Monday, December 27, 2010
Ferruginous Hawk x 2
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Lapland Longspurs
Sprague's Pipit
Sprague's Pipit in short grass habitat. Click once or twice to see larger image. |
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Franklin's and Laughing Gulls
Here we have a nice flock of loafing gulls, soaking up sun on a winter day. Most of these are Laughing Gulls, but in the blue frame, which is detailed below, we have a good comparison.
Here we have two interesting birds. One, the one in back, is interesting because it's a Franklin's Gull. Franklin's are always fun to look for in Laughing Gull flocks, and I always feel I'll find one if I search hard enough. For about half the year, that seems to work. Sometimes I start to think I've got a Franklin's only to admit defeat when the bird turns its head. At this time of year a lot of Laughers have a pseudo-Franklin's look to them, with sort of dark-capped head patterns. The bird in front is a good representative of that look, though not as extreme as some. I even saw a Laugher with a full but patchy hood the other day. With a good enough look, the darker hood and smaller head of the Franklin's is obvious. When you really see one, you know it.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Broad-winged Hawk
Three Terns
Crossing the Calcasieu Ship Channel on the ferry in Cameron today, I had a good chance to compare the winter plumages of three small tern species. The Common Tern, above, is usually hard to find at this time of year, but there were at least a couple there today. Winter Common Terns generally look like this bird, with a darker patch on the front edge of the upperwing, and a cap that leaves the forehead white but meets around the back.
Seen from beneath, the wingtips of the Common Tern have a distinct black trailing edge. The tail has black edges on the outside.
The real "common tern" in winter is the Forster's Tern, above. It has a black eyepatch, not a cap. Its wings can also have a thin black edge in the back, but the black cuts up as a line into the wing.
The third small tern today was a Black Tern in winter plumage, seen in the last two photos. In summer, Black Terns really are black. In winter, the upperparts, the cap, and a little mark that juts down onto the side near the front edge of the wing are all that are dark. Black Terns shouldn't be here at this time of year, but they are sometimes recorded in Louisiana in late fall.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Monarch Tree
Last Saturday (December 4), down in coastal Cameron Parish, I noticed thousands of Monarch butterflies. Most were flying around in the chill north wind, but a few were bunched up in patches of sunlight in the windblocked south side of the woods. I've seen groups of Monarchs hanging out like this before, but I can't recall ever seeing them this late in the year.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Savannah Sparrow
If you've walked Southwest Louisiana ricefields or pastures in winter, or sat in a duck blind and watched little birds hop on the levees all around you, you've seen this bird. Tee-grees, tee-tisses, or tee-tee birds are some of the other names people have given to Savannah Sparrows. Savannahs are with us from October to early May. They can be recognized by their streaky plumage, and the little yellow spot in front of their eyes.
Savannahs are so common that many birders get tired of seeing them, but you really have to hand it to these birds. You don't become common by being wimpy or finicky. These birds can handle just about anything. You try living in the mud all winter long.