Showing posts with label lesser sand-plover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lesser sand-plover. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

LESSER SAND-PLOVER!

This one was too cute to resist. Hence, back to California (3 days after leaving!) and not back home (2+ weeks after leaving.) The temptation: Lesser Sand-plover (code 3.)

There's a good chance I may get this bird in AK later this year, but it's a life bird, the pics I'd seen were so great, and I couldn't risk waiting. The bird was found 4 days ago in the South San Diego Bay area. It's been keeping a fairly regular schedule - appearing in a pool off the bike path at high tide.

I flew out of Orlando after my Budgie and Fork-tailed Flycatcher success and landed in San Diego at midnight the same day. In many ways San Diego is the ideal town: the airport is practically within walking distance from the city (you're so close as you fly in the downtown skyscrapers fill the entire window view), the city is walkable, lots of great Italian coffee shops, great weather, awesome sushi places. And did I mention the coffee? All they need now is a baseball team, and they're all set...


It's a long way to come for one bird and miss. I'm nervous - this is my first rarity chase where I've got on a plane for just one bird. I can barely sleep. When I do get up, I'm still nervous. I'm counting on the bird following its tidal schedule, so have enough time to enjoy breakfast before driving down to the bay. When I arrive at the end of 7th street, I notice lots of birders (good)...
Birders! (adult males in summer plumage)

...who are chatting and clearly not looking at a major rarity (hmm..not so good.)

While we wait for the bird to (hopefully) appear, there's lots to look at... 


Black-necked Stilt - an Oh Wow! bird. 
A common bird here that's not so common back home. 

and my first Belding's Sparrow of the year - a very dark subspecies of the Savannah Sparrow that's found in coastal Southern California...


Belding's Sparrow - P. sandwichensis beldingi
the darkest subspecies of Savannah Sparrow.

and Reddish Egret - always a fun bird to watch...


Reddish Egret.

But no Sand-plover. 

As I'm scanning through the many Semi-palmated Plovers, I hear a shout from the guy next to me, "I've got it. It's flying. Here it comes!" And with that, a brightly-colored plover plops down amid the slightly smaller resident plovers. It's the bird alright - the Lesser Sand-plover...


Not too hard to pick out - Lesser Sand-plover (foreground) 
with Semi-palmated Plover (background.)

It's an active bird: as soon as it lands, it's running around the mud, looking for food...


Lesser Sand-plover. Bright orange breast, white throat and black face mask. 
The sand-colored back really blends in with the mud.

These Sand-plovers breed in Asia - especially above the tree line of the Himalayas. This bird is presumably of the larger eastern subspecies, often called the Mongolian Plover. It's a great little bird (I love shorebirds!) and definitely worth the hassle to get here. Phew!

I'm flying out tomorrow morning so have rest of the day free. Wow - I have some free time! I decide not to update my blog - not knowing at the time that I'll be so busy birding that I won't have time for another week to actually write any of this up - and instead go birding...

This is apparently a good year for Black-vented Shearwaters. This is a bird that turns up in Southern California in the late summer and fall, and can often be seen from shore. I head up to La Jolla - which has a great headland for seawatching - to try.


La Jolla - Scripp's Park. Popular with tourists and sea lions.

The cliffs at La Jolla are smelly - not from the terrible traffic (which really is terrible here) - but from the belching sea lions. Cute to look at, less cute to smell. I set up my scope, and soon start seeing distant shearwaters. They're so far out, all I can make out is the silhouette. Eventually, some come closer into the bay, and I can see the alternating black / brown above and white below and dark under tail. Black-vented Shearwaters.

Ignoring my better judgement to head back to San Diego and get some much-needed rest, I head up to the Torrey Pines reserve to try again for California Thrasher, which I've kept missing. And today, I do a great job of continuing to miss it.

I'm staying at a motel about 300 feet from the car rental shuttle which is about the same distance vertically from the planes that are coming into land right over the motel. But I don't have any problems falling asleep. This time, when I wake up, I'm *finally* going home!

+ + +

BIG YEAR LIST: 688

NEW YEAR BIRDS (2): Lesser Sand-plover, Black-vented Shearwater

WHAT THE FAQ? WHERE ARE YOU?

I know, I know. The blog is, like, so last week at the moment. So, in an attempt at an update and to add greater transparency, I've agreed to answer some FAQs posed by some readers*

Q: Where are you?
On the interweb thingy I'm still in Southern California. In the real world (yeah, like a Big Year chasing birds is the real world) I'm in Orlando airport, trying to get a flight *back* to California. 

Q: Wait - who's feeding the cats? Are they still alive? 
They're fine...

Still alive.

Q: What are you doing in Orlando? Isn't that where Disney is?
Well - I've just spent a day (yesterday) on a pelagic trip out of New Smyrna Beach trying for White-tailed Tropicbird. And today I've chased Budgerigar for the second time and a very geographically helpful Code 3 surprise - a Fork-tailed Flycatcher - less than an hour from the airport. No Disney characters were hurt during these escapades.

Q: Whatever. Did you get the birds?
You'll have to wait for the posts...they should be online soon.

Q: Why don't I know what's been happening recently?
A combination of: too much birding / there aren't enough hours in the day / I haven't managed to delegate my blog / I'm too tight to pay someone to write it / 5-hour energy drinks don't work.

Q: So - why are you going back to California? Did you forget to return the rental car?
Ummm...no. There's a Lesser Sand-plover in San Diego. It's a stunning bird and a lifer. I may get it in Alaska in the fall, but this is too good a chance to miss. Plus, there was a Sharp-tailed Sandpiper too - but that hasn't been seen since.

Q: OK. Well, hurry up and write some more. This blog is the highlight of my life.
Really? Thanks! Well, I know birds are cool, and the writing is kind of funny and…

Q: I'm being sarcastic. 
Oh. OK. 


(*In this attempt at greater transparency I should mention that I've just made up these questions myself. But I think they're pretty good ones.)