Thursday, January 18, 2018

More Bahamas birds, Lakeview Drive Ponds

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Common Gallinule, New Providence, Bahamas
glam Gallinule

In the Bahamas, we stayed at the Comfort Suites on Paradise Island (following a recommendation by Corey Finger at 10000 Birds). Just down the road, less than a quarter-mile, is a birding hotspot, the Lakeview Drive Ponds, and we visited them several times during our stay.

Even before getting there, there were birds, like this cooperative young Green Heron by the roadside.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Green Heron, New Providence, Bahamas
too young to know better

And the edge of a dirt parking lot held a few Common Ground-Doves, which were actually a life bird for me.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Common Ground Dove, New Providence, Bahamas
hello, lifer!

There are two ponds. The east pond is larger and a little wilder, and harder to find a good vantage point to. In one spot at the west end, you can sit on the roadside railing (or stand between it and the pond edge) and look east over the pond, though. The east pond is where the Least Grebes mostly stay (another lifer).

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Least Grebe, New Providence, Bahamas
Least but not last

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Least Grebe, New Providence, Bahamas
very grebelike

There was a mama grebe with a baby grebe peeping after her around sunset one day. Quite charming, though the light was too poor for photos.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; White-Cheeked Pintail (Bahama Duck(, New Providence, Bahamas
Bahama Duck, yet another life bird

The west pond has a nice viewing platform, and is where the ducks mostly hang out. The exceptionally cute White-Cheeked Pintail (a.k.k Bahama Duck) was a real highlight.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; White-Cheeked Pintails, New Providence, Bahamas
Elena has decided these are the Best Duck.

Other waterbirds were also plentiful--a surprising number of White Ibis, one Glossy Ibis, Great Egret, Great Blue Heron, Common Gallinules, American Coot, a couple of stray Mallards that I'm assured are releases, Neotropic Cormorant...

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Neotropic Cormorant, New Providence, Bahamas
Neotropic Cormorant

About sunset, an Osprey flew in to roost, and we saw Merlins as well.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Osprey, New Providence, Bahamas
I'll be your Osprey this evening

The viewing platform makes the west pond a popular place to feed ducks. I watched one afternoon as six people (one couple and four individuals) came and fed mostly the resident domestic Muscovy Ducks over a half-hour period. These are very fat ducks. Oddly the Mallards didn't come close for feeding, though the Pintails and Coots did.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Common Gallinule, New Providence, Bahamas
Common Gallinule not shy at all

Some of the other waterfowl were quite habituated as well; a couple of the Gallinules would come right up on the platform and mix with the Muscovys, one one of the Great Egrets liked to loaf there as well.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Egret, New Providence, Bahamas
habituated Egret

Notable among the landbirds was a fairly sizable flock of Boat-Tailed Grackles, which apparently are increasing numbers in New Providence recently. I took this photo just to document how many there were in one tree, but I kind of like how it came out.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Boat-Tailed Grackles, New Providence, Bahamas
artistic Grackles

North of the ponds, you can walk east along Casio Road to the Ocean Club. There were some nice birds hanging out in the vegetation on the north side of the road. Though I didn't find the Black-Faced Grassquits I was hoping for I did get amazing close looks at Smooth-Billed Anis foraging in the hedges.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Smooth-Billed Ani, New Providence, Bahamas
smooth operator

Near the Ocean Club, I had my best view (and only half-decent photo) of a Red-Legged Thrush. I have to admit, I was a little disappointed by these thrushes; for some reason I thought they were bold and easily seen like Robins. Oh well. Very pretty, though.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Red-Legged Thrush, New Providence, Bahamas
got to be good-lookin' 'cause you're so hard to see

I'm going to do one more post about the Bahamas soon. Fair warning!

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Common Ground Dove, New Providence, Bahamas
Common Ground-Dove, ohsocute

Sunday, January 7, 2018

A fine day out in New Providence, Bahamas

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Bahama Woodstar, New Providence, Bahamas

Elena and I went to the Bahamas in December. It was my first time there. We had a great time relaxing on the beach and all, and we also took some time for birding.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Ruddy Turnstone, New Providence, Bahamas

We were in New Providence (that's the island with Nassau), and we hired a local guide for a day of birding. Some online research led us to Carolyn Wardle of Bahamas Outdoors, and she was just great.

We started at eight in the morning, hitting Montague Foreshore at low tide, where we saw some nice shorebirds including the very confiding Ruddy Turnstone above and the nice Black-Bellied Plover below, and then set about hitting our target species list (which we got using the Target Species feature of eBird).

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Black-Bellied Plover, New Providence, Bahamas

First we stopped in a residential neighborhood and found Pied Imperial-Pigeons.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Pied Imperial-Pigeon, New Providence, Bahamas

It seems that a lot of people in the Nassau suburbs have aviaries, and kept these quite elegant pigeons, and some of them... well, escaped, and set up housekeeping on their own. So now if you drive through this one neighborhood, you can spot these big white pigeons up in the trees.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Bahama Woodstar, New Providence, Bahamas

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Prairie Warbler, New Providence, Bahamas

Nearby, we stopped outside somebody's backyard and saw Bahama Woodstars (the endemic hummingbird of the Bahamas), Smooth-Billed Anis, wintering Prairie Warblers, and Common Ground-Doves. This is the kind of thing that makes it worthwhile to have a local guide--we'd never have gone through the neighborhood on our own, much less stopped at this productive spot.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cuban (crescent-Eyed) Pewee, New Providence, Bahamas

Then it was off to the Retreat Garden National Park. The Retreat is a small park that used to be the estate of a wealthy couple who willed it to the Bahamas National Trust. They had a famous collection of palm trees, and the whole grounds is great bird habitat. We started finding birds right in the parking lot, where a Cuban Pewee (Crescent-Eyed Pewee) was hanging out. It's apparently his spot, which is another thing we'd never have guessed by ourselves.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Banaaquit, New Providence, Bahamas

Moving through the gardens, we lot a lot of species, many of them Bahama specialties. There were more Woodstars (and Bananaquits who took advantage of the hummingbird feeders as well). We saw Red-Legged Thrush and Loggerhead Kingbirds (who didn't give us a good photo opportunity) and Le Sagra's Flycatcher (who did).

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Le Sagra's FLycatcher, New Providence, Bahamas

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; LeSagra's FLycatcher, New Providence, Bahamas

We also good great close-up looks at a very cooperative Thick-Billed Vireo.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Thick-Billed Vireo, New Providence, Bahamas

I mean, really close looks.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Thick-Billed Vireo, New Providence, Bahamas

Next, we headed for a youth camp in a semi-rural area, but on the way we stopped in front of a church along a major commercial street. A shop next door had bird feeders, and there, mixed with the House Sparrows...

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; House Sprrow and Cuban Grassquit, New Providence, Bahamas

...were Cuban Grassquits. These pretty little birds were introduced as cage birds, and escapees made their way as streetbirds quite well.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cuban Grassquit, New Providence, Bahamas

The native Black-Faced Grassquits are much shyer of people; and in fact, we never caught up with one.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cuban Grassquit, New Providence, Bahamas

By the time we got to the youth camp (also not a place we'd have found on our own), it was getting into the mid-afternoon and bird activity had slowed down. We saw more Vireos, heard a Hairy Woodpecker, and got some excellent views of Loggerhead Kingbirds.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Loggerhead Kingbird, New Providence, Bahamas

Later, in a pretty stretch of pine-and-palm forest that had been a pine plantation, we got another fine look at a Cuban Pewee.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cuban (Crescent-Eyed) Pewee, New Providence, Bahamas

Our final stop was Hobby Horse Pond, a wetlands trail maintained by the huge Baha Mar resort. There were some more wintering warblers, and a great look at a pair of Smooth-Billed Anis.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Smooth-Billed Anis, New Providence, Bahamas

A great day out.