Thursday, May 3, 2018

Work-Life Balance

     I knew yesterday and today would bring an abundance of newly arrived avian migrants. So I planned that I would after work today get out and do some evening birding. I was lucky enough to meet up with my coworker and good friend Molly to enjoy a nice walk with. It was actually really nice to spend some time with her as we don't spend nearly as much time working together as we used to, even though she's just on the other side of my cubicle wall!
     We also got to see a spotted sandpiper today which is featured on the 2018 Feminist Bird Club patch, proceeds from this patch benefit Black Lives Matter- grab one today, they are awesome and support a great cause!
     Our walk resulted in highlights such as hooded warbler, a blue-winged warbler, singing Baltimore Orioles in beautiful flowering trees, also occupied by N. parula and orchard oriole. Glad I got out! Light was fading, here are the best captures...
The vale this time of year never disappoints... blue-winged warbler in an ornamental cherry.
Makes for pretty sights.



This bird was so beautiful and so agile, hunting down hiding insects, caterpillars, grubs, whatever!
Check out that fancy foot and legwork!

Eyes are on the prize...

A small insect larvae, yum!

"Hey so there's a woodpecker here, it's got red on it's head..."
Honestly when random guys start with that line, you never know what is about to happen... but there was a Northern Flicker, right there!

Flickers on this side of the continent are referred to as "yellow-shafted." You can see the shafts of the flight feathers are yellow. On the other side of the states, they are red... and you got it,  they are "red-shafted!"

So, in my experience, flickers make eye contact with you and they are gone and away. This bird was like 15 feet from us and kept doing its thing.
While indeed a woodpecker, they peck wood to make nesting cavities, but it's not unusual to see them pecking on the ground.

The ground is also full of delicious food, like grubs! And check out that woodpecker tongue! Woodpecker tongues are pretty important tools, they are sticky, often barbed and LONG. They help these birds cushion the blows when pecking as their tongue wraps up into their skull around the area where the brain is. Flickers have the longest tongues-- using them much like an anteater... so this fairly common bird is pretty freakin' cool... learn more about woodpecker tongues here!


Trash Birds

     I have seen A LOT of trash, wherever and whenever I bird- from the urban settings to rural, trash is everywhere. Most don't think twice about consumption and their actions, because once that trash and ourselves go our separate ways, we don't look back.
     I see wildlife interacting with and among trash all the time and it has caused me to re-think my actions and choices I make, especially regarding single-use items and plastics. I'm nowhere near perfect but I try to take up new practices that fit in with our lifestyle, budget, and routine.
     I'm going to share some photos from past trips of wildlife among trash, I hope readers will think about their choices and actions and find some ways to change those things to ensure our planet doesn't become one choked up in plastic and debris...
     I have been holding onto this post for a while, but the recent death of one of a pair of nesting Great Horned Owls due to fishing line entanglement in Brooklyn has caused a lot of chatter among birders and the media (see the story here covered by our local Fox Station and here by the Brooklyn Paper).
     So here you have it, trash, more common than any bird:
After one of the Nor'easters trash gathered in large masses in the water, especially where water met the coast. This female red head and mallard pair are dabbling among plastic bags and plastic film scraps. I wouldn't doubt that they ate some.
How many ghostly plastic pieces can you spy?

A gull with debris around its leg-- and an old napkin(?) that it ate-- the whole thing. 
It's a joke among birders how we are really good at spotting trash on the beach in the winter because while scanning for snowy owls you find every white bag, bucket, bleach bottle, and plastic jug on the beach. But here is an actual snowy owl sitting with a white plastic bag/sheet.
A really good example of a very happy moment gone sour.
I was so happy to see this handsome drake common merganser - SO CLOSE in Prospect Park. The ice brought him in close range to shore, giving great views. But then he turned his body to reveal a fishing hook and line right in his chest.
I remember park contacts coming over, trying to help catch a fish eating bird with duck pellets. It was a lost cause, we couldn't get this bird close, and chasing it, would only cause it to dive or fly. I do not know his fate- but as a diving bird, becoming further ensnared would be a great worry.
A pile of plastic trash I pulled out of Prospect Park lake... in just one spot.



Plastic is integrated throughout the park and in the aquatic habitats it is strewn through the roots, rocks, and soil.

A immature great black-backed gull pries at washed up trash in Coney Island-- with other small, plastic debris around it.

An immature herring gull with a plastic cap. And a plastic cigarette filter at its feet.

A double crested cormorant with a hook and line in it's wing. Another rescue attempted, Animal Care and Control for one are not wildlife experts- at least the guy they sent for this- and the bird got away, as one would expect-- a diving bird- fishing line and hooks are commonplace in this animals' world, I'm sure.

Discarded cans and bottles from other beverages- are just as, if not more common than this downy woodpecker.

Plastic bags and spawning horseshoe crabs in the surf one night...

An American Oystercatcher bound by fishing line around both its legs and feet, You can also spot other debris on the beach.

A Virginia Rail forages among carelessly discarded trash.
     Maybe you're a bit like me, you see this and go holy (insert whatever choice word suits your fancy)! --But you don't stop there- you think about the things you do and look at easy ways to integrate change as to not contribute to this. I'll share a few of the things I do, they are not out of this world crazy- and I hope that by sharing maybe you can try one or a few to help right all the wrongs above, and more!

1. The parks are full of trash- I have been packing picnics with all those dumb plastic souvenir (but reusable cups) - I pack them in and out. I bring paper plates and my regular silverware. I have a rule that I pack out what I pack in. I don't discard my trash there- sometimes it takes a few days before the park picks it up-- and weather, wildlife, and crowds (who overfill the trash bins) all can cause trash to find its way out of the uncovered receptacles. Once out of those trash cans, it's all over. If you make the efforts to bring it in, take it with you too.

2. I carry a bamboo utensil set and steel straw with me when I go out for food. I don't need to then use plastic single use items like straws and utensils that break down into smaller plastic bits and cause more trouble than good.

3. I use a reusable bottle - I even bring it on trips, so when packed in empty to the airport, I get it filled- saves $$ and causes less waste.

4. Reusable bags, all the time, for groceries, small trips, everything. EVERYTHING.

5. Linen produce bags- I have a set, and try my best to remember them. I am not perfect at working these into my routine yet but I do like them - I also find myself reusing plastic produce bags from my last trip as to not take more- this one I admit has been a challenge as I shop for the week, eat mainly vegetarian, and I cook- lots of bags as a result. This has been the hardest one for me to conquer.

6. Refuse straws and stirrers- I LOVE cocktails. But I try to remember to ask at the bar: No straws, no stirrers, no plastic. Sometimes they look at me funny, and then I whip out my stainless steel straw. I also noticed, it may be good to ask them not to test taste it- as they often use a straw to do that - I'd be okay with a not perfect cocktail if they also refused the straw.

7. Ziplock bags- I bought a bunch of reusable, durable zip-top bags and I LOVE THEM. I have not been purchasing baggies - what a waste, these are great and they wash perfectly and they seal strong. They also work in the freezer.

8. Saran Wrap- I am in love with the reusable beeswax wraps. They work great on veggies or to cover up a plate. And many of them are compostable once they have reached their lifespan (they last approx. a year if cared for properly).

9. Balloons- They just blow, honestly skip these. I asked for all my life celebrations as an adult- weddings, showers and stuff-- I said NO BALLOONS at any of these things! These end up everywhere and just destroy wildlife as they often are consumed by jellyfish/squid eating creatures in the sea-- think sea turtles.

10. Coffee/Tea- Bring a travel mug/thermos - if you ask, they will fill. If they don't then they don't get my business. I give an extra tip when they charge mine up with a hot water rinse before pouring my coffee. Coffee cups are dumb- even the paper ones, because they have a plastic lid. They are even dumber when they put that stupid plastic piece in the sippy hole because it might spill. In the summer, I get my iced coffee in a reusable tumbler with its own straw.

11. Reduce and Reuse! We always think about recycling as being the best thing we can do to be green- but reducing and reusing are better options than recycling. Recycling is the answer to consumption, buy a plastic bottle but you recycle it-- but what if we just stopped purchasing plastic bottles and just had our own, and so on.

I hope folks can feel more empowerment than anger when we see our trash impacting wildlife- if anyone has other things they do or ideas to share about reducing the amount of debris we create- please share them in the comments! I would love to hear ideas to try out!

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Birding with Friends

     Birding is more than just looking at birds, identifying them, and listing... for me it also serves as a great way to socialize. I have met quite a few folks through birding. There are many friendly faces I say hello to and know there are good people out in the park together with myself, others folks I can join up with and bird together with as we share the latest things we have seen and memories birding has made for us, and some have even become great friends. It has truly been a fantastic way to meet people and has grown into more than just a hobby for me.
     I began my day meeting my friend and colleague Bricken to bird Green-Wood Cemetery. We walked and found her many year birds including indigo bunting, many warblers, spotted sandpiper, and we even enjoyed a pretty boss snapping turtle. After a delicious lunch stop at Baked in Brooklyn, I continued on to Prospect Park where I tried once more for the Prothonotary warbler. There, I ran into The City Birder, Rob and we did some birding together, where we ran into the new leader of the beginner birding walks that happen in Prospect Park.
     The best part is that I logged 80 species over yesterday and today, just within two green spaces in Brooklyn, NY. How amazing is that?! There is SO MUCH wildlife in New York City, it's all around and more is on its way!
Some sights from the day...
Bricken spots our first bird, a Baltimore Oriole! 
This and one other were in a flowering tree right at the main entrance, this one was singing its beautiful song.



An unexpected find, a Forster's tern! Flying a few circles over the Sylvan Water and then off to other places. 
A FOY Spotted Sandpiper on the Sylvan Water. It was then spooked off by a circling red tail hawk.


Saw a few masked crusaders.. um, Common Yellowthroats... This one was chowing down by the bee hives at the Dell Water.

We've been discovered.
A Prairie Warbler observes us as we observe it.

So it seems that yellow ain't terrible camouflage. 

My other favorite sight was not a bird, but this Common Snapping Turtle. Seriously, someone get this turtle a mojito! It will soon be time for these turtle to lay eggs, we did spot a second turtle, so perhaps, love is in the water?

In Prospect Park I rode right over the the pools and headed into the Ravine (after stopping to admire a wood duck) in search for the Prothonotary Warbler who stuck around overnight.

While waiting we were entertained by a Northern Parula (pictured), Oven Bird, Yellow Warbler, Black-and-white Warbler, even a Worm-eating Warbler. So we waited.

And waited.

Annnnnnnd waited.

And then finally another birder spotted it. And it was not doing what it has been doing-- being super showy and out in the open. No, it sat in a pile of sticks and fallen branches, down the slope from where we stood. The views were not super-- just that glowing yellow from behind a branch, tipped us off to this birds presence.

A few okay look did happen, but the bird was super secretive.

Best look.... with a branch.

Best look without a branch.
...And then it flew up, behind the hill behind us, before returning to this area again, later.

So rare visitors are cool and all, but I really love a good show of behavior. With Rob, we observed a young red-tail fly in and land on the ground maybe 20 feet from us. Then it jumped onto this stump, with a robin's nest on it. And here is a cruddy picture, but showing the hawk grabbing an egg in its beak!
It then dropped the egg, but didn't drop the act...

Why was this hawk doing this?

The nest is to the left on that stump, seems an oddly placed nest. It definitely grabbed this birds' attention!

Try #2...

And biting the nest- perhaps for balance-- as this whole act was quite... HAWKward.

Don't give me that look- you loved that.

For another try, perhaps a better look would help...

When there are no trees of the right size to get a better vantage-- you sometimes just wing it.
(you can't stop me!)

Perched on the most ridiculous stick about 2-3ft off the ground to get a better look at the nest... after this the bird went to the ground and moved on to other things.
iPhone picture of the aftermath.


I really enjoyed watching this young bird explore, hunt (questionable), and exhibit behavior I never would have imagined a red tail to exhibit.

In making it over to the Peninsula, we had great looks at N. Parula (at eye level, saving my neck), Prairie warbler, Northern rough-winged swallows, (even more) black-and-white warblers, and a FOY Black-throated-blue warbler -- and, oh yeah, even earlier than this we had some high up looks at a yellow-throated vireo up by the Upper/lower pools.
What a great "weekend" of birding for me- super happy for the birds coming back and the temperatures that are on the rise!