderson Slough side hill. Hugh tells me it is probably Japanese knotweed.


As he says, "Yikes!" This is an attractive large perennial, bearing plumes of white flowers in season; it was imported to BC as a ornamental shrub. But it is not content to "bloom where it's planted"; it rapidly goes wild, sprouting as far as 7 metres from the original plant, and crowding out native vegetation, especially along riverbanks. It can send up new shoots even through pavement; it will clone itself from a piece of root an inch long; digging it out is more likely to spread it than to kill it.

Invasive, and noxious. One of its many names is "Hancock's curse." I don't know who Hancock is, but I know what he meant.

Sometimes I am filled with a feeling of despair, seeing our green land and its inhabitants disappear under our onslaught. We are an invasive species, like the knotweed.

In the Delta area, on my doorstep, the beaches are polluted, the wetlands where once waterfowl raised their young are now growing what my grandmother called "similarity houses," tall ones with barely space between for an adventuresome sparrow or two. Purple loosestrife clogs the waterways; malls the high ground. Even in the depths of Watershed Park, the roar of traffic drowns out bird calls.

And now we are threatened with the Gateway project; a system of highways going from Golden Ears in the east to Deltaport, 3 km out to sea, providing, so the politicians say,
"a balance of transit, road and bridge improvements, to keep traffic moving, our economy strong and our region liveable."
I don't believe them.

The transit they are thinking of is trucks and large container ships. Gas guzzlers. Major polluters. And a way of moving things around that we need to re-think, in this time of depleted oil reserves and a changing climate, given an already decreasing volume of shipping, and a current trend away from trucks back to railways.

Liveable? Just in Delta alone, the highway will wipe out Gunderson Slough, filling it in and paving it over. Then it travels along the shore of the river, clearcutting and terraforming the green hillside where now eagles stand guard. After the Alex Fraser bridge, it turns south to skirt Burns Bog, the largest domed peat bog on the west coast of North America, an important wildlife home, and a regulator of our lower mainland climate. The highway will cut the Bog off from its seaward opening.

Delta and Gateway map
Map (homemade) of the Delta section of Gateway. With birds. Click for full size.

Not content with that damage, the developers plan to cut across the rich farmland of lower Delta, diking, paving and eradicating bird breeding grounds as they go. They then move out into the water, over Roberts Bank, home to several pods of orcas, to double the size of the port there at present, even in the face of decreasing usage due to fuel costs.


A farmer's field, near Ladner, waiting for spring.

"Liveable"? I guess, if you don't mind pollution, if you can take your money and run, if you have never stood and marvelled at the creak of a sandhill crane's wings as he flew over your head, if you think green things, wet things, crawly things are "Ewwww!", if the purpose of land and sea, in your view, is to get across it rapidly, well, yes, then the project will make the Lower Mainland more liveable.

Not for us, though. Nor for the myriad small creatures we share the land with.

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Update: Link to the next "Gateway" post, Deltaport, before Gateway.
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Friday, January 04, 2008

2007, Gran Finale

The weather for the last few weeks has been predictable only in that it was cold and usually wet. Snow, slush, rain, wind, ice, snow, rain... We weren't getting out much. But last Saturday, the sun came out from behind the clouds and looked like it was planning to stay out.

We bundled up, just in case, and went down to Boundary Bay.

We stopped at the first parking lot, at the head of the shortest path to the beach, a wide, straight stretch between the mud flats on the left and the grassy, scrubby dunes on the right. A flock of sparrows hidden in the dry blackberry canes at the entrance chattered as enthusiastically as if it were mid-summer. A good sign.

Out on the mud flats, Canada geese lined the waterways, mostly asleep.


Closer to the path, a sole yellowlegs (greater or lesser; I can't tell the difference) waded in the shallows. A pair of teal, the first I've seen in some time, splashed around just beyond.



And in a ditch through the dunes, a heron was fishing.


It was enough. I was content.

But -- wait! What do we see next?

On a dead tree, against the light, a small bird perched. An odd shape; that is all I could distinguish at that distance. I took a photo, anyhow, to see if I could blow it up at home and get a better look. And before I could get a second shot, he dropped off the branch and flew into the blackberry canes right at our feet.

A kingfisher. I had never been so close to one.


While we watched, she (I think, because of the hint of rust on the breast) dove into the water, fishing, several times, each time moving to a different cane with her catch.

Easier to see than to photograph; the cameras kept wanting to focus on blackberries and grasses, and she kept moving on. And here, Laurie's camera began to give problems. While he wrestled with it, I scrambled down the bank ahead of the bird, and tried to get into a position where I had a clear view.

Not quite. But here she is, diving. A bullet-shaped bird going down; wings spread coming up. (Do click on that second shot, to see her clearly.)



And then she'd had her fill; she flew off into the bushes, out of sight.

And that was only the opening act. Down at the beach, we had another treat coming.

Great flocks of dunlins were feeding in the shallow bay. They would stand, all together, at ankle depth (to them) poking at the sand for a few minutes, then lift off suddenly, all together, and stream quickly a few dozen meters down the shoreline, land and feed again. (Click on these photos to get the full picture.)


Feeding. One yellowlegs in front. Looking like a conductor with his orchestra, all of them in tidy brown and white. Note the seagull, just a bit beyond, on the right; it gives an idea of the relative size of these little birds.

Farther out, we could see great grey rafts, mostly resting; the more successful hunter-gatherers, perhaps, sleeping it off.

When the dunlins flew, they looked either black against the light, or as they turned, exposing the underside of the wings and bellies, flashing bright white. All at once; the flock was either white or black in its entirety. And the change was instantaneous, like an electric light switching on and off.


Black. One flock flying, another feeding. Beyond, in the deeper water, a group of Canada geese.


White. Flying just a few feet up, so that their brown upper parts are reflected in the water as they turn.

We followed them down the shore, almost until sunset, never getting close; they took it in easy stages down to the point, then turned and flew back again, always just ahead of us. Laurie was berating his camera; it kept sticking, refusing to zoom, refusing to focus. But no matter; it was glorious just to watch the show; the flocks moving as a unit, a flying raft, stretching out into a line, then bunching into a speeding grey cloud just over the water, flashing white again. And then alighting in a great flapping frenzy, to stand quietly in the mirrored bay, as if intending to fall asleep like the geese. Until, as if blown away by a sudden gust of wind, they were off again...

At one point, another viewer came up to us to ask if we'd seen them in the morning. No. He explained that every morning they are there early, in flocks of thousands, wheeling and flashing over the water. One of these days we must go see.

A photographer loaded with equipment, including a large tripod, and wearing big boots for the mud, made his way down to the water's edge; like us, following the flocks. But by the time he had set up, the dunlins were far away. I felt sorry for him; all that persistent work. But as we reached the straight stretch back to the parking lot, I turned for a last glimpse of the birds.

Payoff! The flock was landing at his feet. I watched him for a while, turning his long lens this way and that, surrounded by feeding dunlin.


On the way back to the car, we noticed a bald-headed eagle standing in the water near the geese. Just standing there. Odd.

We drove home in blissful silence, too full for words.
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