Oct. 4, 2002 Memphis, Shelby Co. Pickwick Dam, McNairy-Hardin Co. Pace Point area, Henry Co. TN I listened to Lili as she knocked on my windows in the late hours on Thursday and through the early morning on Friday. She was like a siren calling, asking for my attention and making my mind reel as to where she might bestow her gifts. I knew she was crossing from LA and Ark into MS around the Lake Chicot area and would curve north east and slide past Memphis to the East. I had to make a few appearances for work Friday, so I decided to start on the Mississippi River early and play it by ear from there. The wind was blowing more than briskly at the parking lot on Mud Island and the gray clouds covered the sky from horizon to horizon. The first birds I see are the hundreds of Tree Swallows again skimming just over the surface of the water and slightly fewer Chimney Swifts darting just below the gray clouds. I found 2 Caspian Terns and a flock of 24 American White Pelicans across the river. The Caspian Terns were hugging the sandbar but the pelicans were going with the flow, circling high and drifting to the North. A few DC Cormorants braved the winds and occasionally traded places to shelter. I checked a job and delivered checks and returned to scan the skies but the Caspian still hung to the sand and the pelicans were somewhere near the Hatchie by then. There had been a change, as the swallows were not to be seen and the swifts had dropped down and were now feeding just above the water. I decided Pickwick Dam would be my next stop. At Pickwick the sun was shinning but the wind still fled from the South and few birds were flying. A small group of sterna type terns fed far to the south and a single immature Laughing Gull in very brown immature plumage was the only evidence of Lili's recent passage. After 45 minutes of scanning I left to head to the other side of the state and Pace Point. Arriving at Big Sandy about 5 PM, I hurried toward the Point, stopping at Lick Creek and finding absolutely nothing my heart sank, had Lile forsaken me in my hour of need? Next I checked Granny's Landing and again, NOTHING, except for a few DC Cormorants leaning into to the wind as they perched on the towers. It was getting late and I decided to go to Rocky Point on the Big Sandy side of the point to catch the birds coming to roost. When I turned in I knew I had made the right decision. There were birds everywhere, mostly Ring-billed Gulls facing into the south wind and hovering just above the water. Some birds were already settling down and forming the roost site in the rough water while most kited in the wind and looked for wind driven food on the choppy surface. I soon came across a single Franklin's Gull, certainly not a gift from Lili but a welcomed year bird. Large dancing flocks of terns flitted and dove into the water and even a few Herring Gulls lumbered around bullying any successful forager. Then it happened, over a windrow of flotsam came a dark bird with a steady determined flight followed by another about 30 yards behind. The birds were dark (sooty dark), white underneath with nice black forked tails that were seen when the birds wheeled to rework an area for the second time. Here were the birds that would justify the long drive and make Lili a name to remember. The first bird actually settled on the bounding material strung out across the water and bobbed in and out of view for a few moments. I looked for the second bird but could not find it but the first bird now streaked across my field of view, heading swiftly with wind back from where it came. It was soon joined in my field of view by the second bird and after about 5 minutes both disappeared to the north and into the dark tree line of the far shore. With more scanning I picked up what was possibly the third bird to the west of where the other two had disappeared and it too was heading northeast. I continued to scan and picked up still another dark bird but it was larger and too powerful in flight. It was diving and chasing one of the many gulls and terns. It had to be a jaeger but it was soon lost from sight. I called a few birders to spread the word and Hap Chambers informed me that Dave Roamer had found 2 Sooty Terns at the dams just north in Kentucky and they had enjoyed them through the afternoon. I was told the next day that he too had had a possible third bird. Another Sooty was reported Friday on the Mississippi River near Greenwood, MS. How many did we miss? Lile was good to me after all............now the long wait. Good Birding!!! Jeff R. Wilson OL' COOT / TLBA Bartlett Tenn. =================NOTES TO SUBSCRIBER===================== The TN-Bird Net requires you to sign your messages with first and last name, city (town) and state abbreviation. ----------------------------------------------------- To post to this mailing list, simply send email to: tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ----------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, send email to: tn-bird-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'unsubscribe' in the Subject field. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Topographical Maps located at http://topozone.com/find.asp * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Visit the Tennessee Ornithological Society web site at http://www.tnbirds.org * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * TN-Bird Net Owner: Wallace Coffey, Bristol, TN jwcoffey@xxxxxxxxxx (423) 764-3958 =========================================================