Fuzz Ball Birding!

I was amazed yesterday afternoon when I discovered that my owlets had not been welcomed into the Northland while I was down in Costa Rica. I thought I had seen some fluff just before heading south, but I was obviously mistaken. When the sun finally warmed the Boreal Forest around 3 pm yesterday, I saw my first fluff ball! The owlet did not stay out long (only a few minutes) before heading back under Mom. I could tell the chhick’s eyes were not yet open which happens about 9 days after hatching. (See Cornell GHO Nesting Timeline). The photos of the parents were taken about 30 minutes before sunset when the yellow orb made an appearance. Sadly, the owlets decided the cold wind off Lake Superior meant they stayed under Mom.

Momma Owl

Poppa Owl

Junior! (I have no clue yet as to the number of owlets)

 

Costa Rican Pale-Billed Woodpecker & Trogons Reprise

I don’t normally post the very next day about the same two bird species, but oh my … what a morning! I started my birding at 6:20 am to both beat the heat (95F plus high humidity) and find the birds during their morning rounds. I started by looking for the Pale-Billed Woodpecker, and I struck gold. While watching one woodpecker, its mate unexpectedly flew in for a mating dance which I caught on video!

After the woodpeckers I left the Savannah habitat and visited the deep forest stream  crossing, and immediately a Black-Headed Trogon performed for me. Like I said previously, what a morning! We head back to Duluth tomorrow, and I am ready for some cold weather, but the birding was definitely hot!

Between birding in the morning, and riding the surf on a boogie board in the afternoon this has been a fantastic vacation … not to forget the Highlands Rainforest. Molly and I were supposed to take this trip right at the beginning of the Pandemic. Three years later this journey has been a treat, just delayed a bit. My own owlets are most likely started wondering where is “the owl guy”. I am looking forward to hikes in the Northwoods to visit my northern friends! Homeward bound now.

Pale-Billed Woodpecker
(video links for email subscribers … mating dance and drumming)

Both close-ups and some images which show the pale-billed woodpecker’s environment.

Black-Headed Trogon (video link for email subscribers )

Costa Rican Pale-Billed Woodpecker

Up and over the hill via the dirt road from Las Catalinas (4 wheel or all wheel drive required) there is the one and only one stream for miles and miles that still has water near the end of this Dry Season (April 2023). As in any extremely dry environments, water is a magnet. This morning I drove over and walked the road next to the stream. My car gave me the opportunity to retreat to an air conditioned environment with the 90+ degree heat (and super high humidity) overwhelmed me.  After a few minutes of sitting with the AC blasting, birding would be restarted.

My excitement of the morning was when I saw a quick flash of scarlet. I knew Pileated Woodpeckers did not range anywhere this far south … never being seen south of the United States. Some research on my Merlin app from Cornel revealed I was watching a pair of Pale-Billed Woodpeckers. The woodpecker were obviously living in a “savannah like” area across a dirt road from the stream (dry forest of the other side of the stream). Until I saw these gorgeous birds, I had no idea they even existed … obviously a lifer.

Pale-Billed Woodpecker

Normally the lifer woodpecker would make for a fantastic day of birding, but as the late night TV commercials would always state … Wait, there’s more!

I had no idea that Black-Headed Trogons sometimes flock together, even during breeding season. While birding the stream near a ford that I was not willing to drive across on a very small dirt road I saw / heard five trogons. There may have been more, but this was the number of trogons I could confirm.

Singing Black-Headed Trogons (video link for email subscribers)