Sunday, November 7, 2010

October 2010

I was a busy person October and I did not get to bird at Guadalupe and Oceano like I usually do every October. I had a Western Kingbird/Tropical Kingbird at the ranch. Not sure which is more likely in October?
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/E5Bq4usBCphsk5BLBtGlDQ .

I think I saw a juvenile Moorhen at River Oak Park in October??
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/z2bx5fWlmHx92mlRlK06Ng  .

October 27 I saw a Red-naped Sapsucker at Mission Santa Ines in Solvang.
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/WywtzlyoGSeG0s1ddpQEZQ  .
And a White-throated Sparrow at Han Christian Anderson! Park in Solvang .
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/URCFqXj8zFTgZ2JOHeHd9A  .

On October 28, 2010 I went to the Santa Maria Sewage Plant and saw a late Pectoral Sandpiper and a late Solitary Sandpiper as well as an Eurasian Wigeon.
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/LbH04VnmSNUsHCnt5VcabQ  .
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/AaYtSJXzKYB6CMs2xQ3Ifg  .
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/aimDPExFJkmMqQJVUuC5VQ .


Ivory Gull at Pismo Beach





Like many California birders I went to Pismo Beach not for the clams, man, but to see an Ivory Gull who knew he should have made a left turn at Albuquerque. The bird first showed itself to a non birder who took a photo Thursday November 4, 2010. I went Saturday afternoon hoping to miss the twitcher mob. It was a very beautiful bird and like everyone who went I got some photos. The bird was tame! I am pretty sure an adult Ivory Gull at Pismo means were all screwed. Global warming bla bla bla.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Odd Shrike at the ranch




Saturday, September 25, 2010 I took some pictures of a weird Shrike at the ranch. I think it is an eastern subspecies of Loggerhead Shrike??? The gray on the back was blue-grayish. Much lighter than the local breeding loggerheads. The bill base on the bottom was horn colored. The gray on the head was violet-gray and the tail was long and ended with a notch. It did not appear to have any white along its side??? There was some subtle pink-orangish on the sides of the breast. The only Northern Shrikes I have ever seen were juveniles and quite brown. The head shape looks odd for a loggerhead also? A very odd bird.



Saturday, September 25, 2010

9/25/2010 Little Blue Heron at ranch!


Today we had offshore winds, (96 F.) Santanas? Then this evening, walking around perimeter of the ranch near the vineyard, I saw a blue heron flying around and figured it was a great blue. But then the bird flew right over me and it was a Little Blue Heron! I followed it to an ag pond and got a few good pictures.

There are 20+ records for Santa Barbara County, but the ranch is very close to the San Luis Obispo County line and Marantz's Birds of SLO only has two records. This maybe the first Santa Maria Valley record?


Thursday, August 26, 2010

Sowing wheat

On the morning of October 16th 2009 I went walking up the closed road to Point Sal in Corallitos Canyon near Guadalupe California. There are some willows along a small creek as well as grass, and chaparral. There are a few farm buildings in the area. I saw an odd bird with a blue-gray crown, some reddish orange on the breast and a white scalloppy belly. It was in the top of a medium sized Eucalyptus tree. I took a few distant pictures. The bird never let me get a picture from the side and never went down lower in the tree for a better picture. I did not know what it was but the blue on the head and small bill made me think of maybe some bluebird plumage I had never seen. I was having a busy fall so I forgot about the bird. Looking at the pictures now I wonder if it could be a first year Mugimaki Flycatcher Ficedula mugimaki. (Temminck 1836) Mugimaki Flycatcher is a very rare vagrant to Britain with one record: First-winter male, Sunk Island Battery, Stone Creek, Humberside, 16-17 November 1991 (Birding World 4: 392-395). B.O.U. placed this bird in Category D because the species was known to have been in trade at the time of the occurrence. There is a wobbly record from Treviso, Italy, on 29 October 1957.

Mugimaki Flycatcher, Length 13 cm. Highly migratory species of eastern Asia. Only North American record is from Shemya Island, Alaska, on 24 May 1985, supported by marginal photos. Note long wings.” (National Geographic field guide to the birds of North America) “In females and juveniles the black is replaced by brownish-gray and the rusty red by a yellowish-rust. (Birds of the USSR) The Mugimaki is also called Robin Flycatcher because it looks a little like the real Robin. There is also a small note in American Birds v. 39 p. 339, but no picture, about the Shemya I. bird which is online at S.O.R.A.

The B.O.U. Committee was unable to find compelling evidence of long-distance westwards vagrancy by this species. But Andrew H. J. Harrop in a 2007 British Birds article (Eastern Promise: The arrival of far-eastern passerine vagrants in Autumn) stated that the Mugimaki Flycatcher , although known from the bird trade; it is scarce in trade. In addition, Harrop discusses the autumn migration patterns of the Mugimaki Flycatchers in Beidaihe and Hong Kong. (Beidaihe = first half of October) (Hong Kong from mid October; peak third week of November) Harrop concludes: “…autumn arrivals in western Europe of eastern passerine vagrants which have travelled farther than birds on conventional routes tend to mirror their normal movements (in term of timing); they therefore occur earlier than might be expected based on simple calculations of their normal speed and distance of movement. Those records which accord with this pattern deserve serious consideration.” There is a similarity between western European vagrancy of Siberian passerines and Alaska, and California ones??? (Tove 1988, Gilroy & Lees Brit. Birds v. 96, No. 9 2003, Sullivan, Stonechat on San Clemente NAB v. 60 No. 2, etc.) The timing of this bird on October 16th matches the Hong Kong & Beidaihe autumn migration dates inferring this was a natural vagrant to California. On September 30, 2007 there was an Old-World Flycatcher sounded reasonably good for Mugimaki Flycatcher in Seaside, California near Monterey. (Roberson Creagrus.com)

The Mugimaki Flycatcher breeds in E Russia, N China and Japan, wintering in Southeast Asia . A reverse/180 degree or mirror migration does not exactly explain this bird in central California. The bird occurred during a fairly strong El Nino. There has been shown to be a connection between El Nino/ENSO on the spring fallout of Asian bird species on Attu Island. (Hameed et al 2009)
“Young male. In general like the adult female, but much paler orange on the breast, with two buffy-white bars across the wing, composed of the tips to the median and greater coverts ; sides of face grey, the cheeks more or less blackish ; tail-feathers broadly white at base of outer web.
Young female. Like the young male, but with no white at the base of the tail-feathers.
Adult female. Different from the male. General color above olive-brown, lighter on the rump, where it is yellower ; upper tail coverts blackish ; tail brown, white at the base of the outer webs of the feathers; least wing-coverts olive like the back ; remainder of the coverts brown, edged with olive, the greater sories tipped with white ; primary-coverts and quills brown, narrowly edged with olive, the inner secondaries with white ; lores yellowish buff; round the eye a ring of buffy-white feathers ; ear-coverts olive, with narrow whitish shaft lines; cheeks slightly shaded with grey: under surface of body as in the male, but not so deep orange. Total length 4-5 inches, wing 0-4, tail 2 9, tarsus 0-6.”
(Catalogue of the Birds in the British Museum volume IV. Sharpe 1879)
Here are three of the crappy photos:
If it is a Mugimaki fly and not just a weird bluebird I think it is a first year bird but I am not sure of the sex.
Hameed, Sultan, Henry H. Norwood, Michael Flanagan, Steven Feldstein, Chien-hsiung Yang, 2009: The Influence of El Niño on the Spring Fallout of Asian Bird Species at Attu Island. Earth Interact., 13, 1-22.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Loggerhead Shrike on ranch 7/13/10

Loggerhead Shrikes apparently breed inland in Santa Barbara County. I did see one in early June at a vineyard near Los Olivos last year. One or two winter on the ranch each winter. One showed up July 13, 2010 on the ranch. I think this is a returning wintering bird who perhaps bred further inland like Cuyama??
Picture:

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Ross's Gull at Santa Maria Sewage???

I took this picture in 2006. It is of a non-adult small gull in a sewage pond at Santa Maria Sewage with some Mallards. The light colored legs, the "lumpy" head and the odd shaped tail look good for Ross's Gull! Yipes! The photograph is dated Wednesday, November 01, 2006, 2:29:12 PM. Its number is DSCF6038.

My picture:

The only record accepted by the Committee is an adult one November 17-19, 2006 at the Salton Sea.


Possible Chimney Swift at Guadalupe

May 10, 2010 I was birding at the Guadalupe Sewage Pasture when I saw a swift flying different from a Vaux's Swift. (It was doing a lot of gliding) It looked a little darker also. It was alone among a large flock of Tree, Cliff & Barn Swallows. It had a pattern on the wing like a Storm Petrel. My first thought was a young Common Swift of the subspecies A. a. pekinensis. They have a smaller tail, (the young ones) and some plumages of pekinensis have a pattern of pale and dark contrast in the upperwing very similar to Pallid Swifts. (Rare Bird Report 2005, British Birds) Also discussed in Common, Asian Common and Pallid Swift: colour nomenclature, moult and identification. Ahmed & Adriennes Dutch Birding 2010. But given the odds I think this is a Chimney Swift. Most Vaux's Swifts are gone by mid-May and there is a record of two Chimney Swifts near Santa Maria May 24, 1987.
My picture:



Possible rufous morph Cassin’s Sparrow near Sisquoc

Sunday June 6, 2010 I was out looking for Yellow-billed Magpies and I went out to the locked gate at the southern end of Long Canyon Road near Sisquoc. I saw a large Aimophila sparrow. It had a rufous crown. It had a large dark tail. It was singing and skylarking off a barb-wire fence. There was a large dry oat pasture with some cows. My first thought was a Rufous-crowned Sparrow but it was not acting like one. Not the usual habitat either. I took two bad pictures and it took off and I could not find it again. I had never heard of a rufous morph of the Cassin’s Sparrow. As this winter was an El Nino a Cassin’s Sparrow would be expected.

http://www.pbase.com/dadas115/image/113901929 .

It looked like that. And sort of like this:

http://www.birdwatchersdigest.com/leica/uploaded_images/CASP-AZ-080507_02-flick-792604.jpg .

My pictures:

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/MarkSBirds#5490379494666936050 .

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/MarkSBirds#5490379493487939426 .

adult Semipalmated Sandpiper SM Sewage

Friday July 9, 2010 I photographed a Semipalmated Sandpiper at Santa Maria Sewage Plant. In Lehman there is only two adult records both from July.
Picture:

Black-headed Gull Saint Patrick's Day 2006 Santa Maria Sewage

I photographed a Black-headed Gull at the Santa Maria Sewage Plant on Saint Patrick's Day 2006. These birds have been seen in ever month except May in California. There was a bird that wintered multi-years in Santa Barbara in the 90's. Two more records from Goleta.
Picture:

Monday, April 19, 2010

Goshawk at the Rancho!

Today April 18, 2010 I scared an adult female Northern Goshawk out of an Oak tree at the ranch, in the eastern Santa Maria Valley. It was twenty-five feet from 30 chickens in a pen. Arthur Bent said: "the goshawk, this bold brigand of the north woods, the largest, the handsomest, and the most dreaded of the Accipiter tribe, swoops down, in winter, upon our poultry yards and game covers with deadly effect. He is cordially hated, and justly so, by the farmer and sportsman; and for his many sins he often pays the extreme penalty.".
There is an April 6, record from Figueroa Mountain. There is also an adult bird seen near Twitchell Reservoir 17 July 1985. Twitchell Reservoir is ~ 6 miles northeast of the ranch. Greg Smith had one in his yard in SLO county May 8, 2007. I had my camera with me but I did not get a picture. I was initially 8 feet away from the bird. The bird was huge! The grayish underparts and the face pattern were very different from any other accipiter. I watched as the bird flew off fast east. The long and big tail was noticeable. I got to see the steel blue-gray back. The pattern of flight was very different also. with short bursts of flying and alternating short and long glides. An awesome bird-human experience. That got my blood stirring! This ended a week in which I got another yard bird. Thursday I saw a hummingbird getting pollen out of some flowers. I got closer and with my binocs I saw purple throat, I initially thought about Black-chinned but then I heard it and got better looks it was a Calliope Hummingbird.

Fork-tailed Fly in California

In mid-December 2006 I took a picture of a black-headed flycatcher type bird the back was gray and the tail was forked. I now think it was a Fork-tailed Flycatcher! Duh!

It looked like this:

http://www.riograndedeltaaudubon.org/Images/Flycatcher_Fork-tailed_Sig6.jpg .

http://www.ctbirding.org/images_rare/forktail.jpg .

http://www.freeportwildbirdsupply.com/photos.asp?image=bird067.jpg .

http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/wb/v25n03/p0113-p0127.pdf .

Fork-tailed Flycatcher

Synonym—Milvulus tyrannus.

Status—Toppan (Orn. & Ool., ix, 1884, p. 48) states: "I have lately received from a dealer in California curiosities at Santa Monica, Cal., a fine specimen of the Fork-tailed Flycatcher, (Milvulus tyrannus,) which was shot near that place in the latter part of the Summer of 1883". The circumstances of capture are not definitely attested. Mr. Toppan writes me under date of April 18, 1912, that the specimen in question was destroyed by fire in 1896. The species belongs to Tropical America, from southern Mexico southward, but has occurred casually in the eastern United States.

Fork-tailed Flycatcher. I have lately received from a dealer in California curiosities at Santa Monica, Cal., a fine specimen of the Fork-tailed Flycatcher, (Milvulus tyrannnt,) which was shot near that place in the latter part of the Summer of 1883. Knowing that this bird is of comparatively rare occurrence in the United States and especially in the western parts (where I have never seen any record of it heretofore,) I thought you might consider it worthy of a note in the O. and O.—G. L. Toppan, Chicago, Ill. G. = George.

There is another California record from 2006 , September 28, 2006 near Yuba City Sutter County. (T. s. monachus?) The first accepted record was from 4-8 Sep. 1982 in Sonoma County (nominate?) .

Mr. And Mrs. John Brickner are among the best known of the first settlers of Santa Monica, and have seen it grow from a four-corner hamlet to the present thrifty proportions of a thriving and promising city. Mr. Brickner is a native of Germany and was born near Berlin, January 3rd, 1835. He there spent the earlier years of his life and in 1875 married Miss Augusta Court, a maiden of sixteen years. They almost immediately came to America, landing in New York and made their way westward to San Francisco, thence to Los Angeles, where they remained one month. On September 16th, 1875 they came to Santa Monica and cast their fortunes with the then new and wholly undeveloped seaside city, where they made some substantial investments, which, with the somewhat sudden rise and subsequent fall of the town finally terminated in heavy losses. Later they opened the first store for the sale of curios in Santa Monica,which is said to have been the first store in this line in Southern California.

Mr. Brickner relates interesting stories of his hunting expeditions, notably duck hunting on the lagoons of what is now Playa del Rey, and likewise where the canal city of Venice now stands. This he pursued in a business-like manner and made it quite a source of revenue, finding ready market for his game in Los Angeles. Mrs. Brickner took up the curing of the plumage of the many fine specimens of these birds and became a somewhat expert taxidermist. The work was placed on exhibition with the Agricultural Association of Southern California, then the leading institution of its kind in Southern California, and received diplomas and cash premiums for superior excellence. They have been continuously in business in Santa Monica since they arrived here and were for eighteen years on Utah Avenue, between Second and Third Streets. In March. 1907, they removed their store to No. 210 Third Street, where they have one of the most complete stock of curios, notions and furnishing goods in the city.

Mr. and Mrs. Brickner are widely known and highly esteemed for their splendid traits of character and strict integrity in all matters.

Final report of the California World's Fair Commission: By California World's Fair Commission (1894)

Brickner, Mrs. J Santa Monica... Stuffed birds.

Lee Chambers: Hunters in Southern California Condor v. 38 1936 Sep/Oct

One of the outstanding spots in my memory was the taxidermy establishment of Mr. and Mrs. John Brickner. Along in the middle 1890’s they sold enormous quantities of small mounted birds for millinery purposes. Hummingbirds were very common throughout this section and the Brickners caught most of their hummers by netting them. With Mrs. Brickner’s unusual skill as a taxidermist, these gorgeous birds were beautifully mounted on long stickpins or on wires. It was common to see hundreds of these mounts pinned on a large slab of redwood bark, so lifelike they seemed about to fly away. I remember one lady in Santa Monica who had a quantity of these beautifully creatures pinned on her hat.

My picture here:

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/MarkSBirds#5490369519574600946 .

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/MarkSBirds#5490369516787245410 .

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/MarkSBirds#5490369523016058354 .

It does not have too pale a neck so is probably a T. s. savanna the nominate subspecies. Zimmer 1937 says that young birds prior to their first molt have a light buffy wash on the underparts. This bird has that. The back is gray but with a brown wash like a young bird. Remember the retrix molt always remember the retrix molt. The one side of the tail is slightly longer than the other. I have one problem I do not remember this bird. I know the photos are named DSCF6470 and DSCF6472 and DSCF6473 they are dated December 15 2006. Dang I wish I had kept DSCF6471!!! The trees looks like to me either Waller Park or Preisker Park?

Sunday, February 21, 2010

I was an intoxicated Nightingale amongst the owls.

December 9, 2009 I stopped at the Gaviota rest stop near Santa Barbara California. It was raining lightly. I saw a bunch of White-crowned and Golden-crowned Sparrows and a few Song Sparrows. I saw a weird sparrow I thought was a Golden-crowned Sparrow x Dark-eyed Junco hybrid. Sibley, D., 1994, A guide to finding and identifying bird hybrids, Birding 26, pp. 162–177. This article supposedly reports a Junco x Golden-crowned Sparrow hybrid pairing. Ernst Mayr and Lester L. Short, Species Taxa of North American Birds: A Contribution to Comparative Systematics. This publication also is supposed to list this hybrid combination. (from Handbook of avian hybrids of the world; by Eugene McCarthey)

I think the dark on the bird’s breast was from the rain. The bird had yellow legs and a yellow-greenish bill, wrong for both species.


Here are pictures of White-crowned Sparrow x Slate colored Junco hybrids.


http://02b93fb.netsolhost.com/blog/?p=2022#comments .

http://birdfellow.com/journal/2009/09/06/probable_dark_eyed_junco_x_white_throated_sparrow_hybrids .


I think mine is an Oregon Junco x Golden-crowned Sparrow.

Pictures:

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/WeirdSparrow#5440638422780814338 .

http://picasaweb.google.com/lawofficeofmarkbrown/WeirdSparrow#5440640092910016290 .

.


Any thoughts would be appreciated.

Mark (Nightingale) Brown