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Snowy Owl |
I spent the day with Erik Bruhnke, first driving around Superior, where we saw our first bird of the day, a Snowy Owl, in quasi-darkness in the parking lot of the Superior High School. We headed to Wisconsin Point for a short while, where we had about 70 Common Redpolls and at least FIVE Hoary Redpolls! Then we headed out to the Sax-Zim Bog.
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Hoary Redpoll |
My most wanted bird of the day was Evening Grosbeak, a bird that has been dangerously declining for the past decade, and is the American Birding Association’s Bird of the Year. I’m thrilled that we saw 8 of them at the Blue Spruce Road feeder this morning, making this the first bird of conservation concern that I’ve seen on my Conservation Big Year. Evening Grosbeaks have long been one of my favorite birds, and so their dramatic drop in numbers is particularly distressing for me.
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Evening Grosbeak |
Lots of cool birds, ending the day with a Great Gray Owl, I brought my year total to 29. I posted all my sightings on eBird, but in a number of different checklists.
Bird of the day: Hard to choose among Hoary Redpolls (so many!), Snowy Owl (Really cooperative, though the light was crappy), Great Gray Owl (how superb!)… but I’m going with Evening Grosbeak, the only one of the bunch that is suffering egregious declines and needs continent-wide research to elucidate the reasons for its decline.
New species today:
- Common Goldeneye
- Bald Eagle
- Rough-legged Hawk
- Snowy Owl
- Great Gray Owl
- Northern Hawk Owl
- Pileated Woodpecker
- Hairy Woodpecker
- Northern Shrike
- Gray Jay
- Boreal Chickadee
- Snow Bunting
- White-winged Crossbill
- Pine Grosbeak
- American Goldfinch
- Evening Grosbeak
Total: 29 species
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Great Gray Owl |
Erik and I carpooled, going 222 miles, for a year’s total of 254 miles.