Janice Zepko
A dozen birders joined together to bird Plum Island. The weather was full sun with temps in the high 70s and the winds were light, better on the beaches, but calm from inland spots.
The tide was too high at Joppa Flats, so we headed directly to Plum Island for our first birding stop at the Salt Pannes. As we passed the gate we were given the first spectacle of the day, thousands of Tree Swallows swirling in the cluster that nearly filled the sky. At the pannes, we were able to pick out several Barn Swallows joining the Tree Swallows in aerial pursuits. Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs were feeding together, which gave us all a great comparison study in size and Long and Short-billed Dowitchers forced us to look at shape and feeding style in order to get correct identifications. There were Semipalmated and Least Sandpipers and we picked out several White-rumped Sandpipers and a juvenile Stilt Sandpiper mixed in the group. Also there were Great Blue Heron, Northern Harrier, and an Osprey enroute to the end of the refuge.
Unfortunately, Lot 7 was full, as was the parking lot for Emerson Rocks and Sandy Point. Our seven-car brigade meant that we would be hard pressed to find spots in the smaller lots, so we headed to Hellcat, where parking was available. From the dike, we spotted more Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs, another Stilt Sandpiper (this one was an adult), and a Short-billed Dowitcher. Also there were more yellowlegs, a Northern Harrier, Double-crested Cormorant, Gadwall, and Cedar Waxwings.
The Bill Forward Pool blind gave us much of the same and the Pines Trail added Purple Martin and American Goldfinch to the list. A few members ended their birding early and the rest of us grouped together a bit tighter to reduce the numbers of cars and tried once more to get to the birding spots at the south end of the refuge.
Emerson Rocks gave us two Common Terns, a Common Eider, Great Black-backed Gull. Lot 7 was still full, but we did find space to park at Lot 6 and it turned out to be a very good stop. We found Laughing Gull sitting on the water, Bonaparte’s Gull in flight, Sanderlings and Piping Plovers, along with Semipalmated Plovers and Semi-palmated Sandpipers.
Next was a visit to Stage Island Pool. It was very warm by then with no breeze and the mosquitoes were very bad. Though a couple of us made it up the hill to the viewing platform, it was a quick trip with no new birds for our efforts.
One more stop at the Salt Pannes on the way out did not give us any new species for the day-list but did provide a bonanza of Semipalmated Sandpipers and Semipalmated Plovers to scan with hopes of finding something new.
We ended the day with 50 species. Click below to view species list.