It was raining steadily as I arrived at the Theler Center
parking lot, too late to start out with the five ‘regular’ birders (something about windshield wiper troubles). This bird walk is led by Faye McAdams Hands
and John Riegsecker every second and fourth Thursday & sponsored by Tahoma
Audubon. I caught up with them on the
estuary boardwalk, and we continued the ‘usual’ route out the River Estuary
trail, and back past the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group’s Salmon Center,
finishing our walk a little after 11 a.m.
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Theler Wetland Trails Map |
There was a 12.68-foot high tide at 9:30 a.m., so the estuary
marsh and restoration area were inundated.
Afterward, the tide ebbed toward a 6.11-foot “low” water at 5:11 p.m.,
but we had high water the entire morning.
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High Water in the Estuary Reclamation Area |
Between the rain and the flooded marsh, the birds weren’t
as conspicuous as they might have been.
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There are Seven Zonotrichia sparrows in the photo - can you find them? |
Probably the highlight of the day was the large number of
Purple Finches feeding with flocks of American Robins on the crab apple and
hawthorn berries. The soggy group ended
the day having seen 32 species of soggy birds.
|
Soaking wet Golden-crowned Sparrow |
Surprisingly, we did not see a Crow this morning!
On my way back to Olympia, I usually stop at Allyn for a
hot lunch, and take it down to the Allyn Waterfront Park, which is a little gem
on the shore of the North Bay of Case Inlet operated by the Port of Allyn. There is usually an assortment of gulls here
to sort through the myriad of plumages for the large “pink-footed” gulls.
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Allyn dock |
Besides the usual Glaucous-winged Gulls,
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Adult Glaucous-winged Gull |
and the hybrid
Glaucous-winged X Western gulls,
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Darker mantle, not-quite black wing-tips, dark eye, 'dirty' head |
there was this putative Glaucous-winged X Herring Gull,
which showed a lot of pale in the eye
and dark primary feathers;
|
Lots of yellow in this bird's eye |
|
Darker wing-tips, kind of like a Glaucous-wing X Western gull hybrid |
the Glaucous-wings pretty much have dark eyes and pale
gray primaries.
Of course, there were crows at the beach at Allyn. Dave Slager at the University of Washington
is in the process of publishing a scientific article that suggests that our
crows in Puget Sound are likely hybrids between American and Northwestern Crows. With any luck, this is a first step toward re-“lumping”
the two species . . . as they were determined to be a single species since 1910
until the 1931 A.O.U. checklist split the taxa again.
|
Northwestern/American Crow (or, is it a hybrid?) |
Rock Pigeons are resident here, usually around two dozen or
so birds
|
Rock Pigeons are feral non-native species here, but kind of pretty |
And, just to spite the DNR and the Port, the Scamper is
still afloat
|
A Great Blue Heron uses the Scamper for a perch |
I left as it began to rain again. I’d recommend this as a birding stop for
anyone who’s travelling on Highway 3.
Theler eBird Checklist Here
Allyn Waterfront eBird Checklist Here
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