Sunday, October 1, 2017

A Tale of 1-3 Species

Yesterday was spent birding Cameron Parish from sunrise to sundown with Van Remsen. We tried to bird Lighthouse Road but were denied access due to new rules, so on the way back I decided to minimize the wasted drive time with a diversion to "Secret Place." Secret Place is school board land that used to give home to a beautiful hackberry cheniere (so I guess it was technically not a cheniere...). Hurricanes Rita and Ike did a number on the woods there, and then two years ago humans with heavy equipment rooted out and shredded the rest. Now all that remains is a few scattered scrubby trees and a dirt road.

As we drove down the road, we noticed shorebirds huddled in the shelter of oilfield pipes that run along the road. The day was hotter than we'd expected, and the birds seemed as tired of the blazing sun as we were. One bird was off to the side a little, separated from its flockmates by a post. From the distance, we noticed that its wings looked long for its body, so we started taking pictures.


This is a pretty good time of year for Baird's Sandpiper, and the habitat looked decent, so we'd had our eyes out for that species. 

However, through the binos, the bird looked gray. "Color's not right," we decided. Maybe it was a White-rumped Sandpiper? That would be downright rare, as White-rumps migrate far to the east of Louisiana on their way south in fall migration, so it was an exciting idea. The bird was hard to compare to the birds on the other side of the post, so comparing sizes wasn't as easy as it looks in the picture above. 

The birds were much more cooperative than we'd predicted, and as we got tolerably close the look of the bird wasn't right for either Baird's or White-rumped. We realized that our potential Baird's Sandpiper-turned-potential-White-rumped Sandpiper was way too small for either and was just a Western Sandpiper with molting wings that presented the illusion of being longer than the tail. Oh well. The bird did offer us great photo chances, which was nice. 


As we were photographing this bird, we noticed another flock just down the road. Scanning them with binoculars, wenoticed that there actually was a long-winged bird in that flock. Voila! We'd get our Baird's Sandpiper after all. 


The distant flock began moving toward us, so we waited for the photo opportunity to arrive. As the bird neared us, its color started to become more evident through the viewfinders. I sneaked a look at the image on my camera and noticed a gray face with a white supercilium. Ahhhh...White-rumped Sandpiper. 

Just to be sure, we flushed the flock and noticed that one bird flashed a white rump in flight. 


So, the chances of finding a White-rumped Sandpiper outside of spring in Louisiana are pretty slim; I've had one summer bird (on 3 August 2014), and now one fall bird. If the chances of finding one in fall are slim, though, what are the chances of suspecting one on a fall day only to realize that you were badly deluding yourself...only to really find one a hundred yards down the road?

3 comments:

  1. Disappointment followed by elation is always a good thing. Congrats on the rare fall find.
    Janine Robin
    St Tammany parish

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  2. Very nice! The emotional roller-coaster that is birding sometimes...

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