By the beginning of June, most of Alberta’s migrants have
reached their breeding grounds, either here or further north though there are
still a few laggards such as Yellow-bellied Flycatcher which take their time
getting here and some shorebirds (such as the Sanderling below) which aren’t in any hurry to reach the Arctic.
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Sanderling |
Cold Lake/Meadow Lake trip – June 2-5
Ray Woods and I made a quick trip to Cold Lake early in June to look for some of the boreal forest birds that aren’t as common around Calgary. On our way, we visited Charlotte, aka “the prairie birder”, in Vermilion. We birded with her near her farm and saw some good birds including a Common Nighthawk which was a lifer for her … always nice to get a lifer in your front yard (it’s been many years since I’ve had the pleasure).
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Ray, Charlotte and me (notice Charlotte's "I just got a lifer look"?) |
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Charlotte's first Common Nighthawk |
We made one more stop before reaching Cold Lake – Kehiwin Lake –
to look for Great Crested Flycatcher. No
luck with the flycatcher but we did get some nice views of Philadelphia Vireo.
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Philadelphia Vireo |
Monday morning, we birded Cold Lake Provincial Park focusing
on warblers. We had some success finding
Canada, Blackburnian and Magnolia Warblers and a few others. Later that morning we enjoyed seeing Sedge
Wrens near the Saskatchewan border.
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Canada Warbler |
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Blackburnian Warbler |
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Sedge Wren |
The Primrose Lake road to the west of Cold Lake is another
good birding spot. We traveled it twice –
once in the afternoon and again the next morning. It took us a while but we eventually found
most of the expected birds with highlights being Cape May and Connecticut
Warblers. Also of interest was a nesting
pair of Ospreys which took to the air when we walked by.
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Typical habitat northwest of Cold Lake |
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Osprey |
That afternoon, we returned to the park to look for a couple
of birds we missed the first time round.
Chestnut-sided Warblers proved easy once we looked in the right place
(thanks to info from Bob Storms) but Mourning and Bay-breasted Warblers still
eluded us.
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Chestnut-sided Warbler |
Across the border in Saskatchewan (SK), Meadow Lake
Provincial Park looked like a good place to build up our Saskatchewan list so
we spent Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning in the area before heading
home. We did record a number of new SK
birds but found that the birding wasn’t as good as on the Alberta side.
On the way home, we stopped at a site where Ray had seen
Piping Plovers many years ago and found one running along the shore.
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Piping Plover |
Piping Plover breeding sites are treated much differently in
Alberta than on the east coast of Canada.
Here in Alberta, the sites are not publicized (participants in plover
viewing field trips are sworn to secrecy) and visiting the sites is discouraged;
last year on les Iles de la Madelaine, a breeding site on a beach was demarcated
with a rope fence about 15m square (I’m sure the unleashed dogs paid close
attention to the ropes). It seems to me
that an approach somewhere between these extremes would be more appropriate.
Day trips from Calgary – June 10 & 12th
Isaac Sanchez is doing a photographic North America birding big year and I volunteered to show him some of our local birds. On the 10th, Isaac, Bob Storms and I birded the Brooks area (a 2 hour drive to the east). We had mixed success finding about ½ of Isaac’s target birds with the highlight being close looks at a Sprague’s Pipit (usually just a speck in the sky). Another highlight for me was an American Badger that Bob spotted … if you followed last year’s blog, you’ll remember the difficulty we had finding this species.
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Sprague's Pipit |
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American Badger |
Isaac’s targets included some common species such as
Franklin’s Gull and Black Tern. It’s
always nice to have some easy targets and also to practise flight shots. A couple of days later, I met up with Isaac
and his wife in the Water Valley area (40 minutes northwest of Calgary) and we
found a few more of his targets including Great Gray Owl.
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Franklin's Gull |
A grasslands day trip
– July 2
The 2nd half of June was busy with a trip to B.C. to visit
family and getting some carpet installed (a lot more work than my wife and I
anticipated). The birds are usually
starting to quiet down by the beginning of July but Ray Woods and I wanted to
get out birding. Reports of a
Black-billed Cuckoo in the Finnegan area (about 1 ½ hours to the east of
Calgary) was our incentive and we set off early on July 2. We didn’t find the cuckoo but did find a number of new year birds
including Lark Sparrow, Yellow-breasted Chat, Burrowing Owl and Grasshopper
Sparrow.
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Burrowing Owl |
The long drive back featured a couple on pleasant
distractions – roadside Upland Sandpipers and a young Mule Deer buck with
velvety antlers.
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Upland Sandpiper |
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Mule Deer |
A brief note on the
recent southern Alberta floods
Barb and I live in one of the highest parts of Calgary so were not affected
by the terrible floods that hit Calgary and surrounding areas. Mike Mulligan (one of the Fur & Feathers
500 birders) lives near the Bow River but fortunately his home didn’t suffer any water
damage. As you may have seen on the
news, many others weren’t quite so fortunate … I can only imagine the grief the
flooding caused (though thankfully with very little loss of life) and hope that
everyone can get their lives back to normal as soon as possible. I also hope that the governments and
communities can start taking steps to ensure that this disaster is not
repeated. Bird life and bird habitat
was also impacted by the flooding but birders are reporting that the birds are showing as
much resiliency as the human population.
Next up?
July and the first couple of weeks in August are usually pretty quiet but
the shorebirds should be returning and there is plenty of water around. I will also be making a trip to B.C. –
primarily for golf but there is always a chance of a new mammal or two.
Good birding and mammaling,
Brian
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