Saturday, September 10, 2022

New Beginnings

     The last days of August into the month of September I decided that I would use my final week of unemployment to tackle potty training. Let me tell you, it's NOT fun. It's hard on your brain, your body, and your emotions and on theirs too! By end of day 1, we made things happen on the potty, but by day two, I wanted to throw in the towel... literally because it was full of pee, from my floors. But we got over something on day three, and four, and we have not used a diaper since that Sunday prior. We still have work to do, but, the torture was worth it. Mommy needed to treat herself, so I did, I went birding!

    The Saturday following my week of potty running, handing out gummy bear rewards, and asking, over and over, "tell mommy when you need the toilet," I was able to round up a few friends and go birding. We met up a Green-Wood Cemetery, and while it was fairly quiet, it was 100% fantastic.

The warbler show was... slow. But we did get a little razzle dazzle by this yellow warbler, their juvenile following and begging for food, and some black throated blue warblers too!


We saw a lot of birds who looked rough.
A lot of molting going on, including for this Northern Mockingbird, we also saw a "bald" blue jay.

One of two funky looking wood duck drakes. 

This Cape May warbler was a year bird for me. Very happy to make its acquaintance.

Very common among the shadows of shrubs and grasses, a common yellowthroat.

    This past week I started a new role with a new organization as their Education Program Manager, and I am very excited to be involved with and working for! Some of my work is hybrid, so, know what that means? I can bird before work some days! So I did. I birded Marine Park as a nice way to clear my mind and get the day started.

Upon walking in, a great egret landed on a small tree and it was just so beautiful peeking through the branches. Not the typical way I view this bird in this particular location.


A silhouette I don't tire of.

Little did I know, that egret was alerting me to a trend. Around the bend there were yellow-crowned night herons (above) and snowy egrets perched among the tree branches over looking the water and path.

Classic.

And that light hits juuuust right, illuminating this yellow-crowned night herons eyes perfectly.

A really nice treat was 3 (possibly 4) marsh wrens weaving between the blades of grass, singing their whacky little songs. Sometimes I was lucky enough to see that marsh wren classic splayed leg perch.

Lucky to grab some decent shots of a perfect bird who I will miss greatly over the winter.

I don't care how many times I have seen a great egret, their flight is mesmerizing. Often you can see every feather, every detail as they soar overhead or come in to land.

😍


I'll be enjoying all my GREG sightings and savoring them as they will be getting that migration itch real soon.

Friday, August 26, 2022

A Needed Boat Ride

     I have been really craving a whale watch, and I have gone on many, I've been in Cape Cod and was blown away by seeing 3 species, I have been from Boston in the stormiest worst weather, watching fin whales frolic carelessly through the waves, I remember my first, as a kid in the 3rd grade, nerding out on the boat, knowing the answers to all the naturalists' questions and freaking out seeing Minkie whales and Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Needless to say, I have always loved cetaceans. And whenever I see them, it makes me feel child-like in excitement to share a place with them.

    Yesterday, I went aboard the American Princess with Gotham Whale, and you know what they say, 4th time's the charm (I've been 3 times, with no whales). In less than an hours time, two whales were swimming and diving in the waters around the boat. I had chills seeing these animals up against the skyline that is not only familiar to me as a huge city, but also my home. And no less than maybe 5 or so miles from my actual home, in the waters that I swim in, spy birds in, and play sanderling in with my daughter (running away and to the waves like a sanderling), here were the animals that just strike my with so much awe and remind me of why I do what I do with my career, with how I raise my kiddo, and how I generally navigate the world and ensuring it is one filled with wildlife.

If you want to hear unfiltered joy, the gasps and squeals from a whale watch is it.
A humpback whale which can easily reach around 45 or so feet in length swims barely more than 2 or 3 miles offshore in waters that are maybe 30 or so feet deep in our NY Bight.
Named for the hump before their little dorsal fin, these whales are distinguished by their large pectoral fins, which you can see, glowing white underwater.

Humpback whales are also known for their unique fluke patterns. Like a fingerprint, each is unique and for people, researchers "know" each whale by their fluke pattern and have followed many of them for years, even decades!

Here a humpback is lunge feeding, just maybe 5 or 6 miles from where I live.... I live about 4 miles up the road from that bridge there... THIS IS NYC'S BACKYARD!!!!

You can even sneak a peek at that baleen!
These whales use their baleen plates live a sieve, fish get caught and water can be pushed out. The baleen is made of keratin, same stuff as your fingernails.

Humpbacks here are feeding happily upon the now plentiful Atlantic Menhaden, or Bunker. a fish that has become plentiful with cleaner waters and restrictions on how people utilize our natural resources. These fish are fatty and helpful for building up their blubber before they migrate south where they often forgo eating.

With Riis Beach at Gateway National Recreation Area right behind it. When you go to the beach you are swimming with whales!!!!
And sharks, other fish, invertebrates galore, birds, sea turtles, there is so much wildlife below the surface!

A more intimate look at this animal shows the characteristic two-nostril blowhole or all baleen whales, but further up its head, what looks like a propeller scar.
Boats are these large animals' biggest threats. People think they can get close as whales are often poised as gentle giants -- and many are. But Our boats can cause serious injuries and death to these large animals.
But not only are big boats an issue, but small things, like plastics are also a threat to these creatures, causing entanglement, ingestion, and other injury. From the boat, debris was evident in the water, change is needed from more than just us and our individual actions.

Sometimes a fluke would break the surface, signaling the whale was taking a deeper dive below. 

How fortunate are we to have these animals here in New York City?!

Before heading home, we found another humpback associating with a decently sized group of bottlenose dolphins who looked to be of all ages, young and old! We even saw a few leap fully out of the water, a spectacular sight!

    So before I start my new job in the next week and a half, being on a boat full of people with differing views and opinions but clearly connected and invested in whales gives me hope and motivation to get started. Reminding me how so many people are ready to have their eyes opened to the wilderness in our waters, our air, and in the tiniest green spaces by way of a street tree. Because it was awesome to hear people exclaiming how they are amazed at the wildlife here and their ability to witness it. That is the kind of fuel I thrive on and I love bringing people along with me to explore it.

Before the season is up, check out whales with Gotham Whale and American Princess Cruises! Otherwise, join them to see some pinnipeds in the spring!

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

August Birding

     Birding can be what you make of it, there is always something going on. You can get in on the action or take it easy. Lately, I have not let racking up numbers and species get to me, but I do get very excited at the opportunity to add a bird to my year list. 

    The piping plovers have been fledging and moving and a lot of the plover patrol has tapered off, so I have been looking t birds other than plovers. As the plovers are on the move, so are many other shorebirds, so I have indulged in them a bit, but also have taken it slow, getting under some shade trees and waving hello to a catbird or nine. A wrap up of a few locations: Tilden, Jamaica Bay, Canarsie Park, and Green-Wood Cemetery.

In watching plovers all summer, I got to also spend some quality time with other birds who called the shore home either for a few weeks or temporarily as they migrated through, like these ruddy turnstones.

And they are just these beautiful mosaics of bold colors, I love 'em!

Toward the end of plover season the sanderling numbers really increased dramatically. These high Artic breeders have been heading south since early August!

I learned this summer skimmers can predate upon plover chicks. They also breed on the Rockaway Peninsula like the plovers. They are incredibly mesmerizing to watch. 


This mature and very good looking lesser black-backed gull spent a good chunk of the summer on the stretch of beach I spent most of my time. It's a gorgeous bird.

*swoon*
Adults are the easiest to tell apart:
1. size, they are somewhere between ring-billed to herring gull size.
2. Head shape, is more round, less blocky than a great black-back.
3. Legs, those yellow legs set them apart from all the others.

On August 13th I co-led a shorebird walk at the Shore Bird Festival at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge for the Feminist Bird Club.
It was really awesome, because shorebirds are hard and we helped some folks see the intricacies that set them apart from one another.
We saw a lot of these, lesser yelowlegs, which are very cute.

This was a treat, one of two pectoral sandpipers. With their yellow-orange legs, orange bill base, and larger size, these birds are one of the easier ones to pick out of a crowd of semipalmated sandpipers.

I really enjoy seeing these, as you have to work hard to see them and sift through other birds. So in a way, it's rewarding!

Caught mid- scritch, this one looks very cute.

One that is a touch harder to find in your sifting are these, two white-rumped sandpipers. The bird on the right is giving an exclusive peek to that white rump this is often hard to see!

Compared to the semipalmated, they are just a touch bigger, I originally found them because they felt so big in comparison to the birds are them. They also have a very strong eyebrow, and I admit, this photo doesn't show it very well, but their wings are longer than those of the semipalmated, reaching (just a touch) past their tail.

Then another stand out from the crowd.

This bird was just a touch smaller than the lesser yellowlegs, a more dainty head and bill, but a deep chest, like a boat. And normally this bird is like a boat, as they typically swim to get their food. But this one was running, and we were so glad to see this Wilson's Phalarope!

Got to see a number of birds on this walk that were show stoppers, very exciting to share my very amateur shorebird knowledge with folks. 

In my visit to Canarsie Park, this little one really delighted me. It's a fledged brown-headed cowbird and it was not shy. Which I suppose is an important factor in being a cowbird.
It's damn cute.

Even I would let this little bird infiltrate my life and raise it as my own, being that cute.


I was very excited that my first steps into Green-Wood Cemetery last week revealed an entire mob on Italian wall lizards! I am excited to go back and see more.

The Dell Water was very low, and this great blue heron was plucking tadpoles from the water like small snacks.

A very lovely black swallowtail finding the thistle to be perfection.

Lots of black swallowtails out on this day.

Got to see one of my favorites having a bad feather day. It is not that crazy to see some songbirds with a more catastrophic molt on their heads, as this brown thrasher is demonstrating.

I don't mind the funny feathers, still love these gorgeous rich, brown birds.

I thought this was my special treat before heading out, a lone immature drake wood duck on Sylvan water.

He was hanging about with a gang of Canada Geese, good pals if you want some protection!

But silly me, the treat was yet to come, a flowering shrub filled with a family of eastern kingbirds, a scarlet tanager, and a yellow warbler! I love the kingbirds and was hoping to see them, nearly sad to have not seen them in my walk thus far, so getting to see them right before my exit was extra special!