Wednesday, September 26, 2018

MA - Northfield shorebirds, kestrels and Cape May Warblers


Greater Yellowlegs, Solitary and Pectoral Sandpipers - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. 
September 26th, 2018.

Another volatile weather system brought heavy rain for the whole of the 25th followed by warm, muggy, south-westerlies the next day. Storm related birds appeared to be very few on the 25th but I did find a 'pocket' of shorebirds at Caldwell Road fields in Northfield late in the day. A modest haul of 2 Pectoral, 2 Semi-palmated and 2 Least Sandpipers plus Greater Yellowlegs and Killdeer wasn't bad compared to most other sites that I checked which seemed to be bereft of birds. American Pipits though, appeared in numbers for the first time this fall with 11 visible on the sod fields.

American Pipits - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. September 26th, 2018.

The following day, the 26th, was a very different story. A return to the Caldwell Road fields had me captivated for three hours! The place was hopping and it was clear that a major songbird fall-out had taken place. The very first warbler that I saw and identified was a first-winter Cape May setting the theme for the morning as Cape May Warblers (12 in total) lifted out of the corn fields to filter through the trees and bushes along the roadside. Again, I was struck by the relative abundance of this species in northern Franklin County compared to previous years. Other warbler species included Yellow-rumped (10), Tennessee (5), Magnolia (2), American Redstart (3), Common Yellowthroat (9), Northern Parula (5) and plenty of unidentified birds that were just too quick or high for me to be sure of. Red-eyed (5) and Blue-headed Vireos were both included in the mix and I'm pretty sure I had a Philadelphia Vireo leaf gleaning but just couldn't clinch it.

Cape May Warbler (first-winter) - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. 
September 26th, 2018.

American Redstart (first-winter) - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. September 26th, 2018.


Red-eyed Vireo - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. September 26th, 2018.

Down on the sod fields, some shorebirds remained and had even increased from the previous evening, surprising given the clearing weather conditions - 5 Least, 2 Pectoral, and 3 Solitary Sandpipers, Greater Yellowlegs and Killdeer, and an increase to 35 American Pipits.


Solitary and Pectoral Sandpipers, Greater Yellowlegs - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. 
September 26th, 2018.

In terms of spectacles, well 14 American Kestrels on wires along a stretch of dirt road no more than 300 meters would take some beating and certainly the closest I've come to a fall-out of that species in our area.

American Kestrel (5 of the 14 birds in view here) - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. 
September 26th, 2018.



Northern Harrier (juvenile) - Caldwell Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. 

September 26th, 2018.


Lesser and Greater Yellowlegs - Pine Meadow Road fields, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. 
September 27th, 2018.









Monday, September 24, 2018

MA - Dickcissel and MUCH more in Northfield



Dickcissel (first-winter) - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.

This morning I headed off to Northfield Meadows in pursuit of the Dickcissel found yesterday by Eric Huston. The morning felt raw with winds in the northern quarter and it was the first day of this autumn that I felt genuinely cold, something of a relief after September's protracted warm spell. Thanks to excellent directions from Josh Layfield it didn't take me too long to find the Dickcissel but it wasn't especially cooperative often remaining buried in the thickets for long periods. Since I was happy with the views I decided to press on and perhaps visit another site, but the meadows had more treats in store and three hours later I was still there tallying upwards of 50 species! The cold air was heavy with migrants, a very nice mix of visual migrants overhead with warblers and sparrows in the scrub and Sumac thickets.

Notable arrivals/movements included Purple Finch (19), White-throated Sparrow (35), Lincoln's Sparrow (16), Swamp Sparrow (25), Cape May Warbler (7), Blackpoll Warbler (15), Palm Warbler (26), and Yellow-rumped Warbler (18). Other species of interest included Red-breasted Nuthatch, Northern Waterthrush (2), Nashville Warbler, Wilson's Warbler and Yellow Warbler (2).

Cape May Warbler (first-winter) - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.


Cape May Warbler (adult) - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.



Nashville Warbler - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.


Northern Waterthrush - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.


Lincoln's Sparrow - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.

The first small skeins of  southbound Canada Geese appeared today with a Northern Pintail leading out one of the flocks, just to add a touch of the bizarre - my first Pintail of the fall.

Northern Pintail - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 24th, 2018.

Sunday, September 23, 2018

MA - Northfield Dickcissel


Dickcissel - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 23rd, 2018.
Image appears courtesy of Josh Layfield. 

This morning I again headed south hoping to repeat Friday's success with Connecticut Warblers at Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary in Easthampton. After hearing a Connecticut Warbler call briefly in the early part of the morning I then ended up chasing ghosts for the next two hours and came away empty in terms of sound recordings and views. On the other hand, it was pretty clear that there had been a strong arrival of Lincoln's and White-throated Sparrows since my last visit on Friday. As I drove home I wondered how else I could have spent those two hours at Arcadia and became especially frustrated to learn that Eric Huston had found a Dickcissel in Northfield no more than a mile from my house! Fortunately, Josh Layfield was birding close by and in a position to chase, and was eventually rewarded with excellent views and some good record shots. Hopefully, I'll get the chance to try for this bird over the next couple of days but in the mean time Josh has kindly given permission for his images to appear here - many thanks Josh! Meanwhile, Brian Kane was busy simultaneously finding a Dickcissel of his own off Falls Road in Sunderland. So two Franklin County Dickcissels found on the same morning - not too shabby!


Dickcissel - Northfield Meadows, Franklin Co., MA. September 23rd, 2018.
Images appear courtesy of Josh Layfield. 

Friday, September 21, 2018

MA - Connecticut Warblers (5) in Easthampton

This morning I headed south to the fabulous west meadows of Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary in Easthampton. Spurred on by multiple reports of Connecticut Warblers over the previous two days, including three together by Aaron Hulsey on the 19th, my chances of seeing at least one seemed to be reasonably good. In the event, the exercise turned out to be much harder than I expected but I did come away with documentation on five birds, three of which I sounded recorded but never actually saw. The best observation came towards the end of the morning when I noticed a small passerine fly out from the woodland fringe only inches above the ground and plunge straight into the grass only feet away from where I was standing. I thought I saw some yellow on the underparts but wasn't sure. Then there was movement in the scrub close to the same spot. I put up my bins once more fully expecting to see a Common Yellowthroat as I had done ten or more times before during the course of the morning. But no, this bird had a full brown hood, a bold white eye ring and a pale lower mandible only serving to emphasize the fairly bland facial pattern - it was a Connecticut Warbler peering straight at me only three feet or so off the ground. How lucky would I get with the camera? I decided to drop the bins and take my chances, firing off a couple of shots and then it was gone. Despite lingering and even returning to the same area, I never saw it again. The pictures are, of course, terrible as the camera focused on the vegetation in front the bird but they do convey some of the jizz of a distinctive species and I was pretty happy to come away with something rather than nothing at all. I'm also hoping to upload the sound recordings at some point in the near future.


Connecticut Warbler (immature) - Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, Easthampton, Hampshire Co., MA. 
September 21st, 2018.



Bobolinks - Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, Easthampton, Hampshire Co., MA. September 21st, 2018.
Plenty of other birds around this morning, despite the single-minded focus on Connecticut Warblers.
Around a dozen Bobolinks in the meadows showing reasonably well at times. 



Thursday, September 20, 2018

MA - Willow Flycatcher


 Willow Flycatcher - Turner's Falls Rod and Gun club, Franklin Co., MA. September 20th, 2018.
Looking back, I think this is almost certainly my latest Willow Flycatcher in Franklin County. 

Unfortunately for me it was a day of running errands, but I did call in at a few locations around Turner's Falls during the course of the day. Mid-morning at the Rod and Gun club initially seemed quiet but two Yellow Warblers and a single Wilson's Warbler brightened things up a little and got decidedly interesting when an empidonax flycatcher dropped into the scrub in front of me and called just the once - it was a Willow Flycatcher which turned out to be one of my latest in the Pioneer Valley.

Yellow Warbler - Turner's Falls Rod and Gun club, Franklin Co., MA. September 20th, 2018.

Around noon I noticed several small flocks of migrating Broad-winged Hawks over Avenue A in Turner's Falls and the raptor theme continued in late afternoon with Bald  EagleMerlinOsprey and Black Vulture all visible from the power canal. With the water level fully drawn down at the latter site, a tiny handful of shorebirds were present including single SpottedLeast and Solitary Sandpipers (thanks Jonathan). And the Great Egrets continue to linger with five birds present this evening along with five Great Blue Herons

Least Sandpiper - Turner's Falls power canal, Franklin Co., MA. September 20th, 2018.



Great Egrets - Turner's Falls power canal, Franklin Co., MA. September 20th, 2018.


Belted Kingfisher - Turner's Falls power canal, Franklin Co., MA. September 20th, 2018.

Monday, September 17, 2018

MA - Marsh Wren in Gill!

Marsh Wren - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 

September 16th and yet another morning shrouded in fog. I considered having an hour's birding before heading out for a mid-morning bike ride. Since it was a peaceful Sunday morning I decided to take my chances at Gill Elementary School and work the field edges adjacent to the school property. Despite the damp foggy start things looked promising and within minutes I was looking at Indigo Buntings and my first White-throated Sparrow of the fall. That was rapidly followed by a smart adult Cape May Warbler which put on a nice show feeding openly in the fields surrounded by Song Sparrows and Indigo Buntings! The morning was starting to 'feel' special when I came across a nice spot overlooking a scrub filled dell that was loaded with bird activity. A wren giving a quiet sub-song caught my attention and turned out to be a Marsh Wren which went on to sing and call for the next two hours - not only my first in Gill but a surprise Franklin County tick.


Marsh Wren - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


White-throated Sparrow - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


Cape May Warbler - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


Cape May Warbler - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


Pine Warbler - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


Lincoln's Sparrow (above) with Song Sparrow - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 

After the Marsh Wren came Black-throated Green, Palm (yellow) and Pine Warblers, Eastern Wood-Pewee, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, Purple Finches, Ruby-throated Hummingbirds and many other nice species including my first Lincoln's Sparrows (3) of the fall.

Ruby-throated Hummingbird (female/juv) - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


Eastern Wood-Pewee - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 


Rose-breasted Grosbeak - Gill Elementary School, Franklin Co., MA. September 16th, 2018. 

The 14th and 15th saw good migrations of Broad-winged Hawks at Putney Mountain, Vermont and on the afternoon of the 14th I tried a short migration watch from Apex Orchards in Shelburne Falls  which produced 78 Broad-winged Hawks, 3 Ospreys, a Merlin and my first American Pipit of the fall. Two Black Vultures also appeared over Apex Orchards but headed east, probably to roost in Greenfield with the local Turkey Vultures.

Black Vulture (one of two) - Apex Orchards, Shelburne Falls, Franklin Co., MA. September 14th, 2018.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

MA - noteworthy passerines

Aside from the Olive-sided Flycatcher at Hell's Kitchen, Northfield on the 11th mentioned in a previous post, other flycatchers of interest included a Great Crested on North Cross Road, Gill on the 6th, two Yellow-bellied at Hell's Kitchen on the 7th, and a Least on Riverview Drive, Gill on the 8th. And there was also 'getting late' singing Yellow-throated Vireo at Hell's Kitchen on the 12th.

Northern Parula - Turner's Falls, Franklin Co., MA. September 13th, 2018.

Yet more overnight rain on the 13th brought an obvious arrival of passerines to the area including our yard in Northfield at dawn with a calling Swainson's Thrush as well as a Wood Thrush. But it was a large flock of migrant warblers at Turner's Falls Rod and Gun club in mid-morning that really caught me off-guard. As I arrived, I heard several titmice and chickadees calling overhead and looked up to see numbers of warblers filtering through the oaks in a non-stop wave that lasted five minutes or so. The light was awkward and I had difficulty in getting my bins onto many of the birds passing through but I estimated that 70+ warblers were involved. Of those that I managed to identify Northern Parula (12+), Tennessee (7+), and Bay-breasted (4) were the most common with other notable species including Magnolia, Blackburnian, Cape May and my first Ruby-crowned Kinglet of the fall. And for the rest, who knows?!

Magnolia Warbler - Turner's Falls, Franklin Co., MA. September 13th, 2018.


Tennessee Warbler - Turner's Falls, Franklin Co., MA. September 13th, 2018.

Also of note on the 13th, quite a few raptors with 8+ American Kestrels scattered around the sod fields in Northfield, a migrant Osprey in Northfield, a Northern Harrier heading south through Gill and several juvenile Broad-winged Hawks seemingly waiting for the gloom to clear to start the southward migration. 

American Kestrel - Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. September 13th, 2018.

Heavy rain throughout most of the 12th created a number of fresh rain pools in the Northfield sod fields attracting five Killdeer and a Least Sandpiper, all of which had moved on by the next day.


Killdeer - River Road, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. September 12th, 2018.


Least Sandpiper - River Road, Northfield, Franklin Co., MA. September 12th, 2018.

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

MA - more from the Turner's Falls area

Greater Yellowlegs (juvenile) - Turner's Falls, Franklin County, MA. September 11th, 2018.

A cold front finally brought some welcome cooler air from September 8th. I was hoping for some dramatic changes locally, especially in terms of waterbirds, but surprisingly didn't find too much in the way of new birds. Things improved somewhat on September 10th with an American Wigeon (male) at the Turner's Falls power canal and a nice selection of species at the Turner's Falls Rod and Gun club with 4 Great Egrets, 2 Greater and 1 Lesser Yellowlegs together, a juvenile Northern Harrier, a Yellow Warbler and my first Herring Gull (juvenile) of the autumn. Rain throughout the afternoon of the 10th and into the 11th seemed to have little effect in grounding migrants but a juvenile Semi-palmated Sandpiper joined the small, regular flock of Least Sandpipers at Hell's Kitchen where an Olive-sided Flycatcher called for several minutes before moving on. A Greater Yellowlegs remained at the Rod and Gun club on the 11th, as did a Great Egret with the latter species continuing to impress with at least 8 frequenting the Connecticut River between the Rod and Gun club and the Turner's Falls power canal.

American Wigeon (male) - Turner's Falls, Franklin County, MA. September 10th, 2018.




Greater Yellowlegs (two lower birds) and Lesser Yellowlegs - Turner's Falls, Franklin County, MA. September 10th, 2018.



The widespread movement of Purple Finches in northern Franklin County continues and I'm still recording birds in almost all the locations I visit though not in large numbers with flock of 3 - 6 birds being the norm.



American Redstart (hatch-year) - Deerfield Meadows, Franklin County, MA. September 8th, 2018.