Monday, September 9, 2013

Temp in the mid-50s, mostly sunny, light to moderate NW wind swinging around to the west by afternoon.

Just another balmy, sunny day on Adak…

The morning started with two of yesterday’s Semipalmated Plovers which had made their way down to the Sweeper Channel.

Just up the road apiece, we spotted a Snow Bunting for the trip list.

We drove up to the Marine Memorial and found several (of the thousand) longspurs perched in the spruces.

Lapland Longspurs, Marine Memorial, Sept 9, 2013.

Lapland Longspurs, Marine Memorial, Sept 9, 2013.

I walked across part of Contractor’s Marsh, but didn’t scare up anything. However, a young Bald Eagle was curious about my presence.

Bald Eagle, Contractor's Marsh, Sept 9, 2013.

Bald Eagle, Contractor’s Marsh, Sept 9, 2013.

Even on nice days like this, Mount Moffet usually keeps some clouds obscuring its top.

Mt Moffet, Sept 9, 2013.

Mt Moffet, Sept 9, 2013.

But, a few hours later, it showed itself.

Mt Moffet, Sept 9, 2013.

Mt Moffet, Sept 9, 2013.

While walking through the Elfin Forest looking for stray Asian passerines, one of Adak’s giant Song Sparrows posed for me.

Song Sparrow, Elfin Forest, Sept 9, 2013.

Song Sparrow, Elfin Forest, Sept 9, 2013.

I walked out the Clam Lagoon Peninsula, but had no shorebirds. We ran into scattered Rock Sandpipers and one turnstone as we drove around to the seawall and Candlestick Bridge.

On the way back, I walked the peninsula again, this time finding four shorebirds. There were three Western Sandpipers and a slightly larger bird that I was unsure about. The jizz said Dunlin, but I had never seen a Dunlin in this plumage before. So I was puzzled.

Dunlin and 3 Western Sandpipers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 9, 2013.

Dunlin and 3 Western Sandpipers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 9, 2013.

Once I got back to the car, a quick look at Paulson’s Shorebird Guide revealed that it was a juvenile plumage which is usually molted out of before migration and rarely seen south of the breeding grounds. So this counts as a semi-lifer (a new plumage that we had not seen before)!

Our trip list stands at 41. Hoping the weather changes and brings some new birds.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Temp around 50, mostly cloudy, light NE wind switching to moderate NW wind by afternoon.

We went down to Finger Bay and Creek this morning. No new birds, but had a lot of Pink Salmon spawning.

Worked our way north to Clam Lagoon and I walked out the peninsula to see if the Westerns were still around. They weren’t, but as I rounded the bend, three small plovers flew ahead of me a short distance. My adrenaline started flowing, as Semiplamated Plovers shouldn’t be here this late and Common Ringed Plover would be a lifer for us.

I radioed Barb what I was seeing, and she read the differentiating details from the shorebird book to me as I photographed them and studied them in the scope. Sad to say, all features pointed to Semis, not Ringed.

Semipalmated Plovers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Semipalmated Plovers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Semipalmated Plovers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Semipalmated Plovers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Semipalmated Plover, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Semipalmated Plover, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

As with the number of Westerns yesterday, this was still a significant record, as we had never seen Semis on any of our previous September trips. So, no lifer, but a nice record.

We continued around to the seawall and had some Rock Sandpipers and four Horned Grebes, but nothing else significant. At Candlestick Bridge, about 50 Common Eiders (all females and immatures) were roosting on the beach.

We drove up the road towards Zeto Point in order to scan Lake Ronnie, where ducks like to hide. There were about 20 Mallards, 5 Greater Scaup, and 2 Northern Pintail.

We came back around the lagoon and I decided to walk the marsh edge, since it was two days since the last time. I don’t like to walk it too frequently, as it disturbs the birds (Although in some years, the birds don’t flush and don’t seem to mind! However, this year they seem very skitterish.). About a dozen Pectorals and 4 Sharp-tailed Sandpipers flew out along the way and one Long-billed Dowitcher stayed.

Pectoral Sandpiper, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Pectoral Sandpiper, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Long-billed Dowitcher, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

Long-billed Dowitcher, Clam Lagoon, Sept 8, 2013.

We still had one Parasitic Jaeger hanging around.

We are up to 39 species for the trip. Our average for previous September trips is 51, so for the first few days, this number is okay.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

The Sanderlings are coming! The Sanderlings are coming!

Or not…

Temp near 50, overcast, on and off (mostly off) light rain, 20-30 mph east winds swinging to NE by late afternoon.

There were few birds out on the bay and in Sweeper Cove this morning due to the high seas and strong wind.

We headed out to Lake Andrew and finally found some Mallards (usually in abundance on Adak).

Mallards, near Lake Andrew, Sept 7, 2013.

Mallards, near Lake Andrew, Sept 7, 2013.

At the Palisades Overlook, we spotted a few hundred Short-tailed Shearwaters that had blown into the bay.

At Clam Lagoon, I decided not to walk the flats and we continued around to the seawall. With very strong winds and high surf, picking out birds was not easy. We had a Horned Grebe and got a glimpse of a loon which we soon lost in the surf and never did identify to species.

An immature kittiwake caused us some momentary excitement. They are so boldly marked, compared to the adults. We often wonder why 99% of the kittiwakes we see here are adults. Where are the young birds?

There were several feeding frenzies going on with multiple species of birds joining in.

Feeding Frenzy, Glaucous-winged Gulls, Horned Puffin, Common Murre, Adak, Sept 7, 2013.

Feeding Frenzy, Glaucous-winged Gulls, Tufted Puffin, Common Murre, Adak, Sept 7, 2013.

When we came back around the lagoon, we scanned the peninsula and saw a small flock (maybe a dozen) of shorebirds. A flock this size usually indicates Sanderlings, which is a good thing. Our experience in fall has been that when a flock of Sanderlings move in, they stay awhile and tend to attract other shorebirds to join them, leading to some goodies (stints, etc).

They flew up for a few seconds and we noticed a larger shorebird mixed in. So I trudged on out to get a closer look (and photos). When I got out there, they turned out to be Western Sandpipers and one Rock Sandpiper. The most Western Sandpipers that we have ever had on Adak was two! And, according to the Birds of the Aleutians book, they only occur in twos and threes on the islands. So this was a very good record.

Western Sandpipers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 7, 2013.

Western Sandpipers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 7, 2013.

We studied the photos carefully when we got back and all ten were westerns–no stints (However, if anyone can say otherwise, please do).

As I was walking back towards Barb and the car, she radioed that she had a light-morph jaeger. Ninety-nine percent of all Parasitic Jaegers that occur on Adak are dark-morph. So the possibility that this was a Pomarine Jaeger instead was very high! Unfortunately, it turned out to be a Parasitic, still a nice bird, but not new for our Adak list.

Parasitic Jaeger, Clam Lagoon, Sept 7, 2013.

Parasitic Jaeger, Clam Lagoon, Sept 7, 2013.

In addition to the light-morph, there were three dark-morph jaegers. Most jaegers leave Adak by mid-September, so this was a good number.

As we were going down the hill above Navfac Ceek, a bright yellow bird zipped by and behind us. The only regularly-occurring yellow bird on Adak is Yellow Wagtail, which would be a lifer for both of us. However, an hour of searching failed to find it, so it will go down as another coulda-been…

At the Landing Lights bridge, a couple of guys flagged us down and asked for a ride down to the Sweeper Cove jetty. They were hunter/fishermen who had already bagged there Caribous and now were doing some fishing. One was from Hawaii and the other from Idaho. We dropped them off at the end of the jetty and, as we drove back, we spotted an alcid close by. It was an immature Tufted Puffin–much more cooperative than the one we saw last year.

Juvenile Tufted Puffin, Sweeper Cove, Sept 7, 2013.

Juvenile Tufted Puffin, Sweeper Cove, Sept 7, 2013.

So, not a bad day.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Temperature around 50, mostly sunny, light south wind.

Our first full day of birding on Adak was nice for shorebirds.

Our first of the day were three Black Oystercatchers in Sweeper Cove. Then we had a half-dozen Rock Sandpipers in Sweeper Channel.

Rock Sandpiper, Sweeper Channel, Sept 6, 2013.

Rock Sandpiper, Sweeper Channel, Sept 6, 2013.

After getting some additional food shopping done, we headed up to Contractor’s Marsh, where I started to walk across the marsh. No sooner had I gone a bit, Barb flushed three shorebirds from the side of the road. When she circled back to find them, she saw a fine Sharp-tailed Sandpiper sitting right out in the open. I caught up to her and tried to get a photo, but it flushed, along with several others, and as it circled, more joined the flock, eventually totaling twelve. They were mostly Pectoral Sandpipers, but a few were Sharptails.

We continued up to Clam Lagoon, where I walked the edge of the marsh and then the peninsula. In the marsh, I flushed at least a dozen Pectoral Sandpipers, six Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, a possible Baird’s Sandpiper, and two Long-billed Dowitchers. There were no shorebirds out on the peninsula, but there was a nice flock of Red-breasted Mergansers (albeit in winter plumage).

Red-breasted Mergansers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 6, 2013

Red-breasted Mergansers, Clam Lagoon, Sept 6, 2013

We could not find the geese that we saw last night, but we did see the Peregrine several times and at least one Parasitic Jaeger.

Along the way, a Raven posed nicely for us.

Common Raven, Adak, Sept 6, 2013.

Common Raven, Adak, Sept 6, 2013.

As we rounded the northeast corner of Clam Lagoon, we always check a stony section where several years ago we had a nice flock of Ruddy Turnstones — usually to no avail. Well this trip was different. A flock of 15 were there.

Along the seawall, traditionally the best place to find shorebirds is on beds of kelp washed up on shore. Today, the only kelp was confined to about a hundred-yard stretch, which made it easy to look for these elusive critters.

As we came upon the kelp bed, Barb spotted two Pacific Golden-Plovers.

Pacific Golden-Plover, Clam Lagoon Seawall, Sept 6, 2013

Pacific Golden-Plover, Clam Lagoon Seawall, Sept 6, 2013

We then saw several Rock Sandpipers and, shortly thereafter, several more turnstones.

Since it was a good visibility day and the wind was swinging around to the east, we scanned the horizon for Short-tailed Shearwaters and saw bunches of them streaming by. They are usually seen with scopes only, but today we saw several well within binocular range — which was a treat.

As we continued south along the seawall, I spotted two terns flying directly overhead. However, by the time we were able to jump out of the car to try to get a better look at them, all we saw was the north end of a horse going south! By all accounts, they were probably Arctic Terns, as there are no records of Aleutian Terns this late in the season, but Arctics have been recorded up to September 30.

Throughout the day, hundreds of Lapland Longspurs flew down the road in front of us and dozens of Song Sparrows flew along the side of the road or serenaded us from the tops of Cow Parsnips.

Not much in the way of waterfowl, as their migration has not yet gotten into full swing.

More tomorrow…

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Our flights on Wednesday from Philly to Seattle and Anchorage were early and less than half-full. A stark contrast to the overbooked flights last May.

We arrived in Anchorage at midnight, got some sleep, got a little birding in this morning, did our food shopping, packed and headed to the airport.

We birded Potter Marsh, which was surprisingly devoid of birdlife. This Long-billed Dowitcher was the highlight.

Long-billed Dowitcher, Potter Marsh, Anchorage, Sept 5, 2013

Long-billed Dowitcher, Potter Marsh, Anchorage, Sept 5, 2013

We arrived on Adak early and were pleasantly surprised to see that someone had finally repaired the welcome sign (the left third of the sign was missing ever since we started going to Adak in 2005).

New airport sign, Sept 5, 2013

New airport sign, Sept 5, 2013

After unpacking, we made a quick trip up to Clam Lagoon. The only birds of note were a pair of Emperor Geese and a Peregrine Falcon. It was nice to see a Peregrine, as we missed it on our May trip.

Up at the “Blue Building”, we found a carcass of undetermined species. Our guess is a murrelet. We will let you know once some experts chime in.

Bird carcass, Clam Lagoon, Sept 5, 2013

Bird carcass, Clam Lagoon, Sept 5, 2013

Bird carcass, Clam Lagoon, Sept 5, 2013

Bird carcass, Clam Lagoon, Sept 5, 2013

We are dead tired and are going to bed with dreams of Pratincoles and Falcated Teals dancing in our heads…