Tag Archives: warbler

May Birding – Best time of the year

Buff-breasted Sandpiper

A Buff-breasted Sandpiper, a rare "shorebird" that you normally don't find along the shoreline as they migrate through. Today was the exception to the rule though, as a flock was found on the edge of a shallow wetland.

May is such a wonderful time.  After a long South Dakota winter, May brings warm temperatures and green landscapes.  From a birding perspective, after a winter of very little species diversity, no other time of year can match the number and variety of species that you can see in a given day.  Shorebirds are migrating through the interior of the country, and a trip to a mudflat or shallow water area can easily yield a dozen or more shorebird species.  In eastern South Dakota where I live, we can have truly incredibly warbler migrations, with the possibility to see 20+ warbler species in a day.  The summer breeding birds also have all arrived by the end of the month, with Indigo Buntings, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, Baltimore Orioles, Scarlet Tanagers, and more bringing a very welcome splash of color after a winter dominated by the cute, but gray/black/white Dark-eyed Junco.

Ovenbird

It's amazing how such a small bird as an Ovenbird can make such a loud noise! This time of year, their loud crescendo songs can be heard throughout Newton Hills State Park.

I always try to save some vacation days and go out on all day birding trips in May.  I went yesterday, and had a truly wonderful day.  The day started with a trip to Newton Hills State Park, about 30 miles south of Sioux Falls.  Newton Hills is a relative rarity for South Dakota habitats, a true “eastern” deciduous forest.  As such, it often holds eastern U.S. forest species that you’re unlikely to find anywhere else in South Dakota. It didn’t take long to hear singing Blue-winged Warblers, a species on the edge of its range in South Dakota.  Warbler numbers weren’t all that high compared to what they can be, but there was a nice mix.  American Redstarts were relatively common, and Yellow Warblers were everywhere.  One of my personal favorites, Ovenbirds, are quite common in Newton Hills and they were certainly doing their best to announce the arrival of spring, with their distinctive, loud songs.  Other warblers included Blackpoll Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, Wilson’s Warbler, Tennessee Warbler, and Northern Waterthrush.

Hudsonian Godwit

One of the most beautiful shorebirds that migrates through the state, a male Hudsonian Godwit.

It was also nice to see all the summer “regulars” at Newton Hills.  Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, Indigo Buntings, singing Wood Thrush, Red-eyed and Yellow-throated Vireo…all welcome for both the views and for their songs.

After Newton Hills, I headed up towards the Lake Thompson area in Kingsbury county, looking for waterbirds.  Lake Thompson never disappoints in the spring.  It’s so large, and no matter the water levels for a given year, you’ll always find mudflats and shallow waters that hold shorebirds, as well as deeper water for other birds.  The highlight was a Little Blue Heron, a bird more often thought of as a bird of the southeastern United States. It was hanging out with a group of about a dozen Snowy Egrets, and is only the 2nd Little Blue Heron I’ve ever seen in the state.  Another highlight were a group of at least 18 Buff-breasted Sandpipers.  They are a pretty rare migrant to begin with and are always a welcome sight, but it’s not often you see a large group of them.  They’re normally found in short-grass areas, but at least yesterday, this flock was acting like other “shorebirds”, hanging around the edge of a shallow-water lake.

Little Blue Heron

A bird you associate more with the Gulf Coast than you do South Dakota, this is only the 2nd Little Blue Heron I've ever seen in the state.

On the grasslands and fence lines, both Eastern and Western Kingbirds had returned, while Bobolinks were seen, and heard, singing their unique, metallic/clinky songs.

Wonderful day, both for the variety of birds seen, from forests, to grasslands, to wetlands, but also for the surprise of seeing some rarities for the state.  Gotta love May birding in South Dakota!

Drawing – Cape May Warbler

Cape May WarblerHmmm.  It’s been over a month now for me to get over myself and my little health challenge.  Maybe it’s time to start posting out here on my blog again.

It CERTAINLY is time to get back into the swing of things for life in general.  Hence, my first drawing in a month.  A very nice night tonight, watching the Olympics and drawing.  This is a bird I’ve seen here, but have never been able to photograph.  It’s a Cape May Warbler.  They come through in the spring in small numbers, but definitely aren’t common, and aren’t here for very long.  A good  candidate for a drawing!

Click on the small image for a larger view. 

Coming soon…more opinionated posts from the stubborn guy running this blog…

Birding Maine

Black-throated Blue Warbler

Black-throated Blue Warbler

Vacation is supposed to be for relaxing, catching up on sleep, and taking a break.  However, a lot of times when I come back from vacation, I’m more tired than before I left.  This is due to my (questionable?) practice of getting up at dawn every day and going out birding before my wife and son get up.  I don’t want to spend family time birding, so doing it in the mornings before they’re ready to go for the day is one way to get my birding in, and not disrupt the family schedule.

Northern Parula

Northern Parula

One reason I do it is that there are usually a new mix of birds wherever we vacation, with the opportunity to see (and photograph) birds that I just don’t have an opportunity to see here in South Dakota.  One group of birds that I have trouble photographing are warblers.  There’s an amazing variety of warbler species, with 40 or so that have been seen in South Dakota. However, the majority of these are just migrants through the state, or rare vagrants.  I’ve SEEN nearly all the warbler species that come through the state, but it’s typically a case of seeing individual birds of a given species.  It’s one thing to go out and try to photograph a bird that’s common in a given region…you’ll have multiple opportunities and multiple birds to try to photograph. It’s quite another task to try to get a photograph of the ONE Black-throated Green Warbler that you see during a given spring migration.

Black-throated Green Warbler

Black-throated Green Warbler

It also doesn’t help that warblers in general are active little buggers!!  The day I see a warbler just sitting still in a tree is the day I can die a happy man.  But NOOOOOOO….warblers are never that cooperative, they’re always flitting about and moving through the vegetation while they’re foraging.  Several warbler species also tend to spend most of their time high up in a forest canopy, making them even more difficult to photograph.

Blackburnian Warbler

Blackburnian Warbler

We vacationed on the coast of Maine, northeast of Acadia National Park.  Many of the “wood warblers” that are migrants or vagrants here breed in the forests of Maine, so warblers were going to be my primary focus during this trip.  I wasn’t disappointed in the number or variety of warblers seen during my morning excursions!!  From the very first morning there, I heard and saw warblers in seemingly every forested patch that I could find.  There’s an expression in birding, often used with warblers during migration in South Dakota, where on the rare occasion the birds are “dripping off the trees”, there seem to be so many.  I wouldn’t say they were exactly dripping off the trees in Maine, but they were quite easy to hear and see.

Common Eider

Common Eider

But to photograph? Not so much!  They were STILL warblers, after all, with the tendency to fly out of the frame JUST when you trip the camera’s shutter, and several species did indeed typically stay high in the forest canopy.  The weather also didn’t help!  It only truly rained a couple of days in the two weeks we were in Maine, but there were many days where it was overcast, and sometimes foggy.   Low light plus very active birds?  Not a great combination for photography!  Despite that though, I had a wonderful time on my morning excursions.  I’ve been doing birding and photography for about 12 years now, and after that much time, it’s getting tougher and tougher to photograph a “new” species, one I haven’t photographed before.  However, on this trip, I was able to get photographs for 6 “new” species.

Black-and-White Warbler

Black-and-White Warbler

I’ve actually seen each of these before, but haven’t been able to get photographs.  The 6 new ones were 1) Black-throated Blue Warbler 2) Black-throated Green Warbler 3) Canada Warbler 4) Blackburnian Warbler 5) Northern Parula and 6) Common Eider.  It was a bit frustrating in that there were about 6 other “new” species that I saw or heard, but was unable to photograph.   However, I’ll never complain about a trip where I was able to get good warbler photos, of species I hadn’t photographed before.

Great trip, very relaxing, and new bird photos as well!

Drawing – Blackburnian Warbler

Blackburnian Warbler - By Terry SohlWork is unbelievable busy right now.  Busy in a good way, but…busy and stressful at the moment.  I needed to relax tonight so drew again. 

This is a Blackburnian Warbler.  For a change…this ISN’T some tropical bird that rarely is ever found in the United States.  Heck, I even see these here in South Dakota sometimes in the spring.  Gorgeous, gorgeous birds, that are only here for a week or two in migration, and they’re not very common.  They are another one I don’t have a (good) photo of.

You can click on it for a larger view.

Drawing – Kirtland’s Warbler

Kirtland's Warbler - by Terry SohlI told myself I’d try to draw something at least once a week.  Three hours left in this week, so I guess I barely fit this one in.  This is a Kirtland’s Warbler.  Very interesting species.  It’s another one I don’t have a photo of, and is one that is endangered.  They only breed in a very small part of upper Michigan and now a tiny bit of Wisconsin. There are only about 3,000 alive.  Tough species to try to protect, because they have such picky habitat preferences.  They typically only breed in large swaths of very young jack pine trees.  Historically, they preferred burned forest areas, breeding in the small jack pines that grew up when the mature forest burned.  With active fire suppression across their normal range, there simply isn’t enough natural, young pine stands for the species.  Now, the species is managed through active forest management, cutting forests and ensuring enough young jack pine is available for the species to breed.

Think this is about my 12th drawing since I started around Christmas.  I’m getting less and less happy with each drawing I do.  I think it’s supposed to go the opposite way, isn’t it?   Either I’m getting worse, or I’m getting pickier.