[obol] Possible Jack Snipe in Curry County

  • From: Charles Gates <cgates326@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: obol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 17 Oct 2015 08:43:55 -0700

Just to keep Jack Snipe on everyone's radar, Jeff Nordstrom and I had a similar experience at Crissey Field State Park south of Brookings on Tuesday, Oct 12. I was walking the trail near the visitors center when a small bird flushed and flew about thirty feet away. I had the impression of an odd passerine in the brief second I observed it. As I approached, it flushed and I clearly saw that it was a snipe, however, it seemed miniature. I flew off over the trees and we were left just looking at each other. Because neither of us have experience with this bird and because it appeared to fly off, we neglected to record the bird or report it.


On 10/16/2015 10:44 PM, Owen Schmidt wrote:

……. Jack Kiley, John Elizalde and I walked a clockwise loop around the ponds at
South Jetty Columbia River (Clatsop County) today just before high tide (2-3:00
pm). When we got to the back pond (the one where Long-toed Stint and Common
Redshank had been seen years ago) a snipe rose out of the vegetation just to
the west of the pond, flew directly overhead, and quickly disappeared over the
conifers to the east. Elizalde called out “snipe” to which I added “miniature
snipe.”

The bird presented itself as a snipe in every respect — pointed wings, very
rapid wingbeat, fast and somewhat rocking flight, but not a very long bill. We
compared notes immediately. We agreed the bird appeared basically all-dark
above with a pale abdomen but because the very brief sighting was from below
and behind against a completely overcast sky no detailed feather pattern was
seen. We barely had time to get our binoculars on it before it disappeared.
The bird did not vocalize. It was a snipe. A small snipe. A miniature snipe.

Weeks earlier I had been chasing meadowlarks very near this location when I
flushed a Wilson’s Snipe from long vegetation that presented no issues about
its size or proper ID. That bird did not vocalize, either.

Swinhoe’s Snipe, Pintail Snipe, Common Snipe and Wilson’t Snipe are all about
the same size and show long bills. Jack Snipe is smaller with a smaller bill.
The habitat is right. The date is right. Because the bird disappeared to the
east just over treetops and we don’t know of suitable habitat in that direction
— and it would be very difficult if not impossible to walk through those
conifers — we did not chase the bird. I was carrying a long lens on a tripod
over my shoulder but under the circumstances a photo was not possible.

We also saw and photographed the Rock Wren on the jetty just west of the
observation tower (thanks, David Bailey), and a Yellow-shafted Northern Flicker
in the burn. No other shorebirds in that immediate area. Bailey reported
Lapland Longspurs, which we did not find.

oschmidt@xxxxxxx
Friday, October 16, 2015




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--
It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for
sure that just ain't so.
Mark Twain

Chuck Gates
541-280-4957
Powell Butte,
Central Oregon
Oregon Birding Site Guide
www.birdingoregon.info



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