Showing posts with label birding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birding. Show all posts

Friday, January 2, 2009

The Hunt for the Cedar Waxwing


Every year during the holidays, I am not just hunting for the perfect gift, I am hunting for a bird that only comes through around this time every year: the Cedar Waxwing. To me, this masked, crested bird is part of the holiday season. Winter berries are on the Toyon and other bushes throughout wildlife areas and parks and neighborhoods. Even on trees you will find fruit that Cedar Waxwings and American Robins delight in eating. Cedar Waxwings gorge themselves on fruit. It's like watching teenage boys at a buffet. They chow down like no other bird I have seen.








I searched everywhere hoping to find them. I searched Huntington Central Park with its many bushes festooned with red berries. I would often hear from another birder that, gosh, they'd just been here near the volleyball court or here near the fence. However, when I was there, they were not.



Cedar Waxwing in an Industrial Complex in Orange County, California. Taken through the window.

One day at work, my supervisor had brought us bagels and English muffins. The toaster is near the window. I was toasting an English muffin when what to my wondering eyes should appear, but a flock of Cedar Waxwings in the Liquid Amber trees outside my office window. They were resting after picking the trees and bushes clean of berries and fruit. I just happened to have my camera and clicked away since I was on a break.





Cedar Waxwing photographed from my office at work. "Through a glass darkly..." To misapply a quote.




But the camera focused on the reflection on the window, and I had problems getting clear shots.






Cedar Waxwings --notice the yellow waxy substance on the tail, and the red waxy substance on the wings--hence the name Waxwings.



So I kept snapping, hoping some would be okay.






Cedar Waxwing in Orange County business complex.




And snapping.






Cedar Waxwing in Orange County.




Cedar Waxwing in Orange County.




Cedar Waxwing in Orange County.







Then I got another chance at some clearer shots. I drove over to San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary and went into the Butterfly Garden area. There were over a hundred Cedar Waxwings fluttering and gorging themselves at several Toyon bushes. Wahoo!









Cedar Waxwing at San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary

After I had snapped a few pictures, my camera flashed a very unwelcome message--"Card and Internal Memory Full." I ran home cleared the card, grabbed another and went back as fast as I safely could. Alas, when I went back, the feast was over and a Cooper's Hawk sat in a nearby tree waiting for his own banquet to begin.





Feather fluffed and puffed to conserve heat in the cold afternoon, a Cooper's Hawk waits near the Toyon Bushes in the Butterfly Garden for the Cedar Waxwings to return. San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary .









Cedar Waxwing at San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary--up a tree.


As I headed toward the car, I saw that there were many Cedar Waxwings silhouetted in the trees nearby. A hint worth keeping in mind when looking for Cedar Waxwings: they often roost in large numbers in trees near their food source. As I walked closer, I saw them in the Toyon bushes in front of the cars in the gravel parking lot. Eureka! Got my camera at the ready.


Cedar Waxwing with a Toyon berry at San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary in the lower part of the picture.


I moved closely into range just as a couple got into separate cars and left. The man hesitated before he got into his car watching the Cedar Waxwings retreat into the trees. "Perhaps they will come back when we've left, " he said apologetically. I waited after they left.









After a long while, the Cedar Waxwings began to fly back into the bushes in front of my car just as a noisy group of children went by. The birds flew back into the trees. I breathed deeply. Then I had an idea! If I used it as a blind, I could get even closer. After all, the bushes they were interested in were right in front of my car! It was perfect.


Cedar Waxwing at San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary eating Toyon Berries.




So I got in my car and rolled down the window. I positioned my camera. After a few minutes, the crested gluttons returned to the bushes and began to eat the berries whole. Now, you might guess that birds that gorge themselves on fruit probably poop a lot. I had never contemplated this logical biological fact until suddenly I heard "Plop, plop, plop." Their poop fell like rain onto my car's pristine, white hood. I was torn between watching these wonderful birds and the fact that these wonderful birds were pooping on my brand-new car! I prayed the protective coat which was sold to me as protecting the car against bird poop damage was really working, and kept snapping. I am, after all, a birder which is why I bought the poop protection in the first place.

Gulp. Another berry down the gullet!


What a birder will do to see birds! So when you are out birding in Orange County, search the berried bushes and fruited trees near you for this gregarious, fruit-gorging group. You may see a flock of Cedar Waxwings in a Toyon bush near you.

Places to find Cedar Waxwings:

Huntington Central Park --including Shipley Nature Center

Irvine Regional Park in Orange, California

Mason Regional Park

Oak Canyon Nature Center

Peter's Regional Park

San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary

Santiago Oaks Regional Park

Yorba Regional Park

And any place with berries or fruit in the winter!








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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Information You Might Need Before You Go Birding




Plan before you go birding with these links:



Weather


AccuWeather



The Weather Channel



Noaa National Weather Service




Severe Weather Warnings




AccuWeather Severe Weather Warning




National Hurricane Center












Daily Sunrise/Sunset and Tides







Sunrise and Sunset





US Navy Observatory Complete Sun and Moon Data









Tides



WaveCast









Maps



Google Maps Directions



MapQuest Directions



Yahoo Maps






Traffic Conditions





Traffic.com










Birding Information







Birding Hot Spots in Orange County, California







Bird Walks and Nature Programs in Orange County







Orange County Rare Bird Alert







Sea & Sage Audubon Society







Reviews of Restaurants and Hotels







City Search Restaurant Reviews

Reviews of Orange County restaurants.










Zagat

Reviews of restaurants, hotels, and attractions.










Lonely Planet

Guide to Hotels and more. Travel Guide.







Fodor's

Reviews of Restaurants and Hotels.













Travel



Amtrak

Train travel.




Auto Club

Travel Planning, maps, books, etc. Has some great maps and discounted (for members) books on hiking trails and more.







Travelocity

Travel site.







TravelAirlineConsolidator.com



Discounted Travel.



Hotwire.com

Discounted Travel.



Cheap Tickets

Discounted Travel.


















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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Foggy Bottoms at Bolsa Chica

Fog covered the Bolsa Chica hiding the wetlands beneath a wet, white blanket.

As I drove towards Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve just after six in the morning, I didn't know if I would be able to take any pictures or see much of anything. The fog lay low over everything. When I got there, white fog lay over Bolsa Chica. The ground and the bridge were wet. Water drops hung on the railings of the bridge.





The damp, dripping footbridge.



The footbridge is normally crowded with photographers and their tripods, some scattered birders, and locals out for a brisk morning walk. However the fog had evidently discouraged the morning crowds. This morning there was just a moist sprinkling of people on the bridge.




American White Pelicans find a drier spot on a small island of marsh grass.

The birds appeared and disappeared into the fog. It felt like when I misplace my glasses and can't see very far--except the wetlands was covered with a slowly moving white mist that hid the usually sparkling water. Today it was white and gray as I looked out from the bridge.




Willet in the muck.


This little Willet stood bravely on his little patch of pickleweed and green gunk.



A ghostly Western Grebe fed in the mist.



The limited visibility brought strange feelings of isolation and intimacy.





Socked in.

The normally clear path that you can see all the way down was shrouded in white.


Wetlands in the fog.


Some of the birds seemed distant like this Snowy Egret below on the post.



Snowy Egret sentry.


Then he got closer.




Snowy Egret on the footbridge in the fog.



The fog seemed to thicken and white out the landscape and the rest of the bridge.






Close up of the Snowy Egret in the mist.


The slowly swirling white mist made the birds and I seem alone together inside the fog. More like a room than the landscape I knew was out there.




Snowy Egret looking out into the mist.






The footbridge had a mysterious, New England air to it.





Dripping Willet.






Everything was damp, dripping, and cold.








Two Eared Grebes come out of the white mist.




By the bridge, birds swam in and out of the fog.









Red-breasted Merganser floats by in the fog.




My camera was not always cooperative. It tended to focus on the wisps of white moisture floating by and not the subject I was trying to shoot.






Loud Forester's Tern getting ready to dive for a fish or bomb dive an Eared Grebe. It was hard to read his intentions.




This loud little guy frustrated a few photographers as he flew all around and above the footbridge.




And heading back to the parking lot, the Ring-billed Gull sitting on the railing in the fog.




A mysterious, damp morning. A fine birder's morning.
















Fogged In from OC Birder Girl on Vimeo.





OC Birder Girl Links


Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve



A Walk at Bolsa Chica Before the Winds



American White Pelicans



Eared Grebe--Podiceps nigricollis



The Herons, Egrets, and Bitterns of Orange County



Red-breasted Merganser--Mergus serrator



Western Grebes



Willet--Catoptrophorus semipalmatus



Orange County Bird Checklists



Bird Walks and Nature Programs in Orange County



Migration--The Pacific Flyway and Orange County

















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Saturday, October 25, 2008

Two-stop Birding

Peeps. Hmmm. My best guess is Least Sandpipers and Western Sandpipers.

I like to hit several birding places in one outing. So today I went to Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve aka Newport Back Bay, and it was somewhat quiet.




Black Skimmers. Some lighter juveniles in the mix.


All over Orange County I am seeing mulefat going to seed. It catches the sunlight and looks pretty. So I took a picture. Provides lots of food for the birds in fall and winter.




Mulefat


I am thinking this is mulefat. Isn't it pretty?






A closer look at the mulefat.

It attracts lots of White-crowned Sparrows, House Finches , Lesser Goldfinches and lots of Bushtits, and other seed eaters.





Marbled Godwit and a peep of some kind. Peeps are beyond my scope. I am guessing a Western Sandpiper.




There are always mixes of Marbled Godwits, Willets, and Black Skimmers just beyond the parking lot on Back Bay Drive.



And the American Wigeons back from their breeding grounds. I often see them near the drainage pipe from the surrounding neighborhood.

The American Wigeons are often beyond the parking lot on Back Bay Drive, and occasionally have a Eurasian Wigeon tucked in among them. Many of the sightings of Eurasian Wigeons come from this spot. None today. I met a birder/photographer looking for an Osprey. He had been there for hours and hadn't found one. I mentioned he might want to check at San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary since it is so close. Sometimes if you don't see them at Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve, they are at San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary. It was fairly quiet at Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve aka Newport Back Bay , so I got back onto Jamboree and turned left. Turned right on Michelson, right on Riparian to the end, and down into the parking lot of San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary. The Sea and Sage Pancake Breakfast was finishing up. I had completely forgotten about.



Black-necked Stilt with its black-and white feathers and red legs mirrored in the water.

I had to park in the auxiliary parking lot which provided a closer view of the first pond. It was full of shore birds and ducks.




American Avocet in winter plumage foraging.


Lots of shorebird action.


Dowitchers. Long-billed? Short-billed? Guesses?



Semipalmated Plover








Pair of Killdeer--Charadrius vociferus scurrying about being vociferous.


Northern Shovelers shoveling.



Female Northern Harrier scattered the shorebirds.



When the shorebirds take flight, I look for a hawk. This time it was a female Northern Harrier looking for a fast meal.






Northern Harrier coming around for another turn around the pond.








Common sight. American White Pelicans coming into San Joaquin Wildlife Sanctuary for a rest.







Overhead a flock of American White Pelicans flew looking for a resting place deep in the marsh. I see them often on the islands or strands of mud in one of the ponds back in the marsh. Often see Black Skimmers there as well, but not today.





Osprey up in the Eucalyptus between the Audubon House and the trail by the pond. Notice the fish under his left foot. Look at that bill!

I met a birder and photographer in the parking lot that I seem to see everywhere in the Southland. Dave. Sunburned and peering through his telephoto lens. He pointed out an Osprey in the tree by the Audubon House. Many thanks to Dave.






He stayed up there eating for hours.




People told me the Osprey was in the eucalyptus tree eating for hours. He had a very large fish. Look at that seriously sharp, hooked bill. A bill made for fish!








Yummy.









Are you still there?


I took a lot of photographs, and all in all it was a good birding day. Have fun birding the Orange County!