Wednesday, January 13, 2016

A Carolina Bird Club Ornithological Workshop at Tiputini Biodiversity Station


Nine brave souls joined Natalia and I for an ornithological expedition to Ecuador’s Yasuni National Park, a UNESCO Biosphere reserve. Lying on the equator at the base of the Andes, Yasuni is widely regarded to be the most biodiverse place on earth and provides habitat for ~600 bird species. Our base of operations would be the Tiputini Biodiversity Station, a remote research outpost operated by the University de San Francisco de Quito.
Rather than a standard birding tour with endemic species targets, we ran this tour as a more holistic ecological learning experience with evening lectures paired with related field activities the following day. For the purposes of this write-up, the focus is rather strictly on the birding to suit the intrepid readers of this blog and our sponsoring organization, the Carolina Bird Club.

Given that it takes four legs of travel and a full day to reach Tiputini, we scheduled buffer days on either end in case of any international travel delays.  We used the first of these days to visit the Paramo ecosystem of Antisana National Reserve. We explored high altitude grasslands at ~12,000 feet of elevation at the base of the active, glacier-capped Antisana volcano, a world apart from the Amazon or anything in the Carolinas.

Our group from the Carolina Bird Club bravely birding at the foot of the Antisana Volcano - ~3400 masl
On the way into the park we stopped to bird stunted tree-line forest and were rewarded with birds such as the abundant Black Flowerpiercer and Spectacled Redstart, a real crowd-pleaser, especially for the warbler fans among us. 

Black Flowerpiercer - common in the elfin treeline forests near Antisana


A midmorning stop at the Tambo Condor restaurant gave us scope views of Andean Condors on the nest, the first of many condors we would see during the day. 

Andean Condor - we saw several in the Paramo near Antisana

Among the throngs of Sparkling Violetears mobbing their feeders, several Giant Hummingbirds could be seen. We even witnessed a few visits by the spectacular Sword-billed Hummingbird.

Giant Hummingbird - cooperatively attended feeders at the Tambo Condor restaraunt


The high grasslands were littered with Carunculated Caracara and Andean Gull, with the prizes hidden among them being the charming Andean Lapwing and odd Black-faced Ibis, representing a small population disjunct from the core range in southern South America.
Black-faced Ibis - an isolated population lives in the paramo around Antisana

We birded so intensely, puzzling over the different color morphs of the well-named Variable Hawk and the subtle differences between Chestnut-winged and Stout-billed Cinclodes, that by the time we reached the park visitor’s center, we scarcely had time to hike out to the laguna to see the Slate-colored Coot, Yellow-billed Pintail, Andean Ruddy Duck, Andean Teal and Silvery Grebe. We practically had to kick the Plumbeous Sierra-Finches, Tawny Antpittas and Grass Wrens out of the way to get there.

Plumbeous Sierra-Finch - common and tame in high altitude grassy areas (and parking lots)
After a late lunch back at Tambo Condor we tallied up 51 species for the day, a great haul for the relatively depauperate Paramo. Crowd favorites were the condors, the Sword-billed Hummingbird and the nearly endemic Ecuadorian Hillstar (Colombia has a habit of nullifying Ecuadorian national endemics and just a couple handfuls remain), but the ‘best’ bird in terms of rarity and surprise was a Blue-mantled Thornbill at a stream by the visitor’s center.

Blue-mantled Thornbill - a surprising rare find at Antisana

We returned to our Quito hotel, Café Cultura, just in time for a lecture about Tiputini Biodiversity Station by its founding director, Professor Kelly Swing of the University of San Francisco de Quito. He explained to us how he canoed and camped along the length of the Tiputini River before selecting the site for the research station in 1994, and how he and other researchers have been working to catalogue the biodiversity present. Prof. Swing also gave us a glimpse of the socio-political context of nearby semi-contacted indigenous communities and insatiable oil extraction.

Rufous-collared Sparrow - the trashiest of trash birds in Quito and the paramo
We were up early the next morning to catch our flight to Coca, a ramshackle Amazonian outpost where we would board a boat to take us meandering down the Rio Napo. In the blinding late-morning brightness we disembarked at the Repsol security checkpoint, a gateway to Amazonian wilderness with little of humanity other than Waorani communities and oil platforms beyond. We rode a truck two hours down an immaculately maintained gravel service road until we reached the Tiputini River for one final leg to the station by motorized canoe. The trip to the Tiputini Biodiversity Station eats up the better part of a day, but seems to always run flawlessly and provides excellent wildlife viewing opportunities: a Neotropical River Otter swam by our boat with a fish in its mouth and of course we saw birds—some familiar Carolinians such as Osprey and the odd Spotted Sandpiper, but most totally alien, such as King Vulture, the ubiquitous Drab Water Tyrant, and miraculously, an Orange-breasted Falcon.   

Orange-breasted Falcon - Near-threatened and a rare find for the lowlands (photo by Jeff Maw)

The latter was perhaps our ‘best’ bird of the trip as it is known to be a foothill species (and a rare, near-threatened one at that), reports from the Ecuadorian lowlands had been yet to be documented by photos, an eBird reviewer would later tell me.

The station has an excellent network of trails, but as we found on our first morning, searching for birds on a footpath in a primary Amazonian forest is a recipe for frustration. The canopy birds are all 40 to 50 m overhead and silhouetted against the sky, while the understory species never run out of leaves and vine tangles behind which to hide.

Birding in dense lowland rain forest is hard!

Blue-throated Piping-Guan - common thanks to the lack of hunting pressure at Tiputini...we would see several Salvin's Curassows and Spix's Guans as well

Green-backed Trogon - formerly known as Amazonian White-tailed Trogon; in this case most of the white tail is missing, probably from repeated entry into a tight nesting cavity

Slate-colored Hawk - a forest hunter
On top of their propensity to skulk out of sight, when one finally does get a glimpse of the lower strata birds it is rarely sufficient to confidently identify a woodcreeper or ant-thing from the several pages of vaguely similar brown/black birds.  For a better handling on those difficult understory species we set up a dozen mist nets, which revealed the presence of several birds we would not otherwise detect on the trip.
We caught 13 species including Common Scale-backed Antbird, Amazonian Barred Woodcreeper, a pair of Blue-crowned Manakins and incredibly, a Green-backed Trogon.


Amazonian Barred Woodcreeper

His and hers Blue-crowned Manakins - note the female (right) shows a few blue plumes on the head. The local manakin expert explained to us that it is common for older females to show hints of male plumages

Green-backed Trogon

Peruvian Warbling Antbird (male) - we caught his female partner at the same time

Common Scale-backed Antbird - Amazonian birds bite

Wedge-billed Woodcreeper - Natalia displays the rarely seen under-wing pattern

An excellent method for viewing birds at Tiputini is by boat and we put one the station’s crafts to excellent use.


On the Tiputini River - Jose was our faithful captain and Mayer (not pictured), our diligent spotter

It’s not just great for the expected riverside species like kingfishers…

Green Kingfisher - we saw four kingfisher species along the Tiputini
…it also gives an unobstructed view of all forest levels from the soil to the treetops. From the boat we saw canopy species like Paradise Tanager and Purple-throated Cotinga as well as terrestrial species like Undulated Tinamou and Ruddy Quail-Dove.


A loving pair of Chestnut-fronted Macaws along the Tiputini

Common Potoo on 'nest' - we later saw its white egg

Great Potoo - the greatest of potoos in my opinion

White-eared Jacamar - seen frequently along the Tiputini

Ladder-tailed Nightjar - miraculously spotted while roosting in a beached jumble of branches along the banks of the Tiputini
By boat we travelled the short 20 minutes to a clay lick where six species of parrots practice geophagy.  What a spectacle!

Clay lick chaos - pictured are: Mealy Parrot, Blue-headed Parrot, Orange-cheeked Parrot, Dusky-headed Parakeet

We also used the boat to visit an oxbow lake where the bizarre Hoatzin breeds by the dozens.

a pair of Hoatzin - in case you were still on the fence about whether birds are dinosaurs

Hoatzin nestling

A couple unexpected gems here were a Rufescent Tiger-Heron on a nest and one of my long sought-after species, Agami Heron.

Rufescent Tiger-Heron on nest

Agami Heron!

For better viewing of the birds flitting around high overhead we employed the station’s sturdy 50 m high canopy tower, which sits within the crown of an emergent ceiba tree, giving a commanding view over a sea of pristine climax forest.  Indeed the feeling up there is reminiscent of pelagic birding, except with the platform mercifully still and the blue cresting waves replaced the green humps of tree tops. Instead of shearwaters, petrels and storm-petrels there are toucans, macaws and gaudy flocks of tanagers.
Unfortunately I was bed-ridden with flu on this crucial morning, so missed out on some amazing birding and photography. So it goes. Reports of crippling views of Black-bellied Cuckoo and Golden-collared Toucanet were enough to make me jealous.

Black-bellied Cuckoo - photographed not from the canopy tower
At Tiputini we racked up species, but inevitiably, in a place with such a long list of rare and local birds we left a lot on the table. On our last day we added 20+ new species to the trip list including great spot lit looks at Spectacled Owl and Crested Owl right over our cabins. We were nowhere close to hitting diminishing returns and had we stayed a 7th day, I’m sure we could have added another ~20 more.


Carolina Bird Club group at the entrance to Tiputini Biodiversity Station

Crowd favorites for Tiputini were Golden-collared Toucanet, Agami Heron, Golden-headed Manakin and Pavonine Quetzal.

Golden Headed Manakin


Pavonine Quetzal
On the trek back we out we added one new trip bird: Broad-winged Hawk, a rare bird for the amazon and a lifer for nobody in our group except our 72-year-old guide!

Broad-winged Hawk - a rare find for the lowlands and a lifer for Mayer, our 72-year-old guide
For our final day of the tour we dropped down the western slope of the Andes to visit one of the most famous birding sites in all of South America—Refugio Paz de las Aves. Here outside the rural town of Nanegalito, Angel Paz invented and perfected the art of worm-feeding antpittas. 

Happy 51st birthday Angel!
We started the day in the pre-dawn gloom at a lek of Ecuador’s national bird, the Andean Cock-of-the-rock. Several blood-red males danced and sang their ethereal warblings. But soon Angel whisked us off on a mad dash to the various Antpitta feeding areas. They would only come out in the morning and were a bit spread out, so time was tight. Thus we had to don blinders and ignore several mixed species flocks, no doubt packed with additional trip birds and lifers, but it was a worthy sacrifice as Angel delivered.


'Angelita,' Chestnut-crowned Antpitta - the least rare, and arguably, the prettiest of Refugio Paz de las Aves' Antpittas

When I had been to visit Angel before, only Maria, the Giant Antpitta had made an appearance. But on this day—incidentally, it was his 51st birthday—Angel procured for us a sweep of 5 of 5 possible antpittas: Maria, the Giant, endangered and endemic to the Choco bioregion; Willy, the Yellow-breasted; Angelita, the Chestnut-crowned; Shakira, the petite Ochre-breasted with her swinging hips; and Susan, the Moustached, vulnerable and endemic to the Choco.
'Shakira,' the hip-swinging Ochre-breasted Antpitta
 The hummingbird and banana feeders with gems like Velvet-purple Coronet and Purple-bibbed Whitetip were icing on the cake. Choco endemic Dark-backed Wood-Quail, Black-chinned Mountain-Tanager, Toucan Barbet and Plate-billed Mountain-Toucan (featured on the cover of our field guide) were cherries on the frosting.

Blue-winged Mountain-Tanager - drawn close by bananas left out by Angel

Dusky-capped Flycatcher - my favorite Myiarchus rudely interrupted breakfast

Golden Grosbeak (female) - nice view from breakfast at Refugio Paz de las Aves
By the time we finished a delicious breakfast, it was afternoon and we were hopelessly behind schedule. We had lunch soon-after overlooking another array of hummingbird and banana feeders that provided dozens of hummingbirds and tanagers included White-whiskered Hermit, Western Emerald and Silver-throated Tanager. 

The best way to eat lunch: with a pile of bananas and 15 hummingbird feeders
We took a short walk along a stream laden with White-capped Dipper to find a an active Cock-of-the-rock nest under a bridge.

We took the old scenic highway back toward Quito and as we climbed up the Andes stopped to ogle a Crimson-bellied Mountain-Tanager that flew across the road before we reached the charming town of Nono. Here we sipped tea spiked with homebrew while ticking some final trip birds such as Mountain Velvet-breast, Collared Inca and Rufous-chested Tanager.

After the final accounting, we logged a mind-boggling 381 bird species in just 10 days in the field, enough to smash the North Carolina big year record. In reality, omitting heard-only birds and those seen by others in the group, each individual participant probably ticked 300-330. I usually make a point of ignoring non-birds on this blog, but in the case of this trip, that seems a bit criminal, as we saw 16 large mammal species including 9 types of monkeys at Tiputini. The myriad snakes, turtles, lizards, bats and kaleidoscope of butterflies, will go otherwise unmentioned. 

Apart from Natalia and I getting sick (a trip tradition), everything, the birds, the weather, the group seemed to coalesce flawlessly. All left Quito with memories for a lifetime and plenty of stories to tell at holiday gatherings and Christmas Bird Count dinners.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Birds in a Changing World: Killing Birds: Invasive species in Hawaii

Hawaii is a tough place to go birding, as I found out while visiting the U.S. extinction capital to present at a conference.
Read about it at Birds in a Changing World

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Gambling on a Gambel's Sparrow

Yesterday I was helping band birds with Natalia out at a beautiful Piedmont Prairie restoration site near the Uwharrie National Forest, when we caught a White-crowed Sparrow.

White-crownes aren't all that common in North Carolina, so getting to catch and handle one was an exciting diversion from the hordes of Song and Field Sparrows. But something about this bird made it a little bit extra special:

White-crowned Sparrow
Can you see it?

The lores (space between the eye and bill) are pale, when they -should- be filled with a black line connecting the black of the broken eye ring to the black crown stripe at the base of the upper mandible. At least that's how birds in the east, belonging to the nominate subspecies, leucophrys, are supposed to look.

Here's an example of a typical eastern adult.

Sibley illustrates this difference in his Second Edition and provides some detailed commentary about the five subspecies on his website: http://www.sibleyguides.com/bird-info/white-crowned-sparrow/

The bird we caught looks like a good candidate for the Western Taiga (Gambel's) White-crowned Sparrow, which might be a rare find in North Carolina. The Birds of North Carolina: their Distribution and Abundance website lists just two prior records: a specimen collected from the mountains in late Oct. 1932, and a report of one at a feeder near the coast on the odd date (for an overwintering species) of July 14, 2007.

But a quick perusal of the Carolina Bird Club photo gallery turns up several examples of birds that might make decent Gambel's, or at least east-west intergrade, candidates.  See here, here, here, here, and here.

Sibley, further discusses the distribution of winter subspecies and observes that pale-lored White-crowns are found in the east far more frequently than we should expect given what we know about the north-south orientation of Gambel's migration. He laments that... "it just doesn’t seem like these birds should show up in the east more often than, say, Harris’s Sparrow."

North Carolina has 9 records of Harris's Sparrow.  How many Gambel's-looking White-crowned Sparrow records would their be if birders were looking out for them and reporting them?

Some of the comments below Sibley's post suggest that up to 10% of wintering White-crowns appear to be Gambel's type in Southern New England, so perhaps the little sparrow we caught isn't quite so unexpected.




If we take a closer look at those lores, you can just make out a hint of blackness to the feathering.






OK.  How about an even closer look.





Could this bird be from the intergrade zone between leucophrys and gambeli?


This bird wintering in Los Angeles certainly seems to lack even this hint of black and is probably a good standard for 'pure' gambeli.

Gambel's White-crowned Sparrow, Los Angeles, CA
Heck the front of the eye ring isn't even broken and the bill looks way more yellow-orange (rather than pink-orange).

Wherever the bird we caught came from and whatever subspecies to which it may belong, it's fun to discover that there's still so much we don't understand about relatively common and well-known North American birds.


What do you think of this bird?  Would you bet on Gambeli? Third North Carolina report?

Sunday, August 23, 2015

A pair of boobies off Hatteras


This weekend was Natalia's first time officially spotting on a pelagic.  While she performed admirably for a couple days out in the Gulf Stream aboard the Stormy Petrel II, a sexier pair of boobies ended up stealing the show. 

You never know what to expect when rolling the dice on a pelagic trip, or hell, in birding anywhere, but on Friday's trip we encountered something unprecedented.  We first spotted a distant sulid--a young Brown Booby, which uncooperatively picked up and flew away from the boat. Not 15 minutes later as we were creeping up on a flock of sitting shearwaters I heard Brian's voice over the radio urging us to look at the "big white bird in the middle."

Masked Booby with Cory's Shearwaters



This booby was far more friendly than its Brown cousin and seemed content to preen with its shearwater friends while we ogled from close range.

Masked Booby

It looked like it was molting into its first set of adult or near-adult feathers, giving it a bit of a mud-spattered look. 

Masked Booby
The mud-spattered thoughts were too offensive and off it flew.

Masked Booby
With two boobies around and the hot, still weather, it was feeling like the Caribbean out there, so not surprising that Bridled Terns also put in a good showing.

Bridled Tern
Otherwise, the weekend provided the usual summer pelagic species found off Hatteras.

Great Shearwaters
Cory's Shearwater (with Masked Booby)



A north wind turned the ocean into a roller coaster on Saturday which brought a lot more Black-capped Petrels in close to the boat.

I rate myself a pretty lousy sea bird photographer and this pic captures my lack of skill, while at the same time the Black-capped Petrel essence.  They're so fast it's all I can do to keep one in frame!



Black-capped Petrel - has places to go
The Saturday trip also offered some good looks at Band-rumped Storm-Petrel, which we missed entirely on Friday.

Thanks to Brian Patteson and Kate Sutherland for organizing the trips and making it a fun weekend.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Three more NC birds with one stone

Last post I said this would never happen again: three NC birds ticked in one day.  Yet, here we are just a couple months later and its deja vu with the blog titles.

North Carolina birders had been bemoaning a relatively long drought of exciting chase-able rarities.  Such negative feelings apparently made an impression upon the birding gods, which conjured in relatively short succession a couple of cooperative mind-bogglers (1st and 5th state records).

So the day began innocently enough.  Natalia and I set off after work toward Grandfather Mountain for a leisurely mountain chase trip.  But as we were passing through Burlington I got word of a Western Kingbird just 15 minutes north of Winston-Salem.

Within an hour I was staring at a NC bird that had many times eluded me--what birders would call a nemesis bird.

Western Kingbird, First Forsyth County Record (and an odd NC record for mid-august)

August is an especially weird time for one of these western vagrants to show up.  October would be typical and they are far more frequently found along the coast.

Western Kingbird, Forsyth County, NC


After Natalia and I watched this odd kingbird zip out of sight behind a barn, there were no subsequent sightings that afternoon or the following day.  A less-than one-day wonder.  And finally a WEKI that let me see it before vanishing.

After a night camping in the mountains near Boone, we were up early to be one of the first to enter Grandfather Mountain.  After a short wait at the iconic Swinging Bridge we were greeted by North Carolina's 1st documented Townsend's Solitaire.

Townsend's Solitaire, Grandfather Mountain, NC
August was a weird time for this bird to show up here.  Typically when this atypical species is discovered as an East Coast vagrant, it's the dead of winter.

Townsend's Solitaire, Grandfather Mountain, NC


Grandfather Mountain executive director, Jesse Pope is a keen birder and has been all over this bird and keeping Carolina Birders appraised of its comings and goings (Curtis Smalling of Audubon North Carolina was the original finder).  Jesse says it has been very loyal to the patch of spruce trees in the vicinity of the swinging bridge.  Could the bridges squeaks, reminiscent of solitaire song, have called it over to NC from the western mountains of its home range?

As a bonus, the spruce cones at Grandfather have produced a bumper crop this season, setting up prime conditions for viewing the elusive and erratic Appalachian Red Crossbill.

Red Crossbill, Grandfather Mountain, NC

These birds' specially evolved crossed bill used for prying open cones are an evolutionary fascination.

Red Crossbills, Grandfather Mountain, NC

This was a lifer for Natalia as well.

Since things had been going so smoothly, we decided to swing by upper Lake Norman on our way back east to try and catch up with NC's 5th Limpkin record.  We had to rent a kayak and paddle a couple miles upstream to get to the muddy cove it has been haunting the past couple weeks.

Thankfully our blistered fingers and paddle-sore shoulders were not in vain and this Floridian beauty made a show of bashing open mussels right before our eyes.

Limpkin, Iredell County, NC

I had always thought that the limited range of large snails (i.e. Apple Snails) is what limited the extent of Limpkins in the US, but this lost individual has apparently been subsisting on mussels for some time.

Limpkin, Iredell County, NC


Another pair of birders was out kayaking to see the Limpkin this day and the owner of Long Island Paddle Sports called the bird a 'godsend' for all the business it has brought him.  He joked about importing flamingoes so he could enjoy another birder bump.

Limpkin, Iredell County, NC


Speaking of birder bumps, the one at Grandfather over the past few days has been substantial.  Jesse estimated at least 100 birders have visited specifically to see the first state record Townsend's Solitaire.  At $20 per head entrance fee, that's not an insignificant windfall for the non-profit.  It will continue to balloon as long as the bird continues to stay faithful to its copse of spruce by the bridge.

For me, this trio of unexpected birds was a personal windfall of sorts.  Not that I expect the checks to begin showing up in the mail, but if new NC birds keep coming in threes maybe one day I'll crack 400. 

Friday, June 12, 2015

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Three NC birds with one stone

Natalia and I had a little getaway to Wilmington last weekend and took the opportunity to follow up on some unusual birds that have been hanging around southeastern North Carolina.

Shortly after dipping on Swallow-tailed Kites a few years ago with Nate Swick, the species was finally confirmed to be breeding in the Cape Fear River floodplain forest just below Lock and Dam #1.  Since they seem to be spreading northward, I figured they would get easier and easier each year.  At long last my patience has paid off.

Swallow-tailed Kite, above US-87, NC


We had our first sighting at the intersection of US-11 and US-87 as one cruised over the road in front of us.  We called Mark K., who, also searching for kites, was waiting for us to meet him about 5 miles further down the road.  This kite had vanished over the trees, so we decided to continue on to our rendezvous.
But we had only made it a quarter mile before two more kites crossed the road.  We pulled off at the first opportunity, a church parking lot, and were treated with the spectacle of eight (8!) Swallow-tailed Kites circling over our heads

I managed to get four out of eight Swallow-tailed Kites in one frame

I've seen these beautiful kites in Florida, Nicaragua, Ecuador and Colombia where they are common, but they are relative new-comers to NC. 

Only three Swallow-tailed Kites in this capture, but gives a nice perspective on how high they sometimes soar.  Also notice the middle-distance bird in the bottom left is molting flight feathers and has a much shorter tail.  Immature or molting adult?

Poor Mark arrived on the scene just after the kites had vanished.  We dallied around for 20 minutes in vain and then continued on to our original destination, an abandoned Monk Parakeet nest where kites had been seen earlier in the day.

We didn't see any kites, but where pleasantly surprised to see a pair of "Quaker birds," as they are called in pet store parlance, adding twigs to the nest.


Monk Parakeets, Northwest, NC


Monk Parakeets are native to southern South America, but are commonly owned as pets. Escapees have established large populations in the US--and not just in South Florida, but in northern cities as well.  Breeding in NC has been documented sporadically since the 1970s.

Monk Parakeet, Northwest, NC

According to locals, this pair has been in residence for a few years, but has yet to successfully fledge any chicks.  Apparently European Starlings (another exotic species, ironically) have taken to feeding on parakeet eggs.

We cruised around a bit longer with Mark hoping to lend him some of our Swallow-tailed Kite juju, but after a short, unsuccessful while we parted ways.  We wanted to get to the beach with time to see one more odd bird.  This one was over from across the pond, rather than from down south.

A Black-headed Gull had been hanging around Mason Inlet at the north end of Wrightsville Beach.  It turned out to be a real bird-chasers bird: sitting in plain sight in exactly the expected location.

Black-headed Gull, Mason Inlet, NC


These gulls are super common over in Europe and wander over the North America regularly, but this is the first one in a few years to be found in NC and then stick around for lots of birders to see.

Some may debate the "countability" of Monk Parakeet, but that quibble aside, it was cool to add three species to my NC in one day!  That hasn't happened since a pelagic I took in 2012. And I only added 5 species in all of 2014. So I don't ever expect to have such a day in this state ever again.


Monday, May 25, 2015

Birding North America's Deep End

Any serious ABA-area lister with the stomach for pelagic birding has to make at least one pilgrimage to Cape Hatteras to venture offshore with Brian Patteson.  Hatteras provides convenient access to gulf stream waters and continental shelf break, with unparalleled opportunities for deep Atlantic Ocean bird species unlikely to be encountered anywhere else in North America.

The best chance to see the most elusive target species lies at the end of May when Brian runs his 'spring blitz,' with 11 consecutive trips.  It represents a sort of mecca for elite North American birders.  The Attu guides with decades of Alaska vagrant-hunting under their belts come out here year after year, hoping for a mega-rarity or a better look at the mega-rarity they glimpsed on a previous trip.  One Canadian birder on board was sheepish about his ABA list of 'only' ~750.  Another birder in town from Montana signed up for all 11 trips, hoping to sweep the table of rarities in one season.  Other birders had arrived from Oregon, the British Isles and Austria, all well-seasoned twitchers keen for a rare chance to tick multiple life birds in a few days.

I enthusiastically took the opportunity to spot on the first three trips of this season.  I've done plenty of spotting aboard the Stormy Petrel II, but this was my first time at it in May and under such pressure to perform.  Luckily Brian and his first mate, Kate Sutherland do all the heavy lifting, and I had the sharp eyes and big lens of Mike Lanzone to help carry the spotting burden. 

Day one was Pomarine Jaeger day.  I'm not sure how many crossed our path throughout the day, but there was almost always one trailing the boat, taking futile swings at the scurrying Wilson's Storm-Petrels and dipping into the wake for chum.
Pomarine Jaeger



Pomarine Jaeger


Pomarine Jaeger and Wilson's Storm-Petrels

Every now and again one would make a low pass over the bow just out of arms reach.
Pomarine Jaeger


The biggest surprise of the day was a young Bridled Tern loafing around on flotsam.  Spring is the breeding season for this species, so they are rather uncommon offshore until late summer. 

young Bridled Tern



Day 2 was another big one for kleptoparasitic species.  We had a couple Parasitic Jaegers around the boat and then a pair of friendly South Polar Skuas.  It was wild watching the Black-capped Petrels divebomb these birds.

Parasitic Jaeger (dark morph)
South Polar Skua


Just after the first of the dark Parasitic Jaegers appeared, a second odd dark bird showed up, but this one was a pterodroma--a Trindade Petrel!  This is one of the rare gadfly petrels that we hope to see.

Several Arctic Terns braved our attendant skuas and jaegers and fed in the wake, giving close enough looks for all to tell them apart from the similar Common Terns which were also seen frequently. 

Arctic Tern

A few Arctic Terns had been recently blown onto shore in North Carolina by the passing of a tropical storm.  I hadn't been able to chases these birds, so was glad to see them offshore and add them to my list.  Apparently all you need to see them out on a pelagic in May is a bit of an easterly breeze.

Arctic Tern


The east wind also seemed to bring out the Leech's and Band-rumped Storm-Petrels.  We saw several of each on our second day.

On Day 3 a front arrived bringing much cooler weather and winds out of the north.  This seemed to blow away the jaegers and skuas and most of the storm-petrels, but there seemed to be just as many Black-capped Petrels around, so we had a mind for pterodromas.

We had more arctic terns and the usual assortment of Sooty, Cory's and Audubon's Shearwaters--seen each day so far.  But other than a few tantalizingly brief and/or distant glimpses of Trindade Petrel our day was looking to be a bit of a bust.  But at 1:30, just as we were about to begin our run back to shore Brian shouted, "Fea's Petrel four o'clock!" In zipped a gray-backed petrel with dark underwings bouncing in and out of the swell.  For a panicked few moments we shouted instructions on its rapid movements.  It disappeared in the chum slick for a few moments before taking off again.  I watched it bound off into the distance.  It would appear above the horizon slightly smaller after each successive arc until it became a small dot and then disappeared. 

Sometimes it takes some quick reflexes and sharp eyes to catch a glimpse of the rare petrels.  When they come in to the boat they don't often stick around and pose for photos and are then miles away again in a moment.  It boggles the mind to think of the hours of preparation and effort that go into an outside chance of a brief view of these elusive birds.  I had been out on many pelagic trips out of Hatteras and until this moment Fea's Petrel had eluded me.

(the not-at-all rare, but crowd-pleasingly cute) Wilson's Storm-Petrel


If you fancy your odds make sure to book in advance as the spring blitz trips always fill in a hurry.  See seabirding.com for more information.  For far superior photos of some of these birds by Mike Lanzone and Kate Sutherland's accounts, see the seabirding blog: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3.

For the first time on a pelagic, I followed ebird's suggestion of submitting a new checklist every so often while offshore.  I found this to be rather tedious at first, but it has its rewards.  Now I have a better understanding of the route we actually take on this trip.

eBird GPS fixes outlining the teardrop-shaped pelagic route

I was surprised to find that a few of the points outside the inlet actually landed in what ebird considers to be Hyde County, so I got a few unexpected county ticks for my trouble (Arctic Tern and three shearwater species).