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WORDS ON BIRDS
Nesting Season Includes Common and Rare Nesters
June 28, 2008
Steve Grinley
The excitement of three Mississippi kites in Newmarket,
New Hampshire has reached the media and birders from all over New
England, and beyond, are traveling to see these birds. There is an
adult and a sub-adult female, along with a male that have been
pleasing spectators in the vicinity of the High School on Route 152.
The birds have been seen copulating on numerous occasions, and also
bringing sticks to a nest in a maple tree in the residential area. The
female has been sitting on the nest for at least the past week,
raising hopes that these birds may produce a successful brood.
Mississippi kites are falcon-like birds that reside in
the south, Florida and Texas, and are rarely seen in New England. They
have been spotted in migration by hawk watchers in Truro, on the Cape,
and more rarely from inland locations. So not only is seeing one
unusual, seeing three together is a first. Even more amazing is their
attempt to nest, which seems to be happening, so far out of their
"normal" range. If successful, this nest will be one for the
textbooks!
Speaking of nesting birds, Margo and I did some more
work on our Breeding Bird Atlas project last weekend. This is a five
year study by Mass Audubon which is documenting the distribution of
breeding birds throughout the state. Scores of volunteers are
collecting evidence of breeding for each bird species in their
assigned areas, or "blocks". Our 2 blocks range from approximately the
Merrimack River south to just beyond the Parker River and roughly
east/west between routes 1 and 95.
We spent most of one day at Maudslay State Park where
we found baby Baltimore orioles, downy woodpeckers, tufted titmice,
scarlet tanagers, wood pewees and cardinals all being fed by their
parents. We also saw red-eyed vireos, bobolinks, and bluebirds
carrying food to their young. We followed a pileated woodpecker for a
short while, but never saw it near a nest. We did, however, find a
suitable cavity in a dead tree in a swampy area that a pileated may be
using, but couldn't confirm that on this visit. We also heard indigo
buntings and a wood thrush singing on territory, but have yet to
confirm nesting on those species.
At the Spring Street pumping station, a chipping
sparrow was sitting on a nest. It was successful in defending its nest
from some curious grackles. Nearby, a house finch was carrying nesting
material, presumably to start a second nesting.
Along Turkey Hill Road, we watched a black and white
warbler carry food to a nest. We saw an ovenbird feed its offspring
and watched a baby chickadee being fed by one of its parents.
In Newbury, there was a recently fledged bluebird, with
heavily spotted breast, following its parent near the Transfer
Station, hoping to be fed. Willets were on territory along the Parker
River along with nesting salt marsh sharp-tailed sparrows and marsh
wrens. Cliff swallows are nesting, again, under bridges over the
river. In a secluded pond, we watched three young great blue herons
being fed by their parent while a pair of kingfishers chased each
other around the pond. Chickadees were feeding their fledglings near
the pond, as well. Another fledgling Baltimore oriole was calling
along Middle Road and we wondered how it, and other fledglings survive
from predators with all the noise that they make! It does make them
easier to find for our survey!
I will be away on a birding trip for the next weeks,
but I will leave you with some of my favorite "Words" from the past,
including a couple written by my daughter, Melissa, for past Father's
Days, which people have requested to read again. Steve Grinley
Bird Watcher's Supply & Gift and Nature Shop at Joppa Flats
Newburyport, MA
BirdWSG@Verizon.net
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