[obol] Re: Seawatch 26 Oct 2014 S. Jetty Umpqua River

  • From: d_villa <d_villa@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: matthewghunter@xxxxxxxxx <matthewghunter@xxxxxxxxx>, OBOL <obol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2014 03:33:59 GMT

Matt, what a wonderful way you have of breathing life into a field report! It 
has been fun, hasn't it? Thank you 

Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE Smartphone


------ Original message------
From: Matthew G Hunter
Date: Mon, Oct 27, 2014 8:02 PM
To: obol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx;
Subject:[obol] Seawatch 26 Oct 2014 S. Jetty Umpqua River

Hi Folks,
 I decided last minute (Saturday night) to go over to the S. Jetty of the 
Umpqua River and join in the fun. I arrived there about 0900 and did three 1-hr 
watches plus a final 30-min watch. Following are some photos and numbers. I 
tell you, it was so fun watching all the birds streaming by those 3.5 hours; 
I'm not kidding when I say it really seemed like 3.5 minutes. Anyway, I was 
incredibly lucky weather wise, as there were huge squalls/clouds to the north 
and south several miles.

My favorite observations of the morning were:
*5 species of "tubenoses"
*Several beautiful Sabine's Gulls including two flying south right over the 
beach.
*Two somewhat late Caspian Terns
*Red Phalaropes that landed fairly close by
*Peregrine Falcon "following" a Surf Scoter flock about 3/4 mile out.
*The way the gulls hour after hour came south near the end of the jetty, then 
used the uplift from the south jetty to cruise west toward the beach, then 
proceeded south. I had a nearly constant stream of gulls of many species coming 
right by me.
*Just the massive number of birds constantly going by, from within feet of me 
to as far as I could see west at sea.

Some photos of closer birds:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/matthewghunter/sets/72157648596060338/

Following is the list of all species observed during the total 3.5 hours of 
observation, but the numbers are the maximum from any ONE HOUR. And, these are 
only birds within about a mile of shore, there were many thousands farther out 
that I could not identify to species, and even these are surely underestimates.

Cackling Goose                        160
Northern Pintail                        60
Green-winged Teal                   20
Greater/Lesser Scaup               50
Surf Scoter                               1,300
White-winged Scoter               60
Long-tailed Duck                     1
Red-breasted Merganser          1
Red-throated Loon                  5
Pacific Loon                             1,500 (prob incl more RTLOs)
Common Loon                         50
Western Grebe                         3
Northern Fulmar                       100
Pink-footed Shearwater           2
Buller's Shearwater                  6
Sooty Shearwater                     2
Storm-Petrel sp.                       1
Brandt's Cormorant                  20
Double-crested Cormorant       180
Pelagic Cormorant                    5
Brown Pelican                          150
Black Turnstone                       2
Surfbird                                    1
Sanderling                                4
Dunlin                                      900
Least Sandpiper                       6
Red Phalarope                          60
Pomarine Jaeger                       2
Common Murre                        60
Cassin's Auklet                         300
Black-legged Kittiwake           14
Sabine's Gull                            2
Bonaparte's Gull                       75
Heermann's Gull                       450
Mew Gull                                 110
Western Gull                            350
California Gull                         800
Herring Gull                             60
Thayer's Gull                            1
Glaucous-winged Gull             11
Western x Glaucous-winged Gull (hybrid)     3
Caspian Tern                            2
Peregrine Falcon                       1

Amazed at the power and breadth of migration...,

Matt Hunter
Melrose, OR

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