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| Eastern Musk Turtle |
I had three days off from work this week. I took a vacation day and had my regular two days off consecutively to give myself three consecutive. The first day I hung out with my friend Charles in Rhode Island. He had moved to Brazil two years ago and this was his first time back in the states. The other two days I birded Plum Island. I stayed at the campground at Salisbury Beach on Wednesday night.
Charles and I (and Laurie) had objectives on Tuesday. We met at Miantonomi and birded early. Next we were going to stop at a reliable spot for Musk Turtle From there we were going to look for White Ibis which would be a Rhode Island state bird for me. We would look for more birds in southern RI before heading north to hopefully find him a Black Crappie. Both Eastern Musk Turtle and Black Crappie would be lifers for Charles.
We met at around 7 am but birding was slow at Mia so we were out of there by 9:30. We quickly found a couple of Eastern Musk Turtles and Charles couldn't have been happier. I didn't get the White Ibis. The tide was really high and it was easy to scan the area and it was devoid of a large white heron shaped bird with a pink curved beak
We went to a place that has breeding Hooded Warblers. Charles and I found three along with many other nice nesting birds such as Baltimore Oriole, Louisiana Waterthrush, and Eastern Wood Peewee. Charles was again thrilled. The highlight other than the Hooded Warblers was a loud Wood Thrush singing right out in the open.
We then headed north to try to catch a Black Crappie. I failed in this quest. I landed two sunfish and broke off a big Chain Pickerel. We also saw Golden Shiners spawning. We dropped Charles off at a motel in Mansfield so he could take the train and a bus connection back to Newport the following morning.
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| Wood Thrush |
Wednesday and Thursday Laurie and I went to Plum Island. Birding was okay. We saw good birds but had to work for them. They weren't dripping from trees. I got less than ten species of warblers both days. We did see five Blackburnian Warblers and I saw a Bay-Breasted. However we dipped on many of the rarer warblers like Canada, Wilson's and Cape May.
Despite being slow, a rarity shows up at Parker River each day. Last week while we were there a Wilson's Pharalope was in Bill Forward Pool. On Wednesday a Hooded Warbler showed up that most everyone was trying to see it. For me, birding in RI, Hooded isn't super rare. Thursday, a Tricolored Heron was in the same pool as last week's Pharalope. We also saw a Yellow Crowned Night heron, Orioles, an Orchard Oriole, and Purple Martins. We didn't go to the ocean or saltmarsh but we ended up getting fifty one species.
By far, the highlight was a Black Billed Cuckoo that hung around for ten minutes on Thursday. I had never seen one out in the open for so long. It was special.
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| Veery cute bird |
Besides the birds, I tried shad fishing in the Merrimack but didn't catch any. Wednesday night after supper Laurie walked to the mouth of the river and watched nine Harbor Seals haul out on rocks. It was a relaxing way to enjoy the evening.
Thursday was cool (after two scorchers) but we tried for Blanding's Turtle for a third time at Oxbow NWR on the way home. We struck out. The best we could do was finding two Garter Snakes and a Veery.
All in all, my three days off were not truly amazing, but we made some good memories and it beat the hell out of work. It was good medicine for my gypsy soul.
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| American Toad |
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| Wild Geranium |