Winter Storm Ice Out Birding Piping Plover!

The last few days have been quite the roller-coaster of weather here in northern Minnesota. Last night a late winter storm hit with huge winds and 6 to 10 inches of snow across the region. Here at my house it snowed hard, and by morning the ground was covered with white stuff. However one fringe benefit from the storm is the HUGE winds out of the northeast chopped up and melted the remaining ice. Here are two photographs I took two days ago at sunrise before the start of the stormy weather. I am standing out on Minnesota Point looking back towards town.

By this afternoon the weather had improved enough that I decided to go out birding. When I realized that the beach was now free on Park Point (Minnesota Point), I decided to look for shorebirds. As they say in birding, a little luck never hurts as I found two Piping Plovers (very rare / endangered) near Dune Bridge. I eBirded the discovery. Unfortunately about ten minutes into my observing of the plovers they were scared off by two unleashed dogs.

I waited a few minutes for the owner to reach my location and politely explained about Duluth’s Leash Laws, and how the dogs had scared endangered birds in a designated nesting area (referred him to the sign on Dune Bridge). Unfortunately I would not expect the Piping Plovers to stick around, both because of the foot traffic in this particular area and the fact that there is so little beach / sand between the high water wave mark and the dunes.

Good Grebe Morning (Reprise!)

Another day … another Grebe, but in this case a lifer for me! I drove over to the Superior Entry shortly after sunrise in hopes I might get lucky and find some Red-Throated Loons feeding upon smelt while taking a break from their Arctic migration. No such luck, but this Eared Grebe which was definitely at the extreme eastern edge of it migration range was present.

Then I was dumbfounded as the only two Red-Breasted Mergansers present at the Superior Entry (HUGE area) swam right over to within five yards of me. It never hurts to be lucky; however given the angle of the sun they would have had difficulty seeing me. A good morning. Just wish I would find a Red-Throated Loon that is not 1/2 mile distant out on Lake Superior.

Good Grebe Morning to You!

The Lester Park Golf Course Ponds in Duluth are an excellent spot to bird early in the morning during migration. This Horned Grebe checked me well over shortly after sunrise this morning, and then decided I was harmless. I watched it hunt for about ten minutes till I went to check the other four ponds.

In the last two days I have seen:

1. Ruby Crowned Kinglets (major migration numbers)
2. Yellow-Rumped Warblers (major migration numbers)
3. Palm Warblers
4. Phoebes
5. Tree Swallows
6. Buffleheads (courting battles underway each day)
7. Greater Scaup
8. Great Horned Grebes

and the usual suspects!

One thing I like about the ponds is while the numbers of ducks are not huge (normally 2 to 10 of a given specie), the smaller flocks normally don’t spook so easily giving me a chance to watch. Visit very early in the morning before golfers scare the ducks off the ponds.

Horned Grebe