Yesterday morning we had a break from the rain and headed for one of our favorite spring birding spots. Lippold Park hugs the east bank of the Fox River between Batavia and Aurora. Thanks to recent rains, the river ran fast and was barely contained within its banks. The sky was blue and the wind had not yet picked up. The ground was still quite wet.
Wake Robins were just starting to bloom:
Many trees were in blossom, and bird songs were almost deafening. Such is spring in the north, in strong contrast to its rainless and prolonged arrival in Florida. It is the spring of my childhood in New Jersey, when warblers of several species often decorated the bare tree branches.
As usual, I birded mostly by ear, and Mary Lou made most of the sightings. Between the notes of the robins, cardinals, Yellow-rumped Warblers, Song Sparrows, and House Wrens, I was momentarily stumped by a familiar melody of quiet chortled whistles followed by a very loud “WICHEY! WICHEY! WICHEY!” I last heard this spring song over five years ago in the mountains of New Mexico, when I would have immediately recognized it as that of a Ruby-crowned Kinglet, but now I spent a quarter of an hour tracking down its source. It is amazing how some of the smallest birds, such as wrens and kinglets can make such loud noises.
I picked up the “UNIQUE NEW YORK, UNIQUE NEW YORK… (etc)” incessant warble of a Rose-breasted Grosbeak, visible on a distant perch:
A Yellow-rumped Warbler bathed in a rivulet, his wings but a blur:
Somberly dressed but, oh so beautiful, a Cedar Waxwing, one of our favorite birds, was an easy subject:
This Northern Cardinal boldly made his presence known…:
… while an elusive Tennessee Warbler offered only fleeting views as it foraged in a treetop:
Highlight of the morning was this very cooperative Bay-breasted Warbler, onr of two we sighted:
CHECKLIST REPORT (eBird) May 2, 2009 7:45 AM (2.5 hrs)
No. Species (37)
30 Canada Goose (Giant)
12 Mallard
2 Great Blue Heron
2 Turkey Vulture
1 Osprey
1 Red-tailed Hawk
10 Rock Pigeon
6 Mourning Dove
1 Red-bellied Woodpecker
2 Downy Woodpecker
2 Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted)
9 Blue Jay
1 American Crow
1 Tree Swallow
5 Barn Swallow
2 Black-capped Chickadee
2 Red-breasted Nuthatch
1 White-breasted Nuthatch
4 House Wren
1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet
25 American Robin (American)
6 Gray Catbird
5 European Starling
2 Cedar Waxwing
2 Tennessee Warbler
50 Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)
20 Palm Warbler
2 Bay-breasted Warbler
6 Song Sparrow
2 White-throated Sparrow
3 Northern Cardinal
2 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
7 Red-winged Blackbird
10 Common Grackle
12 Brown-headed Cowbird
1 Baltimore Oriole
5 American Goldfinch
Here is a slide show of my photos taken at Lippold Park in springtime over the past two years. If you have trouble viewing it, try THIS LINK