Sunday, September 23, 2007

Notes from an Alameda County Big Day

On September 23rd, our three person crew met up in Bob's driveway at 2:30 AM with the goal of seeing as many bird species as possible in Alameda County in one day. By 2:55 we had our first bird: Great Horned Owl calling at Redwood Regional Park. At 8 pm we wrapped up with bird #128, a Common Tern at Berkeley Marina. Our first warbler of the day, found at Del Valle Regional Park, turned out to be the bird that
followed us throughout the county -- Yellow Warbler. On reveiwing the ABA rules, we find that we can count our 3 partially seen birds for a Grand Total of 131 species or 52.610% of Alameda County.

(note: for full details see birdwalker.)

Site-by-site notes
Our itinerary was heavily researched and frequently rearranged during the four weeks between coming up with the idea to do a big day and our chosen date -- chosen because it was the only free day in our calendars inside the SFBBO Fall Challenge period. We'll be using these notes to enter our total in the Fall Challenge contest and for planning our next Alameda Big Day.

2:55 - 4:15 am - Redwood Regional Park

Much quiet listening and tape playing only turned up two owl species - Great Horned (between 2 and 6 individuals) and Western Screech (4 individuals). A slow start.

4:45 - 5:40 Arrowhead Marsh

Walking in the back way let us look at Black-crowned Night-heron, Mallard, Mourning Dove and Great Egret in the dark on our way to the Rail Spot, where both Clapper & Virginia Rail obliged, but Sora and (elusive?) Black Rail did not.

6:45 - 7:00 Mines Road

A quick pullout turned up California Thrasher and Rufous-crowned Sparrow. One of our biggest scouting successes was knowing where to go to get these dry, interior species quickly.

7:00 - 8:30 Del Valle Regional Park

A great spot for dawn - and we chose the specific stop inside the park based on email sent to the EBB mailing list the night before. Our "species per hour" average jumped way up, as we entered Del Valle with 21 species (that's four per hour) and left at 8:30 with 53 (slightly over ten per hour). Specialties of the location were : Wilson's Snipe, Red-breasted Sapsucker, Downy Woodpecker, Spotted Sandpiper, Osprey, Yellow-billed Magpie and Green Heron.

8:45 - 9:00 - Murietta's Well

This quick stop for a specialty bird did not go as planned. We left without the Eurasian Collared Dove, but traded that miss for a Western Tanager. And Yellow Warblers.

9:15 - 9:30 - Owl Road

Another great scouting success - knowing where to find a Burrowing Owl, Say's Phoebe, Loggerhead Shrike and (possible) Golden Eagle was very helpful in picking up 6 species in about 15 minutes. Onward!

9:55 - 10:10 - Tassajara Creek park

Reported on EBB, this park was another quick dive into known birds, turning up two good warblers and a House Sparrow.

11:00 - 1:30 pm - Frank's Dump

Eucalpytus / bushes around the parking lot had a Lincoln's Sparrow, Warbling Vireo, more Yellow Warblers, and a White-Crowned sparrow.

The large pond south of the parking lot obliged with a couple of duck species we hadn't gotten at Del Valle - Greater Scaup, Ruddy Duck, and Northern Pintail - along with an Eared Grebe.

The long walk out to the main shorebird roost was wearing -- some of us were dragging a bit by this time. But the payoff was *huge* with large flocks of Western Sandpiper and Black-bellied Plover harboring small numbers of Sanderling (10ish), Ruddy Turnstone (3), Black Turnstone (1), Red Knot (20?), and Surfbird (1). Hundreds of Marbled Godwit scanned failed to turn into Long-billed Curlews. On the walk back, we heard, but never saw, Horned Larks on top of the active trash heap and Bob spotted a single fly-by Whimbrel. We probably spent more time than we should have trying to spot the Horned Larks, but they were soooooo annoying close and vocal, it was hard to resist

2 pm - 3:30 pm Coyote Hills

The butterfly garden had a Western Woodpewee and American but not Lesser Goldfinches (a miss for the day). An adult Cooper's Hawk landed on a pole just beyond the gardens and there wasn't much feeder action after that! Rock Wren failed to appear on our way out to the ducks overlook, but Green-winged Teal, American Wigeon, and Common Moorhen were located amongst hundreds of eclipse Northern Pintails -- and seen by Bob & Bill but missed by Mary, rats! The arrival of a Lark Sparrow (once again, credit to Bob!) was a consolation prize.

3:50 - 4:15 - San Leandro Marina

Drove up to San Leandro and found the Pectoral Sandpiper which Bob had discovered while scouting the day before. The sandpiper was on the island breakwater, but the tide was so low at this point that the "island" was acessible to the humans, and no terns were hanging around.

4:30 - 5:00 - Alameda shore

Parked near the beach at Alameda South shore, where Bob spotted two Elegant Terns heading away -- which Bill & Mary could not pick up. Picked up Long-billed Curlew, but no Sora. Elected to cut this stop short in order to return to the redwoods, since our "likely" list had 8 redwood species left on it.


5:30 - 6:30 - Chabot observatory

Another highly successful stop brought morale back up after a mid-afternoon slump amongst the smaller animals in the expedition. In 10 minutes, we picked up Townsend's Warbler, Pygmy Nuthatch, Dark-eyed Junco, Steller's Jay, Brown Creeper, and Hairy Woodpecker in the first 10 feet of the trail. Only Mary saw the Band-tailed Pigeon flyover, so we can't count that on the list, but another 15 minutes' work brought us Red-breasted Nuthatch and Hutton's Vireo. A second stop for chaparral netted us a Wrentit. Now we were at 127 species and had our eyes on 130. We dashed back to the shore to try our luck.

7:00 - 7:45 pm - Cesar Chavez Park

We headed north along the road towards Cesar Chavez park near Berkeley Marina. There was one Clark's Grebe visible in the water -- but none of our hoped for comormants or scoters. We did find at least one Common Tern, but were unable to scare up the Barn Owl from the kite flying park. We had to close our day with 128 species. A more energetic team would surely have tried another stop for Pelagic Cormorant or maybe Sora back at Arrowhead, to boost the total, but we were cooked on both sides and had to call it a night.


Our day ends with 128 species for the team - a perfect square - and a feeling that we did "pretty well" for our first Alameda Big Day, but we want another shot!

POSTSCRIPT: A big day is not over until the list is discussed & retallied at length and the rules reviewed. ABA Big Day rules allow species to be included in the Grand Total even if they are not seen by all observers. We had five species in that category -- Elegant Tern, Black-headed Grosbeak, Common Moorhen, Violet-green Swallow and Band-tailed Pigeon -- and a review of the rules shows that these all count, not just the ones seen by a majority of ht team. We were allowed 6 species not seen by the whole team -- so all 5 of our "partials" count. This increases our total to 131 for the trip and that's the total we will be reporting to SFBBO.

Totals:

Bob Power: 126 + VIGSWA + ELETER + COMMOO = 129

Bill Walker: 126 + COMMOO = 127

Mary Wisnewski: 126 + VIGSWA + BATPIG + BKHGRO = 129

Grand Total: 131

Percentage: 52.610% of 249 species in Alameda County

Friday, September 14, 2007

Pelagic Trip #2


Black-footed Albatross
Originally uploaded by Bill Walker.
Today was our second of three pelagic trips. This time we sailed out of Bodega Bay on glassy, glassy seas. This albatross photo was taken 20 miles out to sea, but as you can see, the background shows almost completely smooth water. Also, we learned that when you toss big stinky fish heads out in the ocean, the albatross are a lot more friendly.

More pictures here.