a flock of seven

July 23, 2004


 

Two common terns chase a herring gull. A woman in a black bathing suit does the dance of the greenheads on her way down to the water. Someone has written "Stop" and "Closed" in the sand along the boundary this morning. The tide is going out. A thick white haze obliterates the horizon.

A huge bundle of white balloons lands on top of the dune near the board walk. Just as I start thinking I should probably do something about it, a lull in the breeze causes the greenheads to swarm around me and I start doing the dance of the greenheads. It ain't pretty. Then I end up talking to visitors, who are once again more interested in greenheads than in piping plovers. The wind changes and picks up speed and by the time I look back at the dune the balloons are gone. I see the whole white bundle of them scudding down the beach toward parking lot 5. At least the wind keeps the greenheads down for the rest of the shift.

A brown thrasher slides down the dune onto the beach creating a miniature avalanche of sand. I've never seen anything like that before. Why not just fly down from the top of the dune? I think this is the first time I've seen a brown thrasher actually on the beach. I often see them in the dunes and sometimes accidentally scare them up from under the boardwalk, but I don't think I remember any hanging around the wrack line. Maybe this one has developed a taste for seaweed.

Not much is happening visitor-wise and if there are any trespassers in the mystery zone I wouldn't be able to see them because it's so hazy. They'd just blend in to the vast expanse of white.

Two ringbilled gulls hang out in my general vicinity for most of the shift. They don't do any interesting flycatching behavior despite the greenheads. Come to think of it, when the wind lets up enough for the greenheads to fly I'm paying more attention to their trying to bite me than to whatever the ringbilled gulls might be doing to them. I found a used copy of Seabirds: their biology and ecology by Bryan Nelson (the gannet guy) at Rodney's in Central Square last night, which has a great chart showing the different feeding styles of different seabirds. It doesn't mention the ringbilled gull's hawking for flies though. After I mentioned their flycatching and playing catch with reeds I half thought legions of ornithologist readers would tell me I'm nuts (well, I am nuts, but I meant about my observations of ringbilled gull behavior) so I checked the web and found that the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology has this to say about ringbilled gulls' feeding habits:

"Forages while walking on land, dips for food on surface of water, skims shallow water for small fish, hawks for flying insects. "

and this about playing catch:

Ring-billed Gulls "play" by dropping objects while in flight, then swooping down to catch them. This playful behavior may be practice for catching and retrieving prey.

I even found a photo of a ringbill playing catch. There was nothing specifically about their eating greenheads though. I definitely think about gulls far too much :-).

As the morning goes on, not only does the haze burn off but the weather turns positivley great. It's suddenly a beautiful summer day. Who knew?

I'm counting a big flock of sanderlings that has just arrived when I see pale white movement out of the corner of my left eye and quickly get the binoculars on it. Aha! A piping plover! I thought so! What's this? Another one? I scan and take in the whole picture. I am looking at a flock of 7 piping plovers. Some are adults and some are fledglings . And they're flocking. I usually only see them flock when it's almost time for them to leave. Come to think of it, July is almost over. Where has the summer gone? The flock forages for some time between me and the 5.6 (or 5.d) mile marker and then flies a little bit south and closer to the water but still in sight between lots 6 and 7.

I'm sitting here thinking "I can't believe I saw 7 piping plovers." when I hear peep-lo peep-lo coming from behnd me. Here's another one! That one sticks around for awhile foraging along the high tide line just to my right -- well within naked eye identification range. Eventually it too moves further south. A few minutes later another one arrives landing even closer to me. I'm regretting having left the camera in the car, but who needs a photo? I have just seen 9 piping plovers.

The plovers leave. Visitors come. Some are really interested in piping plovers and ask about the immature plumage. They didn't see the flock of 7 although they came from the direction the flock went. Mostly the visitors noticed the sanderlings. It's hard to miss some seventy-odd sanderlings streaming down the beach.

Before I know it, the morning is gone and the radio battery is so low that the gatehouse sounds like she's whispering. Where did the time go? And can I watch the Red Sox play the Yankees and read about seabird biology at the same time?

Today's Bird Sightings
Plum Island

purple martin 18
great egret 2
snowy egret 1
eastern kingbird 7
mourning dove 4
cedar waxwing 9
gray catbird 4
American robin 2
herring gull 2
common tern 11
sanderling 77
great black backed gull 10
tree swallow 7
double crested cormorant 11
ring billed gull 7
piping plover 9
least tern 2
brown thrasher 1
barn swallow 2
Bonaparte's gull 1
bobolink 1
great blue heron 1
northern mockingbird 1

Refuge biological staff: 0

Coast Guard assets: 0

Today's Reading
Seabirds: their biology and ecology by Bryan Nelson

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Curt Schilling


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan