Sunday, August 18, 2013

Great Egrets and Shorebirds

Great Egrets and Shorebirds
at Ellacott Lookout
17 August 2013

    Fred Urie and I spent about an hour and a quarter this morning checking  the activity on the Speed River accessible from Ellacott Lookout. It is at this time of year the bird population, especially shorebirds, can change almost by the hour.


View from Ellacott Lookout across the Speed River
     There was a very agreeable range of shorebirds, including a crisp, juvenile Baird's Sandpiper Calidris bairdii and a Short-billed Dowitcher Limnodromus griseus. Many were quite distant and not amenable to photographs, however. It will help to click on these pictures to view a larger image.

Stilt Sandpiper with Two Solitary Sandpipers

     Most impressive, perhaps, was the sheer number of Great Egrets Ardea alba. We counted eighteen, a new high for both Fred and me at this location.

Seven Great Egrets



Flightless Mallards resting

    Ring-billed Gulls Larus delawarensis and Killdeer Charadrius vociferus were ubiquitous.



    The picture below shows a Great Egret with a Solitary Sandpiper.

    
    
Looking very stately.

        The following picture shows Canada Geese Branta canadensis, Lesser Yellowlegs Tringa flavipes, of which there were many, Ring-billed Gulls and if you click to enlarge the picture you will see a Semipalmated Plover Charadrius semipalmatus behind the leftmost Canada Goose.


    
    And to end, a last picture of the star of the day!

   

David M. Gascoigne,
David M. Gascoigne,

I'm a life long birder. My interests are birds, nature, reading, books, outdoors, travel, food and wine.

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We acknowledge that the land on which we are situated are the lands traditionally used by the Haudenosaunee, Anishinaabe, and Neutral People. We also acknowledge the enduring presence and deep traditional knowledge, laws, and philosophies of the Indigenous Peoples with whom we share this land today. We are all treaty people with a responsibility to honour all our relations.

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