“Be as a bird perched on a frail branch that she feels bending beneath her, still she sings away all the same, knowing she has wings.” –Victor Hugo
Minus One Sharp-Tailed Grouse
I keep bird lists. These include a life list for all the bird species I’ve seen, a yearly bird list and a list of Lake Walcott birds. My life list stands at 702 bird species, the one for the year currently at 203 and the one for Lake Walcott, minus 1.
That one bird is the sharp-tailed grouse. Of all the birds that have been seen in the Lake Walcott area, it’s the only species not on my world list. Admittedly, it’s a rare bird for here, normally preferring more northern habitat, but I keep hoping.
Lake Walcott has, however, given me two lifers. A rare migrating Sabine’s gull that winters at sea, primarily off the West Coast, and a gray partridge, that calls Lake Walcott home year-round and which I’ve seen, among other places here, out the rear window of my RV.
Yesterday evening, the lake hosted a flock of Franklin gulls, a bird I’ve frequently seen but this was my first sighting of it here at the park. I think the flock was just passing through because there were none of these gulls still around when Maggie and I took our walk this morning.
The visiting gulls, which both look and sound a lot like laughing gulls, were far enough out on the lake when I saw them that I had to use my binoculars to make an identification.
Birds I see here at the lake almost daily include white pelicans that make their nests on the opposite shore from me and which gather in great numbers below the dam where the Snake River froths up white as it flows down and over some rock ledges.
House sparrows, American goldfinches, black-headed grosbeaks, house finches, house sparrows, white-crowned sparrows, brown-headed cowbirds, Brewer’s blackbirds, red-winged blackbirds, mourning doves, robins, killeer, and broad-tailed and black-chinned hummingbirds visit my camp site almost daily.
Common nighthawks and a variety of swallows fly overhead each evening. A red-tailed hawk frequents a huge nearby cottonwood tree; I wake to the hooting of a great-horned owl and the cooing of doves. I watch western grebes, Canada geese, quacking mallards and an occasional pied-billed grebe and northern pintail swim about in the water.
Life is good for this wondering/wandering birder here at Lake Walcott. If I were to send a postcard, I’d say: “Wish you were here.”
Book Report: “Travels with Maggie” now stands at 31,331 words. While that’s just about 600 more words than yesterday’s final count, I did a lot of slashing and rewriting to make things read smoother. Rewriting can be both easier and more difficult than the first time around, which I already knew. The good news is that I’m having fun with it.
Bean’s Pat: 10,000 Birds http://tinyurl.com/8t62xry Check out these bee-eaters.
The Tanager matches your shirt in the gravatar picture. I am slowly learning birds. Fun. Did you see the movie the Big Year? about birders- I really enjoyed it.
That’s funny — about the bird and my shirt. I do love bright colors. I had read “The Big Year,” long before the movie came out. I loved both the movie and the book. > Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2012 21:19:21 +0000 > To: patbean@msn.com >
The tanager is very colorful … I have never seen one. The birds here have been very busy out in the woods and not visiting the feeders much .. the singing is pretty much gone, too … signs of Fall.
Thanks. Birds do travel a lot. Seems there are more here at Lake Walcott than last year at this time, however. Thanks for commenting. > Date: Wed, 15 Aug 2012 03:00:15 +0000 > To: patbean@msn.com >