[mou] Dakota Co 9-1, Carver Co 8-30
Chris Mansfield
bikebirder75@yahoo.com
Mon, 1 Sep 2003 14:33:07 -0700 (PDT)
Finally got out in infernal-combustion style to do a little birding
this weekend. A couple nice birds in Dakota Co Sept 1:
14+ Buff-breasted Sandpiper at Jirik Sod Farm (southwest side of
intersection of Blaine Av aka Dakota CR 79 and 200th St E aka 66),
8:00-10:30 AM, despite the presence of RC aircraft operators also on
the fields. 8 birds were visible to the naked eye in the short grass
about 30 feet south of the big green building and tractors etc; the
other 6 birds were south of here and very far west in the patch of
short grass west of the two wooden gate poles. Bring a scope and scan
for 'em. Horned Larks, Vesper and Grasshopper and Savannah sparrows,
both meadowlarks, and hundreds of swallows making their presence known
in the area also.
Juv. light-morph Swainson's Hawk 12:00 noon over Hwy. 52 and 42/145th
St. Probably a different individual than that seen by Steve Weston on
Aug 17, as this bird had the most unmarked body underside of any juv
Swainson's I've seen. Take all the underbody spots off the light juv
bird on p. 67 of the first ed. of Clark and Wheeler's photo guide and
you get the idea. It was not "bibbed"; it had only an "unbuttoned
vest" of heavy side-of-neck/uppermost breast markings, and the rest of
the underbody was completely pale tawny-whitish. The underwing flight
feathers were unusually pale too, in my limited experience. Altogether
the dark was more an "outline" on the wingtip and trailing edge, as the
basal portions (1/3 to 1/2 exposed length) of the flight feathers were
nearly as pale as the tawny-white wing linings. Anyway, very fun to
watch this lanky hawk circle over, call, and then fold into a fierce
closed-wing glide and just eat up the distance.
Carver Co Aug 30:
New Germany Crane Creek mudflats (Yancy/Yale) drying up, fewer birds
than last weekend, but still hundreds of shorebirds, with at least one
juv/winter Red-necked Phalarope. Other shorebird species as previously
reported, though I didn't see any Wilson's Phalarope, dowitchers, or
Baird's sandpipers this time. And only a couple of Gr. Yellowlegs, but
hundreds of Lesser. Hundreds of Great Egret, as well, which were
spectacularly flushed up by a Bald Eagle intent on Mallard for lunch.
Nice to see a couple Caspian Terns too, and adult and immature
Red-headed Woodpeckers perching on the telephone poles.
Chris, glad to be out again
=====
Chris Mansfield
Richfield, Hennepin Co. MN
bikebirder75@yahoo.com
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