Showing posts with label Great Black-Backed Gull. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Black-Backed Gull. Show all posts

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Cruising and scrambling for new birds

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Lapland Longspur, Randalls Island
Lapland Lonspur

Last weekend, a Lapland Longspur was spotted on Randall's Island. This was the first sighting of one on land in New York County since probably the 1950s (there have been some flyovers). I was lucky enough to get a nice look at it after some adventures.

Sunday began with an Audubon harbor "eco-cruise" through New York harbor, past the Verrazano Bridge to Hoffman and Swinburne Islands. Elena and I and our friends Barbara and Jim were among the 60 or so people who piled on a NY Water Taxi at the South Street Seaport. There were a lot of other birders, but most people were there to see the Harbor Seals that winter around the islands.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Bonaparte's Gull (and Ring-Billed Gull), NY Harbor
Bonaparte's Gull (and Ring-Billed Gull)

We saw plenty of birds first, pointed out by tour leader Gabriel Willow. We stopped off Governor's Island where Double Crested Cormorants and a couple of Great Cormorants basked on the piers, and we saw a sizable flock of Black Ducks around the Island. There were dozens of Bonaparte's Gulls swimming off and flying around the Brooklyn shore.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Long-Tailed Duck, NY Harbor
Long-Tailed Duck

There were a large number of Long-Tailed Ducks, many in flight, recognizable by their bold black-and-white pattern. They were hard to photograph, as were the several Red-Throated and Common Loons we spotted.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Swinburne Island, NY Harbor
Swinburne Island


Hoffman Island and Swinburne Island are artificial islands that were used for quarantining immigrants. Long abandoned, they are now home to large numbers of gulls, to nesting colonies of egrets and herons in the summer, and to overwintering seals in winter.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Harbor Seal, Swinburne Island
the seal also watches you

The seals who were basking on rocks offshore slid into teh water as the boat approached, but they seemed curious about us.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Gulls and Double-Crested Cormorant, Swinburne Island
gulls on the rocks with a twist of cormorant

The rocks off both islands were covered with loafing gulls, One Double-Crested Cormorant was hanging out with the Herring Gulls there.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Black-Backed Gulls, Swinburne Island
composition with Great Black-Backed Gulls

There were also Great Black-Backed Gulls, who stayed mostly a bit apart from the Herring Gulls. They also took over all the wood pilings.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Cormorant and Great Black-Backed Gulls, Swinburne Island
doing the Great Cormorant hop

One Great Cormorant was on the pilings with the Great Black-backeds. Bigger gulls get a bigger cormorant.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Surf Scoter, NY Harbor (Swinburne Island)
distant Surf Scoter

I spotted this unfamiliar duck well to the south of Swinburne Island. Gabriel Willow ID'd it as a Surf Scoter, the first he'd seen on a harbor cruise, and a life bird for me. I really recommend these Audubon cruises; you can get details of upcoming cruises from the NY Water Taxi website.

While we were on the boat, an email from the NYSBIRDS-L mailing list reached my phone about a Lapland Longspur on Randalls Island. I had some trouble getting there--thanks MTA!--and whej I arrived it started to rain. Luckily there were several birds watching the Longspur. Unluckily, just as I was getting to where they were, a dog someone had let off leash (illegally, of course) flushed the bird.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Lapland Longspur, Randalls Island
Longspur taking a look around

All ended well when William Haluska refound the bird and pointed me at it. Thanks, William! I watched the bird creep through the brush along the rocks at the water's edge while the rain grew heavier and everyone else left, and then suddenly it popped up on a rock and posed in the open for a minute.

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Bald Eagle on ice

I went up to Inwood Hill Park for the first time this year. There was a report of Canvasback ducks yesterday, and it's generally a good place for winter waterfowl--last year I had Long-Tailed Duck, White-Winged Scoter, and Greater Scaup there.

Today, the first thing I saw when I went to the Hudson shore at the end of Dyckman Street was this:

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Bald Eagle, Hudson River at Dyckman Street
Bald Eagle, chillin' on the Hudson

That's an adult male Bald Eagle standing on an ice floe drifting up the river with the tide, eating a fish. Amazing.

Inwood Hill is actually a pretty good place to spot Bald Eagles, but usually they're soaring over the cliffs in New Jersey, not sitting in the middle of the river.

Presently, some Great Black-backed Gulls started investigating the scene.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Bald Eagle and Great Black-Backed Gull, Hudson River at Dyckman Street
the eagle is not too impressed with this punk gull

You'll notice the eagle is not vastly larger than that juvenile-plumage Great Black-Backed; that's why I surmise he's a male. Female eagles are much larger.

The eagle had devoured the whole fish except the head, and decided to leave before the party got rough.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Black-Backed Gulls squabbling over a fish head, Hudson River at Dyckman Street
my fish head, understand?

The gulls established some kind of pecking order, and drifted up the river nibbling away at the fish head.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Black-Backed Gulls on the Hudson River ice, at Dyckman Street
gulls' banquet

I saw nothing else of note, but who needs more?