Week Ending May 4, 2014

We had an extremely rainy week here in Virginia Beach. Monday through Thursday it rained every day. Parts of northeast North Carolina received several inches of rain and there was also outbreaks of tornadoes across the state. The torrential downpours were very apparent when I went on my first hike of the week on Friday to Back Bay NWR. I first noticed high water when approaching the intersection of Sandbridge Road & New Bridge Road. The ditches along Sandbridge were extremely high, even flowing out onto the roadway edges. The Lotus Gardens were easily a couple feet higher than I've seen at times, with water filling up the grass shoulders around the bridge. All the farmfields and front yards had standing water across them, making all those crayfish 'chimneys' obsolete and allowing the crayfish to have some additional real estate for the time being. Apparently we've also had continuous southerly winds this week, which coupled with the high amounts of rainfall, caused Back Bay to rise up way above the standard elevation. Usually, it is the opposite effect on the bay, since we get northerly winds more often. Again, this is the highest water I've ever seen on Back Bay and the surrounding areas. When I got to the park, I started down the Loop Road's west side, en route to the West Dike Trail. The water was everywhere, filling forested areas where I've never seen water before. I saw a pair of Cottontail rabbits seeking refuge on a bit of high ground beneath the trees behind the contact station. On the way down the Loop Road, Red-winged Blackbirds were seen flying and landing in the cattails of the marsh everywhere I looked. I saw what could have been a small rail jumping through the reeds as well. Perhaps it was another Sora, like the ones I saw last week not far away. It seems that as the bay has risen upwards and therefore further inland than it usually does, it has pushed a lot of wildlife into areas where it can be seen. 

Common Yellowthroat (warbler species) at Back Bay NWR.

Under normal water levels, there is plenty of marsh & forest for the animals to hide within, but with the water moving into these areas, they have to seek out higher ground, which means they've moved up to the edges of the dike system and the inner impoundments. Even today, it rained a little bit on me the first 15 or 20 minutes. After that it stayed overcast, though very very dark further to the south, which made for a nice background in some of the photos in this gallery. With no sunshine, I didn't expect to see any snakes, and I didn't end up finding any. The animals that seemed to be the most numerous were again the shorebirds. Spotted Sandpipers & Solitary Sandpipers were both present. Greater Yellowlegs were seen on all the impoundments. The warblers are still around as well, and I saw a Common Yellowthroat in the exact same shrubbery that held my first Prairie Warbler of the season a few weeks back. With the high waters of the bay, I heard a lot more splashing around than normal, which at the time I just assumed were Nutria moving around in the water, it wasn't until later what I'd find out what it really was. As I was starting to near the maritime forest section of the trail, I had caught sight of a number of Red-winged Blackbirds off to the right in a large tree, one of several trees that dot the west side of the trail in this section. When they spooked into the air, I saw a pair of other birds, and a blue colored bird also fly off and land elsewhere. The pair of birds looked to have orange and black on them, so I first thought they were Eastern Towhees, but they appeared smaller, so as I snuck up on their location, and they again burst into the air I realized that they were actually Orchard Orioles! These were my first of the season, and only the second time in my life that I've gotten to see this species, after having seen one for the first time last May in Chincoteague NWR on my graduation vacation from ODU. I tried to snap photographs but only got one off in time, and it was quite blurry, though you can tell from it what the bird was. I didn't get another chance to see what species the blue colored bird was, out here it could be an Eastern Bluebird, an Indigo Bunting, or a Blue Grosbeak, any of which I'd greatly welcome. While I was standing there thinking about how I'd missed on the photographs I'd hoped to get I heard a loud splash behind me. I turned to find nothing there but focused my camera on where the rippled were, thinking again that it was probably a Nutria swimming around. 

Spotted Sandpiper in flight over the impoundments of Back Bay NWR.

While watching the spot, a figure slowly rose in the water column, and thanks to the very dark clouds overhead, I could actually make out the shape just under the surface, then it rose and leaped. I closed the camera shutter and from the photo I could see it was a very large Chain Pickerel (the southern cousin of the Northern Pike that I grew up with in Minnesota)! The Pickerel had a Bluegill tail sticking out of it's mouth, making for an amazingly lucky photograph! The fish didn't stop though, and kept jumping out of the water & thrashing back and forth like one does to try to toss a lure when hooked. I realized pretty quick that the Bluegill was so large that it was stuck in the Pickerel's mouth & gills. The Pickerel went belly up, and was just holding the Bluegill still, but it for some reason started swimming very slowly over towards me. When I'd first seen the fish, it was probably about 30 or 40 feet out from my position, but after a few minutes of slowly moving towards me, I was able to get a foot in the water, and reach it with a stick. It let me get my hand around it's neck and land it, like I've done so many times in my life, only while fishing, not while out hiking! After some effort, and several toothbites into my hand, I was able to push the Bluegill back out through the mouth & get it unravelled from the gills of the Pickerel. I got the Pickerel set into the water belly down and moved it forward and backward to get the water moving through it's gills again to give it some oxygen. When I let go, it swam off into the dark waters. Unfortunately, I could not get the Bluegill to steady itself, and when it kept going belly up, I had to take it out and put the fish down humanely. I left the carcass up on the trail thinking an Osprey or Eagle would find it in no time, and didn't want to throw it back in the water for the same Pickerel to choke on again. I like to think that over the years, I've seen some pretty incredible things out in the woods, but I'm hard-pressed to come up with another occurrence that was as unexpected as this one. I've never had a fish choose to swim towards me in what I can only assume was it's only shot to survive. 

Yellow-rumped Warbler in breeding plumage at Back Bay NWR.

Had it not done this, it would have choked to death on the Bluegill, I'm sure of it. It reminded me of being a kid on Lac la Croix in northern Minnesota, and trying to catch a Smallmouth Bass barehanded. I remember working around behind it, then slowly pushing it towards the shore, and then actually beaching it but unable to grab the fish before it flopped back into the water and sped off. That was the closest I've ever been to barehanding a free fish, well now, I can say I've done it, though it was only because the fish clearly allowed it to happen. A bizarre, but touching experience that I'm very grateful I got to be a part of! After this, I just headed back towards the entrance to the park, thinking there was no way it could get any better out there, and I was getting pretty hungry being a Friday evening. While walking northward, I continued to hear the same splashing around in the bay shallows that I'd heard earlier, and this time I got a clear look at what was doing it! Mixed in with the marsh grasses and cattails of the shallows, I could see fins moving around, and long pointed bodies. It seems that this time of the year, the Longnose Gar move into the shallows to spawn, and it was their fins breaking the surface that was causing all the rustling sounds in the water! Folks had been talking in the HRWE group about the Carp spawning in ditches around the region, but I had never expected to see Gar doing the same thing. After the Gar, I actually saw another Chain Pickerel in the impoundments, hunting in the shallows, they must just be very active right now for some reason. After all the fish excitedment, the weather cleared and let the sun through for a half hour or so on my return trip, giving me interesting light and backdrops for some Caspian & Forster's Terns, some Blue-winged Teal, a Yellow-rumped Warbler, and the rabbits I had seen at the beginning of my hike. It turned out to be quite a walk, one I'll always remember for the bizarre fish rescue. 

Red-winged Blackbird perching on a cattail at Back Bay NWR.

Saturday morning Ruth decided to come hiking with me since it was going to be in the 70s and sunny. Because of how much I saw yesterday at Back Bay because of the high water, I wanted to get back out there again while the wildlife was still forced up to higher ground. We started off on the same route as I did last night, walking the western side of the Loop Road to the West Dike. Ruth spotted a Common Yellowthroat that was singing from the top of a shrub. With the clouds not having yet lifted, I couldn't get very good photographs, but it was in a spot where had I had some sun, the shots could have been great. Just after the Yellowthroat, we heard something making wood-knock sounds in the marsh, but we could not locate the culprit, even though it was probably only 20 feet away, just couldn't spot any movement in the reeds. Not sure on what makes that sounds, so I'll have to research later. Like Friday evening, the Red-winged Blackbirds were out in large numbers and provided constant entertainment for us while we watched them land on cattails throughout the marshes. The waters of Back Bay were still high, but not quite what they were the evening before, having dropped probably 6 inches or more. We again got to hear the Longnose Gar moving around in the marshy shallows of the bay, something I'd hoped Ruth would get to see or at least hear, so when I talked about it I wouldn't seem crazy.

A 1st year spring male Orchard Oriole at Back Bay NWR, first one of the season.

The Greater Yellowlegs and Solitary Sandpipers were still around on the impoundments. As were a large number of Snowy Egrets, and a few Great Egrets & Great Blue Herons. When we reached the trees that held the Orchard Orioles Friday, we walked slow, but again scared off a group of birds, with yet again some blue colored bird mixed in. This time though, it flew off and perched up in a tree where I could photograph it, albeit poorly, but I was able to confirm it as my first Blue Grosbeak on the year. The Orchard Orioles managed to slip me again, this time without a single photograph. We walked through the maritime forest and then reached the False Cape State Park entry sign and turned back around to head northward. About this time I saw a Ruby-throated Hummingbird fly past quickly, one of 3 that we would see on the day, though no photographs could be taken. On the second pass through the maritime forest, we saw a Carolina Chickadee, heard several woodpeckers, and I photographed some Blue-gray Gnatcatchers in the same spot at the north end that I'd seen a couple weeks ago under better sky conditions. No Prairie Warblers were heard this time in the forest though. When we left the forest, we again had to pass the sections of trail that held the Orioles. This time, we were even more careful not to spook everything out of the largest of the trees, where they seem to be congregating. The birds were there again, but were extremely adept at sticking into the deep cover of the tree, or moving to the opposite side from us. 

First Eastern Kingbird of the season at Back Bay NWR!

So we both set up on opposite sides of the tree, which caused them to move upward to the top. I was able to get a couple photographs of a 1st spring male bird through the thick foliage, first time I've seen this plumage! Also around this tree, I got to see my first Eastern Kingbirds on the year. I don't know what it is about this spot, maybe that it is right at the edge of the forest/marsh boundary, or that it looks like a farmfield or orchard, but these migratory songbirds seems to love the spot. I'll keep my eyes open next time and hopefully I'll get my first Indigo Bunting, another bird that just seems like this would be a good location to find. On the way back north from here, we encountered several Nutria, getting to watch them from a distance without scaring them off as they fed on reeds. Also, while the tram was passing us, I saw what was either a Black Racer or a Eastern Ratsnake, but it zoomed off into the grass before I could take a photo. Caspian Terns & Forster's Terns again were seen on the impoundments. When we reached the Loop Road, we took it around to the east this time, en route to the Dune Trail access to the beach. On the way, we heard a Prairie Warbler, and I stepped off the trail to see if I could locate it in the sandy/scrub environment. While listening to its call, I got a look at one as it was flying almost directly at me.

Brown-headed Cowbird male at Back Bay NWR!

It missed me by just a couple of feet & landed in a nearby shrub where I got some photographs of it. They're one of the most beautiful little songbirds with their yellow & black patterns, and rusty colored shoulder patch. They're also becoming a favorite of mine since I know their song well enough to ID them, and can use it to help me search for the little bird making it. We walked the beach portion but didn't see much for birds, just a Bonaparte's Gull and one Common Loon in breeding plumage, not sure why it is still here as they typically fly north when they acquire it. Ruth stopped to sit on the pier back near the contact station, and I was en route to the Bay Trail when a Cottonmouth blocked my path on the boardwalks. So I went back, but on the way ran into Liza Eckardt, a volunteer at the park. She said she'd move the Cottonmouth so Ruth & I walked with. On the way, she showed us a Brown Watersnake & caught sight of an Eastern Ribbonsnake as well. While moving the Cottonmouth around she told us when to back off and when they are not a threat. I still don't plan on getting any closer than I need too to the venomous snakes though, out of due respect to them, and caution for my own safety.  We also saw a Marsh Rabbit and a baby Yellow-bellied Slider at the contact station. Afterwards we took off back to the car and headed out. 

Brown Watersnake, far from the water, at Back Bay NWR.

Sunday proved to be even nicer than Saturday had been, with temperatures peaking right around 80. Since I went out in the morning, it was a bit more enjoyable with temps probably still in the 60s. I went out to Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge for the third Sunday in a row, and the third time that I've now been there overall. I went again to the Washington Ditch parking area, and heading out down the trail. Very near the start of my walk I got a really nice surprise, a pair of Yellow-billed Cuckoos were hiding in the canopy of a large tree. They made very careful movements through the branches so that they stayed mostly concealed at all times, and then came to a full stop where you'd never have seen them if you had just walked up. I snapped some photographs of them, and remembered that this is the first time I've seen the species since the very first time I saw one on August 20, 2010. I remember the date off the top of my head, because it is also the day that I would later end up meeting my girlfriend, Ruth. It was nice to get a surprise of this magnitude to kick off another hike here.

My first Yellow-billed Cuckoo sighting since August 20, 2010! Taken at Great Dismal Swamp NWR.

I'd had good success in seeing & hearing a lot of songbird species, but less success in actually photographing them since in the swamp, they have an almost unlimited area to hide in. Now it has especially become difficult with the leaves having come fully out, and any warbler can now easily hide amongst the dense green of the forest. When I hit the junction with the Lynn Ditch Trail, unlike the previous two outings, I decided to head north onto it. This trail runs almost straight north-south and eventually ends up at the Jericho Ditch Trail parking area a few miles further to the north. Shortly after getting on this trail, I spotted one, then two Green Herons staring me down from behind the cover of the trees. They kept flying parallel to the trail as I moved, so I kept inadvertently spooking them. Before they flew off into the swamp, they posed on top of some trees for photographs. About a mile and a half north of the Washington Ditch, the trail has another junction with the Middle Ditch. I had originally planned to hike eastward on the Middle Ditch, hoping to maybe see a Black Bear as they area had been described to me by a bear photographer the week before. However, the ditch trail was overgrown and looked like an absolute haven for ticks and/or chiggers, and though I was sprayed down with deet already, I opted to just keep heading north on the Lynn Ditch. I ended up going about 2.5 miles more to the north, which put me just about 2 miles south of the Jericho parking area. 

Green Heron in the canopy of Great Dismal Swamp NWR!

The trail is much easier to walk than the Washington, both are very flat trails, but this one has a better base ground to walk on. You can easily walk silently on the trail as there isn't much gravel, and the north-south orientation helped funnel a nice breeze past me all morning so it never got humid. It was the first day I'd really noticed any mosquitoes out as well, though they were more abundant on the Washington Ditch Trail, I think the more open Lynn Ditch Trail kept them away due to the breeze I mentioned, and more sunlight getting down to the trail. Along my route north I saw a lot of Great Crested Flycatchers, and the now-standard lot of Prothonotary Warblers. In addition to those, and like the east end of the Washington, I began to hear Prairie Warblers in higher numbers the further away from the parking area I walked. They seem to enjoy the more interior areas of the park, I'd guess for either the scrubby habitat, or just the isolation maybe. When I decided to turn around and head back south, I got a photo of a Ruby-throated Hummingbird that flew in and landed on a branch, and I also was confronted with some blue birds that I could not validate as either Blue Grosbeaks or Indigo Buntings.

My first decent Dragonfly photograph of 2014, at Great Dismal Swamp NWR!

The birds were molting, far away, and in bad light. I keep going back and forth on which bird it might be, but I just can't say with certainty, therefore it remains anonymous. Unlike the Washington Ditch, the Lynn appears to have a much higher population of turtles living in it. I saw tons of them, mostly Yellow-bellied Sliders, but also Spotted Turtles, and probably others I just can't ID properly. I didn't come across anything too remarkable or noteworthy on the way back south on the Lynn Ditch Trail, but continued to see warblers, including a Prairie Warbler that finally came in close enough to view. Walking back on the Washington Ditch Trail, I took the boardwalk at the finish, and saw one Ovenbird, as well as my first Five-lined Skinks of the year. They were running around on the manmade boardwalk, but not providing the best of backgrounds for a good photograph. Oh, and so that folks know, when I walk trails like this where I don't get to a junction of any kind when I turn around, I have a method for always knowing how far I actually made it on a trail. I took some photographs at the far northern end of my walk, then used the GPS tag my camera places into the files to locate my exact stopping point on Google Earth. From that I can figure out how far I walked, roughly 9.5 miles roundtrip. This week, my sister Ellen will be coming into town Wednesday afternoon, and I've got Friday off from work for a trip out to Merchant's Millpond State Park with her, where hopefully I'll get to show her some cool stuff like I have there in the past! 

Black Swallowtail at Great Dismal Swamp NWR!

Week Ending April 27, 2014

Made it out for the first time this week on Wednesday evening after work! I went up to the 64th Street entrance at First Landing State Park since it's just the easiest place to get to quickly after my workday has ended. Right away in the swamp next to the bridge on the Cape Henry Trail I saw a Green Heron tucked away back in the cover. This is the first one I've seen at the park this year, though they are quite common in the summer. In the past I've seen them mainly around the tidal creeks that come into the park from Broad Bay, this is the first one I've seen on fresh water. I walked my typical route down the Cape Henry, Long Creek, Osprey Trails to the bridge at White Hill Creek and back. On the Long Creek Trail I got to see an abundance of Hermit Thrushes, as I did the last time out as well. They should be leaving the region fairly soon, since they are just winter residents of the area, but move further north for the breeding season. When I got to the Osprey Trail, I found that the Mourning Dove that nested just above the trail in a nest of  Spanish moss last year has again taken up residence there. It is right out in the open, but you can still easily miss it if you aren't looking directly at it.

Hermit Thrush at First Landing State Park!

Once you find it, you'll laugh at how you never saw it before, hiding in plain sight. The Canada Goose pair is also still nesting out on the small puddle on the south side of the trail just before you reach the large Osprey nest on the right side of the trail. My Osprey nest that I monitor for Osprey Watch may have gotten blown down in this last batch of wind we got over the weekend; I couldn't locate it, although the leaves are popping out a lot more now so I might just not be able to see it. I ran into another birder between the two tidal creeks, and as a result I was able to locate my first Northern Parula of the season. I had just gotten finished asking if she had seen any warblers and then two of them flew into a tree about 50 feet away, what timing. I also saw a Red-headed Woodpecker nearby in the tidal marsh on a dead tree that is one of their favorite spots in the park in my experience. At the next tidal creek, the cackling Belted Kingfisher held true to it's usual self, evading my camera quite well. As I was heading up to White Hill, a Great Blue Heron flew in over top of me, and gave me a good opportunity to get some flight photos. I still haven't seen any fence lizards on White Hill this year, and its always been a hotspot for them in past years.

Red-winged Blackbird telling me to go away!

I hope that Black Racer I saw swallowing one last year didn't destroy the population. Hopefully in the next month or so they'll also start popping up, or I'll start to get worried. Ospreys & Great Blue Herons dominated around White Hill Lake, with all the wintering ducks having left the area (aside from 3 Buffleheads that I saw on Broad Bay). On the way back from the creek bridge, I scared up another Green Heron in the White Hill Lake overflow area's southwest corner. I took a few shots through cover, but the sunlight wasn't on it so they came out dark. Fortunately I got good looks at it though. Along the bay on the way back an adult Bald Eagle put on a good show flying in circles looking for fish before heading off to the south. The rest of the walk I mainly saw Chickadees and Hermit Thrushes, no other warblers showed up unfortunately. I'm hoping to get out later in the week to the Dismal Swamp again, though the park is hosting a Birding Festival on Thurs-Saturday so I may avoid the crowds, hopefully Sunday though!

Red-breasted Merganser and the beautiful waters of Back Bay!

This weekend we had some of the nicest weather we've had all year so far. Saturday, temperatures reached into the 70s and it was a perfectly sunny day. I went down to Back Bay NWR in the morning and found that a lot of other people had the same idea, the parking lot was full. Surprisingly though, I didn't really see anyone along the West Dike Trail, everyone must have been concentrated on the mile or so around the parking area, the beach, and the Bay Trail were probably packed. The shorebirds seemed to have returned in huge numbers now to the park. Greater Yellowlegs were the most numbers, I probably saw over a hundred throughout the day. Lesser Yellowlegs were also present in smaller numbers. I saw a couple flocks of Semipalmated Plovers along the West Dike, and a pair of Killdeers appears to have taken up a nesting spot in the field next to the contact station. About a half mile after entering the West Dike Trail I got a great surprise, I saw a tiny bird jumping through the underbrush. I thought at first it was a sparrow but soon I saw a yellow bill and realized I was looking at my very first Sora! A few minutes later, after trying to maintain visual contact with the bird, I noticed a second one in the same shrub that had been sitting stationary.

Blue-gray Gnatcatcher finally stayed still for a photograph!

I had no idea how small the birds were. Having seen them only in field guides & photographs, I guess I had just assumed they were of similar mass to a Clapper Rail, but they are much, much smaller, and even tougher to find if you can believe that. The pair eventually flew off across the water to the marsh on the opposite side and disappeared into the grasses very quickly. I didn't get the best of photographs since they were small, in cover, and dimly lit but I got good enough shots to verify the ID with certainty which is all I can ever hope for. In addition to the shorebirds and rails, the egrets were out in large numbers again this weekend. Snowy Egrets outnumbers Great Egrets by a vast margin, but I still saw a lot of each. Unlike last week though, I didn't find any Ibis anywhere along the trail. Nutria were also very active today, I saw at least 4 of them swimming around and cutting down reeds for food/nesting material. There was a group of folks that were harvesting snakes for some college study, and were violating basically every park rule there is, like walking in areas closed to the public. I don't know if they had permission from the park, but it's really irritating seeing people always in places that are clearly marked as Closed. They said they'd got 4 Cottonmouths that morning, and a number of watersnakes. I did eventually end up finding 3 Cottonmouths later in the day, one of which I got some good shots of as it was basking in the impoundment nearest to the parking area. I walked the West Dike Trail to the False Cape SP entry sign and back this time again, which is a good 6.5 mile round trip, plus the 1 mile on the Bay Trail for 7.5 miles on the day. I had a good time in the maritime forest near the south end of the trail, seeing several Blue-gray Gnatcatchers, and hearing a loud Prairie Warbler, then finally being able to locate it up in a tree.

Eastern Cottonmouth basking in the sun!

I'm glad I recently learned their song, now I hear it and immediately know what I'm looking for. It sounds like a ticking bomb that is about to go off, getting louder and faster until it stops. Along the Bay Trail, I got to add a second rail to my daily list, having found a King Rail on the small rainwater pool on the right side near the end of the trail. I watched it for at least fifteen or twenty minutes while it wandered around the edges of the pool poking around for food. It never seemed to be scared of me, so long as I didn't try to approach it, and even then it would just slowly back off in the opposite direction. Eventually, it wandered inland into the marsh. I then kept on down the trail, and came across another one on the large pond on the left side of the trail. This one was better concealed and I couldn't get any photographs but it was still neat to see. After that I headed back along the boardwalks, only to get stuck as the snake herders had a Cottonmouth on the boardwalk itself and I had to reverse direction and walk around the area. Clearly, they had no concern for the people trying to enjoy the park today, it was very annoying. 

King Rail at Back Bay NWR!

Sunday was even nicer than Saturday somehow. Sunny skies, and temperatures in the 60s made it the absolute perfect day for me to hike. With weather like this, I never break a sweat and am just very comfortable while moving. The wildlife agreed as well, and I saw a great deal of birds. I went out to the Great Dismal Swamp NWR for the second Sunday in a row after having been there last weekend for the very first time. The park was hosting their Great Dismal Swamp Birding Festival from Thursday through Saturday, so I was hoping the crowds would be gone by today. There was a few cars in the Washington Ditch parking area this time, and I ran into a few people right away. I also ran into a ton of birds right off the bat. I've never heard birds singing from all directions anywhere else around this area, it was really incredible. Trying to find the small songbirds is a challenge though, especially with the leaves now almost fully out. Even the colorful warblers can easily hide in the trees, making it more and more important for me to start learning all their songs better, since I only know a few of them good enough to ID. In the stretch before the Lynn Ditch junction, I saw several Prothonotary Warblers, and a Chipping Sparrow, and also some American Redstarts. Yet again, a pair of Wild Turkeys was sitting a couple hundred yards north on the Lynn Ditch Trail and ran off as soon as they saw me. From the point on, I didn't run into another person until my return trip from Lake Drummond, though I did have people in sight behind me that eventually turned around.

Tiger Swallowtail showing it's yellow against the green background of the swamp.

It really pays to walk the whole trail, the further out you get into the swamp, the more wildlife you see in my opinion. Also, I've only heard Prairie Warblers in the mile or so closest to the lake, never nearer to the parking area. I don't know if the habitat suits them better, or they just like the isolation, but they do seem to congregate in that stretch of the trail. I heard lots of them, and was finally able to see one high up in a tree. Common Yellowthroats were also around, and a number of Yellow-rumped Warblers in breeding plumage were seen as well. The birds weren't the only animals that were out today. I saw a pair of Nutria working the ditch near a Beaver lodge, and also a ton of Yellow-bellied Slider turtles in the same area. In some of the small pools, I saw Spotted Turtles, which are the first ones I've seen outside of First Landing State Park. Nearing the lake, I got to a spot where I heard a loud rustle on the forest floor to my left, and scanned the area for a few minutes to finally find a Ratsnake sitting under the leaf cover with just it's head sticking out. I think it must have been either attacking prey, or was trying to mate with another snake that must have gotten away. It was so loud I jumped when I initially heard it so close to me. When I reached the lake, I scared up a Spotted Sandpiper that had been in the shallows, but fortunately it landed right on the manmade observation pier and posed for some photographs, along with a buddy that must have been hiding elsewhere. I prefer to get photographs of them in a natural backdrop, but at least I could ID them from the photos on the pier. They flew off around the lake shortly after. The leaves really are out now around the lake, its all green & blue as far as you can see, save for the area on the south side of the lake that was burned off in recent wildfires.  On the trip back, unlike last week, I had the sun at my back, and could finally focus a bit more on where the birds were at. I saw basically all the same animals on the way back, but I did also scare up a male Wood Duck from the ditch before I could raise my camera, and found another pair later that also immediately burst into the air and disappeared into the swamp. I passed a number of people on my way back that were heading out towards the lake, glad I got the earlier start so that noone was in front of me to scare off the wildlife. Today I decided to take the boardwalk path instead of just going back to the car. It wanders around through the swamp for 3/4 of a mile, but I didn't really see any birds outside of a couple Prothonotary Warblers. I walked out to the ditch trail for a little more, and I think I saw an Indigo Bunting fly across the trail, but I didn't get a good enough look to say for certain that it wasn't a Blue Grosbeak, so unfortunately I can't count that one, which either way would have been my first of the year! After that I headed back to the car after 10 miles of walking around the swamp. I've been wearing bugspray the last few outings, and have yet to notice any ticks or really any other bugs outside of a few mosquitoes, but nothing remotely bad at all, I hope that trend continues. The weather for the week is looking like a lot of rain basically every day til Friday, so I don't know if I'll make it out after work at all, but hopefully the sun comes out at some point or I'll start to go crazy.

Turtle at Great Dismal Swamp NWR

Week Ending April 20, 2014

With Friday being "Good Friday", and a holiday for my company, I was able to get out for a hike at Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge in the morning. Unfortunately the weather did not cooperate, with completely overcast skies, a strong 15-20 mph northeasterly wind, and temperatures in the mid-to-upper 40s. I walked the western dike from the contact station south to the False Cape State Park entrance sign. While walking the west side of the Loop Road I saw a shorebird with a long downcurved bill fly past out over the Back Bay marsh. The size & shape assuredly made it a Whimbrel, which was my first of the year! On the way down the dike I saw a Pied-billed and a Horned Grebe up very close. Also, a pair of Killdeer must have been nesting near the dike at one spot since they kept circling me in the air and screeching at the top of their lungs. Off in the middle of the impoundments I saw what turned out to be a large cloud of Glossy Ibises circling around the marsh. From the photographs I counted at least 114 of them, which is the most I've ever seen in a day. While watching them land on the marsh, I also saw a young Bald Eagle fly over heading southeast towards where they were at. The impoundments were very choppy with waves today since the wind was screaming across from the northeast. I'm guessing it was because of this strong wind that there was no dabbling ducks to be seen, when last time I was there a couple weeks ago there was hundreds of them.

Carolina Wren uncharacteristically sitting still long enough to be photographed.

In fact, the only two ducks I saw the entire time hiking was a nesting pair of Wood Ducks on a small freshwater swamp in the forested area of the west dike. There wasn't much in the way of Gulls today but I did see another Caspian Tern, and some Forster's Terns. There was a small group of maybe 10 terns out in the impoundments but it was too far to positively ID. At the far southern end of the dike, I had a hawk fly past quickly, but was unable to get an ID, though I suspect it was a Cooper's Hawk since it was large, and I didn't see the white rump that a Northern Harrier would have. I've seen both species in the park in the past so it wouldn't surprise me if it was either. Walking back up the west dike I got some additional photographs of the Glossy Ibises, which had moved further northwest from their original spot, and were much closer to the dike while in the air. Once they landed in the marsh though, they were completely invisible from my position. I saw a Great Egret & a Snowy Egret seemingly hunting together along a small tidal creek leading up to one of the impoundment release valves. I think I actually saw more people today than birds, as every few minutes another vehicle was going past me on the dike for whatever reason. When I got back up to the contact station I walked the Bay Trail and then the Kuralt Trail but came up very empty handed on both, seeing just a few Red-winged Blackbirds, and that was it. 

The view down the Washington Ditch Trail at the Great Dismal Swamp NWR, and a Wild Turkey staring back at me.

With a never-ending drizzle on Saturday, I was unable to get out hiking. But, Sunday morning was unpredictedly beautiful. The sun was actually up, while the forecast had called for an all overcast day. I finally made it down to the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge for the first time ever. I've seen so many photographs come out of this area in April of the beautiful songbirds that are migrating northward. Apparently the park is one of the largest stopping locations for them since it is about 175 square miles of undistiburbed swamp & forest. Nowhere in the Hampton Roads area is as large of a wilderness area. I got down to the Washington Ditch access at about 8 AM and right away I was greeting with a group of 7 Wild Turkeys in the farmfield to the north of the access road. After taking some shots from my car (had I gotten out, they'd have surely run off), I parked at the trailhead and started down the Washington Ditch Trail towards Lake Drummond. The lake is a rather large (about 5 square miles), freshwater, and is one of only two natural lakes that exist in Virginia. Waters from the surrounding swamps filter through a series of ditches that were designed & installed in the early 1800s and empty into the lake. The Washington Ditch was surveyed & constructed under the supervision of George Washington himself! This trail travels 4.5 miles right through the heart of the swamp, and reaches the lake at it's most northern point.

A Pearl Crescent, one of several species of butterflies seen at the Great Dismal Swamp NWR.

Along the 4.5 miles I had the sun directly in my face, which made it difficult to see things in front of me, so I had to do a lot of walking and stopping to look back away from the sun. There was an absolutely incredible amount of bird songs in the air, probably more than I've heard anywhere around here. I was constantly looking in trees trying to find the culprits, but more often then not, I couldn't locate where the bird singing actually was. The leaves aren't fully out yet, but there was enough for the small colorful warblers to hide easily behind. On the trip out, I saw probably a dozen Prothonotary Warblers, a couple of American Redstarts, a Common Yellowthroat, and also a White-eyed Vireo. All four species were the first I've encountered this year, and the Prothonotary Warblers were the first ones I've ever gotten focused photographs of. For some reason, the autofocus on my camera has been getting worse & worse each time I use it, and it was not able to focus on the birds with any accuracy. I ended up having to manually focus most of my shots today, which in the dense cover of the forest, on tiny songbirds, made for a very difficult day. At the junction with the Lynn Ditch Trail, I saw another pair of Wild Turkeys off to the north, but as soon as they realized I was there they took off running quickly in the opposite direction. At this junction, there is a water elevation control structure, kind of like a dam, though it has the ability to close or open valves to let more or less water through. There was a several foot drop in the ditch at this spot so I felt higher up for a little while walking along the ditch. The trail adjacent to the ditch is actually built on top of the material that was removed while creating the ditch, which is why they are side-by-side. I'm sure material has been added to strengthen the trail at some point, but for the most part, it is the fill material that just came from the ditch construction.

First White-eyed Vireo of the season!

The further I got away from the parking area, the more birds & especially the more butterflies I began to encounter. I had an inquisitive Carolina Wren hop around on a stump very close to me for an extended duration so was able to get some nice photographs of it; which is very uncharacteristic of these small & hyper birds. As for the butterflies, I started seeing them about 3 miles east of the parking area, and the final mile & a half to the lake was just full of them. Most of them were Zebra Swallowtails, but also had a number of Pearl Crescents, Painted Ladies, and one Black Swallowtail also. About the 3 mile mark as well there is a sizable Beaver lodge, and close downstream the Beavers are actively building a dam across the ditch. Backup from the dam has the trail almost flooded across for a hundred yard or so section. The water was just inches from the trail top, percolating upward into the tire treads that sit on either side of the trail. If the dam continues to grow in size, the trail will definitely be flooded as a result. Next time I'm out it will be interesting to see what this area looks like. But for now at least, I was able to keep walking and made it to the lake probably around 10:30 AM. At this point, I finally was going to not have the sun in my eyes, having made the turn westward to head back to the parking area. Of course, out of nowhere, it became completely overcast & I lost the sun anyway, after I fought staring into it the whole way out. So from that point on the light level was very low for photography, being that the sun was gone, and I was in deep, thick forest & swamp. On the trip back I scared up a couple of ducks that I believe were Wood Ducks, and I encountered another American Redstart, being the 3rd on the day.

Another species of butterfly that was very numerous, Zebra Swallowtail.

The Prothonotary Warblers continued to sing and be visible all over the place along the trail, but at a far enough distance where extreme closeup shots were impossible. I also came across a spot where 3 Yellow-bellied Sliders were sitting on logs out in the swamp. While I was walking I realized just how remote the park gets, I hadn't seen a single person all day, and I was the only car in the parking area when I'd arrived in the morning. It wasn't until about mile 7 that I finally saw a group of folks walking towards me. Of course, the trail is perfectly straight, so it took me another 15 minutes or so to actually reach them. Just before that, I found my first Eastern Ratsnake of the season, about a 3 or 4 foot long specimen that was arched upward on the trail looking at me. I took a few photographs of it from ground level on my knees and sat there waiting for the group of people to approach so that I could let them know it was there. They were all looking at it as I walked onward, hopefully nobody tried to mess with it, looked like a group of William & Mary students. Also on the way back, I heard a warbler singing that sounded like the sound bye the movies use when a bomb is going to go off, I later found out that it was the call of a Prairie Warbler, one of the prettiest of our spring birds out here.

First Prothonotary Warblers of the season at Great Dismal Swamp NWR!

Unfortunately I never located any of them, but I at least can confirm their ID by voice now which is something I need to work on for the other birds. When I reached the parking area again, I had wanted to walk the 3/4 mile boardwalk trail that starts there as well, but I was pretty exhausted from the 9 miles to and from the lake, and with the overcast skies making photography not work out I opted to head back, it was around 12:30 PM anyway so I was ready for some food. Thinking about it afterwards, I definitely understand why this is listed as a major birding hotspot. There is just a massive amount of undisturbed habitat for the birds to eat, drink, and nest in. I didn't see any birds of prey today, but folks keep posting sightings of Red-shouldered & Red-tailed Hawks in the area so maybe next time. Ruth is having some of her friends from Connecticut come down next weekend & I'm hoping to get back out here at least one time. Once the leaves have fully opened up throughout the park, it'll make it that much more difficult to locate all the small singing songbirds, even though they're very bright & coloful, they can still hide extremely easy in this environment. 

Eastern Ratsnake taking a peek out over the forest floor at Great Dismal Swamp NWR.

Week Ending April 13, 2014

This week started off with a rainy day Monday, and a mostly cloudy day on Tuesday. On Tuesday however, I did get out for a 6 mile walk through the neighborhoods of Little Neck for exercise, but didn't bring the camera with me since it was completely overcast. I didn't really see any birds to speak of either so it worked out OK. Had I seen something interesting I'd have beaten myself up for bringing my camera with, like has happened so many times in the past.  Wednesday proved to be a much nicer day, mostly sunny and in the 60s. I went down to First Landing State Park after work hoping I might catch some more migrating songbirds. I did the usual walk, parking at 64th Street outside the park and walking in along the Cape Henry, Long Creek, and Osprey Trails. I got a later start than I'd prefer, so I only walked to the south shore of White Hill Lake & Back, which is about 5.5 miles or thereabouts. I counted a total 4 Osprey nests up and running along the Osprey Trail so far, though there could very well be others that are just out of sight. The leaves in the park are really just starting to show up, but in another week or so it'll probably be completely greened up. Bradford Pears around the area are still in bloom, but are starting to fade it seems. Also along the Osprey Trail, the pair of Canada Geese still appears to be nesting. This is the 2nd year I've seen them in the same spot. Their nest is on a small freshwater pond just south of the trail, but well concealed within a small island of cattails. It is kind of neat that they are able to nest so close in proximity to Ospreys without hesitation, I would have though goose eggs would be like liquid gold for a hungry Osprey family, but maybe they really do stick to just fish.

My first Black Racer (snake) on the season, roughly 4 or 5 feet in length at First Landing SP.

Either way, the geese are there and hopefully they'll hatch out a family of goslings in a few weeks that I can photograph. The next pond to the west held a pair of Snowy Egrets, which took to flight as soon as they saw me unfortunately. Usually about this time of year I'll come across Tricolored Herons at the park, mixed in with Snowy Egrets, so I was on the lookout. Unfortunately though, I didn't spot any, though I did total up 11 Snowy Egrets on the day, which is a career high for me in the park. At the western tidal creek bridge, I could hear a Belted Kingfisher cackling, which is pretty common in this spot as there is one bold Kingfisher that never lets me photograph it with any quality. White Hill Lake was quiet for once, I didn't spot any ducks or herons out on the water, but the Osprey nest on the north side is still active. On the return trip I saw a Bonaparte's Gull right up on the shoreline of Broad Bay, only the second one I have ever seen on the inland side of the park. A Great Blue Heron was out in the western tidal creek marsh, and was pretty weary of me taking photographs so I kept on walking. In the area of the Osprey Trail that I refer to as The Grove (east of the Broad Bay beach about a quarter mile), songbirds were moving about like they typically are. I saw some Carolina Chickadees, and Tufted Titmice, the usuals. But also, there was a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher hopping around. I tried desperately for a few minutes to get a good photograph but came up with a lot of out-of-focus, or tree branch only photos, with maybe a couple shots that at least were confirmation of the sighting. It was pretty quiet the rest of the way, and close to 7 o'clock when I returned so the setting sun made for difficult shooting. 

Beautiful little Pine Warbler in it's namesake tree at Pleasure House Point.

Thursday I was able to get out to Pleasure House Point since it was yet again a gorgeous spring day out in the 60s & sunny. On the way home from work I had passed a Green Heron on one of the ponds off Kings Grant Road, so on my way back out to the park I stopped and got a couple photographs for the first of the season. At the park, I worked from east to west, having parked at Loch Haven Park again. No Gadwall today in the stormwater retention pond surprisings. The sandbars out in the Lynnhaven were full of Gulls, Terns, Cormorants, and Pelicans like they always are this time of year. No re-sighting of the Harbor Seal I'd seen before here, but it may be that they've moved further north with the warming of the weather the past couple of weeks. Like last visit, the Yellow-crowned Night-Herons were present, and provided the best photo opportunities since they're large, slow, not-so-weary, and enjoy being out in the sunlight; pretty much the perfect subject to photograph. I spotted a Green Heron along the shores of the second largest of the freshwater ponds, and later saw a pair of Mallards in the same pond, presumably the same pair I've seen the last few visits. Walking around the largest pond allowed me to sneak up on a Pine Warbler that was calling from about 20 feet up in a large pine tree. I got some photographs of it before it moved onto the next tree.

Horned Grebe in Pleasure House Creek.

They seem to be the only species of warbler I've seen in the park, which I'm OK with since they're beautiful, but it would be nice to get some migration variety. The Pine Warblers are here year-round, and love areas with tall pine trees, which this park has a great deal of. I got some shots of a Great Egret along the ditchlike pond that flows from Marlin Bay Drive out to the river. The pear trees in the park are still blooming & very pretty, as they were at First Landing on Wednesday. Along the river on the way back there was a Horned Grebe in fairly close. When I dove I snuck up on it and got quite a few close shots before it dove again, it didn't seem too bothered by me on the shoreline. When I headed back up to the car I saw an Osprey hovering over the stormwater pond, and while sneaking up on it, inadvertently spooked a Green Heron that was on the shoreline that I hadn't even seen. I tried to re-locate it on the river where it had flown in the direction of but couldn't, and instead yet again scared off another bird, a sparrow this time that may have been a Field Sparrow, I can't say for sure. After having used up my good luck apparently I decided to call it a day, fortunately I had been successful with a few birds earlier, before I started scaring everything off. 

The Cherry Blossoms of Washington, D.C. at peak bloom.

After a lengthy, traffic-filled, drive up to Fairfax on Friday, I was ready for some photography when Saturday morning rolled around. My girlfriend & her mother and I drove into Washington, D.C. to see the cherry blossoms around the Tidal Basin. They were right in their peak this weekend, so it timed out perfectly. We went into the city at 6 am and it was already full of people. The parade was going to be at 10am so I'm sure it only got crazier after we left. I took some photos of the blossoms, and a few of some Robins but didn't see much in the way of wildlife. Mallards, Canada Geese, Double-crested Cormorants, Gulls were about the only birds out, which are all the common ones I should expect in the city. After the festival, Ruth & I did do some walking on the Cross County Trail in Lorton right behind her mother's house. The only notable wildlife we saw was a large number of Toads calling and swimming around in a storm water retention pond. At least it was a beautiful day out in the high 70s with a nice breeze. The leaves up there were just starting out, so about a week behind Hampton Roads. 

More of the National Cherry Blossom Festival.

Sunday morning I got up early and went out for a long hike on the South Run Trail off Hooes Road, just north of Silverbrook Road. This is a trail I've hiked a number of times as it is very near Ruth's mother's neighborhood, and it has a surprising amount of wildlife along it. The trail encircles Lake Mercer, a reservoir created by damming up the South Run Stream which exits Burke Lake about 3.5 miles upstream. I usually walk around the east side of the lake, then follow the stream up to Burke Lake and back along the west side of the lake. The trail is a paved path, so there is usually a lot of joggers/walkers, and many dogs on the trail. Since it is in a stream valley, the neighborhoods are visible this time of year on either side up on the higher ground. It reminds me a lot of the trails that are common in Williamsburg. These trails are usually there mainly for the purpose of allowing pump trucks access to the sanitary sewer manholes that have been run through the area, utilizing the natural terrain slope to help them flow properly. The paved paths just happen to also function perfectly for recreational uses. With all the residential areas nearby, there are a ton of feeder birds in the stream valley. Tufted Titmice, Carolina Chickadees, Carolina Wrens, American Robins, White-breasted Nuthatches, Northern Cardinals, Dark-eyed Juncos are all extremely common in the forests here. The stream valley is also home to a lot of other wildlife though. I actually saw a female Wood Duck about 50 feet up in a tree along the stream, and could hear the calls of a male, but couldn't locate it.

Carolina Chickadee watching as the leaves start to come out in Fairfax County. 

It is possible he was in a tree cavity somewhere where they are nesting for the season. I've seen a number of Red-shouldered Hawks in the valley, including my very first a couple years ago. However, this time I couldn't seem to find any that I could ID. Though, I did see two hawks that were clearly Buteos of some species, but they were in flight and too fast & far away to properly identify. At the Burke Lake dam end of the trail, a pair of nest boxes has been set out for Tree Swallows, which were seen flying all over the place over the shallow waters next to the dam. These waters were full of Toads, just like the previous day, singing & swimming around frantically, I'd imagine it is just the breeding time of year and that's why they are so loud and mobile. I'd never seen it before, but I watched an American Crow actually grab one of the toads up off the water and proceed to devour it. I didn't realize crows would actually take live food, I always have known them as carrion feeders, though I suppose every day isn't garbage day so they must make use of something else for sustenance. The forest also is home to a number of woodpecker species, of which I saw both Downy & Hairy, Pileated, Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers, and Northern Flickers. Fortunately, since the leaves aren't totally out yet, I had good vision through the woods to be able to see all these birds, in a week or so it will get a bit more difficult, though, more beautiful. When I'd reached Lake Mercer on the way back, I got to see a number of Mallards, Canada Geese, and even one Great Blue Heron that was frightened off by a dog before I could get close enough to it for a photo. Near the emergency spillway I kept an eye on the treeline but didn't find any foxes this year. Two summers back I saw a mother Red Fox with 5 or 6 young pups walking around on the edge of the treeline. From the top of the dam, I spotted my first Barn Swallows of the year, and also saw what could have been a Beaver swimming around, trying to avoid a fisherman who was in a kayak near the outlet structure of the lake.

White-tailed Deer on the run in the South Run Stream Valley of Fairfax County.

I'd reached the car and thrown my pack into it, turned the key, and realized it was only 9:30 in the morning. I decided I had another couple miles in me, so I walked downstream from the parking area. This turned out to be a great thing, because up til that point, the Wood Duck was really the only out of the ordinary bird I'd seen. But on the ensuing 2 miles, I found a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, and photographed it. Then, I saw a flock of Rusty Blackbirds, which are now a new addition to my life list! After that I also saw a Louisiana Waterthrush, which is my first of the season. It was quite fast, and in the underbrush, so my photos aren't the best, but this is now the 3rd time I've seen this species, after having added it to my life list just last June at Crabtree Falls. Along the stretch I also had a pair of White-tailed Deer run directly at me, which is highly unnusual. They cut to my right about 50 feet away from me and then bounded across the stream. Something spooked them, and a pair of people were not far from me, so they must have been splitting between us on their run. I could still see them a couple hundred yards off, grazing in the woods, but didn't feel the need to try to sneak back up on them given that they'd already provided me with a good show. I didn't find any of the colorful spring warblers in the woods, but it turned out to be a great hike, and weather right around 70s while I was out, so a perfect end to a good week in the outdoors. Next week, I have Friday off of work for holiday, so I may try to go down to the Great Dismal Swamp NWR where everyone seems to be having good luck with finding colorful migrant birds!

My first Rusty Blackbird, a new life bird, taken in the South Run Stream Valley in Fairfax County near Lorton.