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WORDS ON BIRDS
First Big Wave of Migrants This Week
May 10, 2008
Steve Grinley
Tuesday was one of those magical mornings on Plum
Island. Not that every day isn't special there -or so I thought when I
lived on the island. But there are those remarkable days in May when
the migration hits just right and nearly every tree and bush has birds
moving through them. Such was the case on Tuesday. After the cold
April that we had, and an especially miserable last weekend, many of
the spring migrants were just not here yet. They had to be "backed up'
somewhere south of here. Just a change in the weather pattern, some
southerly winds, and they would come.
And come they did. I arrived on the Parker River Refuge
just after 5:30. Yes, a.m.! But there were ten other cars already on
the refuge, also anticipating the birds. Cars were stopped along the
road just after the entrance as birds were moving slowly through the
low shrubs by the side of the road, calling and singing as they went.
Willets had arrived in numbers overnight and their loud calls could be
heard all over the marsh. Catbirds, which were totally absent the day
before, had also arrived and were singing everywhere.
Warblers streamed through the low shrubs, the majority
of which were yellow-rumped warblers. But there were also large
numbers of black & white warblers - more than I remember in a long
time. They were crawling along branches, like nuthatches do,
everywhere I looked. Blue-headed vireos were numerous. So, too, were
ruby-crowned kinglets.
On "normal" days, I usually head for one of the parking
areas, either at the Hellcat Trail or the Pines Trail and walk around
from there. But on this day, the birds were moving north along the
vegetation and if you didn't stop, you would miss the bulk of the
birds as they moved north. Unfortunately, until you get well beyond
the Salt Pannes where vegetation grows on the marsh side, you are
forced to look east into the rising sun. The boardwalks are closed at
Lots 2 and 3 which would, otherwise, let you look back at the birds.
So it was a struggle to turn silhouettes into discernible images by
getting a good enough angle on the birds to see color.
Four large birds were a particular struggle to see
while looking into the sunlight. I caught one at just the right angle
to see a deep red spot on its chest at which point it sang its
familiar warble of a song - rose-breasted grosbeaks. Another large
bird flew and landed briefly, just long enough for me to catch some
orange-yellow color on the rump and tail. It was a female Baltimore
oriole.
But it was the warblers that stole the show. A few palm
warblers with yellow underparts, rusty cap and a wagging tail were at
several stops along the road. A few other tail-waggers passed by.
These were prairie warblers, and one or two sang their diagnostic song
of distinct notes, ascending the musical scale. Stunning
black-throated blue warblers were showoffs, their plumage makes them
look dressed for the prom. Parula, chestnut-sided and black-throated
green warblers all made appearances in their colorful garb.
The common yellowthroat, whose black mask gives it the
"lone ranger" nickname, will now be heard throughout the island once
more, singing its "witchity, witchity, witchity" song from the low
scrubby, wet areas. I saw several along the road's edge. The loud
"teacher, teacher, teacher" of the ovenbird echoed at a couple of
stops. Even the usually secretive northern waterthrush sat up and sang
at one place along the road.
I finally made it to Hellcat and to the Pines Trail a
few hours later, but it was decidedly quieter by then. Still, there
were pockets of warblers and vireos along each of the trails. There
were many more birds than there had been just a few days ago, and a
glorious May morning it was.
But time was against me that morning. I had to leave
for work. When you work for yourself, you can't call in sick!
(Otherwise, I would have.) As I drove off the island, I could only
imagine the birds that I left behind. But there was some solace in
knowing that this was just the first big wave of migrants to come this
May, and I am looking forward to the ones that follow.
Steve Grinley
Bird Watcher's Supply & Gift and Nature Shop at Joppa Flats
Newburyport, MA
BirdWSG@Verizon.net
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