Sunday, May 31, 2020

October 6-7 Newport, Oregon - Pelagic Birding


Sunday morning, the 6th of October, I woke with the alarm and made it down to the Newport, Oregon Bayfront.  A beautiful clear morning boded well for the Oregon Pelagic Tours seabird trip, as it was cool at 45º F, but nice and calm.

The birders assembled next to Mo’s Chowder House Annex, which dates from 1968.  The building is older than that, but Mo’s has been here since I was a kid, and Dad would stop here for dinner or supper when we visited the Coast.  The main Mo’s Chowder House is across the street.

We were given our orientation by Pelagic Birder exceptionale Tim Shelmerdine.  Tim was a pelagic birding guide with “The Bird Guide”, which was operated by Greg Gillson until he moved to California in 2013.  This was my first time out with Tim, and I was impressed with the guides today - besides Tim, we were joined by Russ Namitz, Jim Danzenbaker, Shawneen Finnegan and Dave Irons.
Tim greeting the blurry birders . . .
We left the harbor shortly after dawn, aboard the F/V Misty, captained by Skipper Rob Waddell, and steamed west and a little north of Yaquina Bay.  We went past the M/V Yaquina, a suction hopper dredge operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.  She’s 60 feet in length with an 18-foot beam, which makes her pretty efficient at dredging the waterways of the smaller ports on the Northwest coast.  A birder friend of mine, Jay Stene, worked on this ship for a number of years.
M/V Yaquina
We birded our way west, looking for fishing vessels.  En route today, we saw a number of marine mammals.

Besides the California and Steller’s Sea Lions inshore, we got offshore, and: “Thar Be Whales!”  We saw a number of Humpbacks, as well as a Fin and a Blue Whale.
"The largest animal known to have ever existed"
A few Northern Fur Seals watched us pass by.  Having seen these on the beach last month, it was nice to see them again here at home.

Around 10 a.m., we approached the F/V Pacific Ram, an 84-foot catcher-trawler built at Rockport, Texas in 1978, now operated by Trident Seafoods.  She’s been recently refitted, and is a pretty good looking boat.

We shadowed the trawler until she began hauling the nets.  This attracts a swarm of gulls and shearwaters, which we sort through, looking for the more uncommon species.

While we were watching the birds around the fishing operation, a Red-breasted Nuthatch, of all things, landed on Bob Archer’s shoulder!
There, on the left shoulder - what is that??!?
Bob looks nothing like the bird’s preferred habitat of Sitka Spruce branches, and was likely just taking a welcome rest from its fall migratory flight.  Getting tired when you are 30 miles to sea can be lethal for migrating songbirds.

Leaving the Pacific Ram a little before noon, we motored south to catch up with other trawlers, the 87-foot F/V Leslie Lee, and the F/V Muir Milach.
Fishing Vessel Muir Milach
F/V Leslie Lee
When we’d get near a concentration of sea birds, such as those behind a trawler, or seeing some of the tube-noses, Tim and company would lay out a ‘chum’ of popcorn, flavored with fish oils.

The tube-noses (Procellariids) are the albatrosses, shearwaters, fulmars, and petrels.  They’re called tube-noses because their nostrils are ‘tubed’ above their bill, and their sense of smell is amazing.
Northern Fulmars' nostrils are quite evident - and effective
They can detect a bit of fish oil, the spawn of shrimps or squid, or other foods from miles downwind, and hopefully the ‘chum’ will pull them in close enough that we birders can get a decent view.
Russ keeps a sharp eye for a "good bird" . . .
Tim uses the popcorn and fish oil chum, which is a bit different from the suet and fish oil used on Pelagic trips by Westport Seabirds, but seems to be equally effective.

We presume that the roughage of the popcorn is compatible with the digestive system of a Sooty Shearwater or Northern Fulmar . . . you know that the gulls can handle it.

Finally, we headed east toward Newport around 3 p.m., and pulled into the slip around 5 p.m., on a fine 60º F afternoon.
The Yaquina Bay Bridge was built in 1934-36.  It still works.
It had been a long day, but a number of people were interested in ‘chasing’ the Orchard Oriole that I’d found yesterday, as well as a Prairie Warbler that was found in the same area yesterday afternoon.  After the trip, I went down to the Local Oceans restaurant on the waterfront with Dave and Shawneen, and Dan Heyerly and his wife Anne.  Good food but a little on the expensive side; I had the calamari salad with Roasted fennel, poblano peppers, Niçoise olives, orange, shiitake mushrooms, queso fresco, and a bowl of Dungeness crab soup that was well-balanced with garlic.  I'd eat here again!

Monday morning, I went back to the neighborhood, and just missed seeing the Prairie Warbler by minutes, but it wasn’t found again before I called it a day after two hours’ searching.
Western Gull
The trip back to Olympia was uneventful, and I had time to enjoy the reminisces of a great day on the Ocean with some great birders.


Yaquina Bay a.m. eBird Checklist is Here
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 1 eBird Checklist is Here
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 2 eBird Checklist is Here
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 3 eBird Checklist is Here
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 4 eBird Checklist is Here 
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 5 eBird Checklist is Here 
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 6 eBird Checklist is Here 
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 7 eBird Checklist is Here
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 8 eBird Checklist is Here
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 9 eBird Checklist is Here 
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 10 eBird Checklist is Here 
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 11 eBird Checklist is Here 
Oregon Pelagic Tours – Leg 12 eBird Checklist is Here
Yaquina Bay p.m. eBird Checklist is Here
Newport Neighborhood eBird Checklist is Here  
A Common Loon welcomed us back into the Bay



Tuesday, May 26, 2020

October 4-5, 2019 - Oregon Bound

This current trip is multi-faceted.  I leave this morning to attend the funeral of one of my Mom’s sisters, my dear Aunt Margaret Hanson.  This amazing woman always impressed me with the way that she handled adversity, and raised her family, with a strong spirit.
Margaret Hanson 1927-2019
The services were held at Salem's Belcrest Cemetery.  My Grandfather John Unruh worked at this cemetery before he was killed crossing Commercial Street on a rainy night in February 1961, and many of the family are buried here.

Mom & Margaret’s two surviving siblings, Fern and Waldo, attended, as well as about 75 of my cousins and their families.  After the service, we adjourned to Salem Heights Church for a reception, and it was good to visit with family that I don’t see nearly often enough.
I really don't expect this many people at my funeral . . .
I continued from the funeral toward Newport, as I am going to go on the Seabird Trip with Oregon Pelagic Tours on Sunday morning.  En route, I stopped in Albany, where I grew up.  I hadn’t been to the place I grew up for a number of years.
You can't go home again . . .
The old early 1950s house has been torn down, and an empty lot is all that’s left of where I spent my first 20 years.  I used to walk out the back door into the neighboring pastures, enjoying Killdeers, Ring-necked Pheasants, and the fragrance of Popcorn Flowers in the spring . . .
Fragrant Popcorn Flower Plagiobothrys figuratus
I continued west on Highway 20, turning off to go to the top of Mary’s Peak, the tallest mountain in the Oregon Coast Range.

From here, you can see the vast expanse of the Willamette Valley, and on a clear day, you can see the Pacific Ocean!  I took a few of the trails, hoping to do some birding, but it was a bit blustery.

The Forest Service campground area is a good place to look for Mountain Quail, but with the wind, I didn’t even hear one today.

I did find a Townsend’s Solitaire in the forest, trying to stay out of the breeze.

I got to the Coast in the late afternoon, and checked into the Day’s Inn in ‘uptown’ Newport.  On Saturday morning, I was awake at 5:30 this morning, so got up and drank motel room coffee and put out a short blog page.  I was only two months behind at that point . . .
Not a bad place for the price . . .
I waited until 7 a.m. for the motel’s ‘continental breakfast’ to open, having a bagel and a banana to start the day.  Then I walked down to the Newport Bayfront, and while coming down Fall Street, I heard the chatter of an oriole.
Orchard Oriole Icterus spurius
I was surprised to find an Orchard Oriole in the Pyracantha berries, along with a mixed species flock of chickadees, finches, and such.  This Oriole species is not a common bird for the Oregon Coast, and it was fun to find it there.

I posted the sighting to eBird, and emailed the other birders who were going to be on the birding trip tomorrow, then continued down to the waterfront, where the California Sea Lions lazed the afternoon away on the docks.  I made certain I knew where the boat was to leave for tomorrow’s Pelagic birding trip, then walked across the bridge to South Beach.
California Sea Lions pretty much own the docks . . .
I headed across the bridge to South Beach, and walked the trail east of the Hatfield Marine Science Center.

There were several people harvesting clams on a relatively low tide, but I didn't go out to see what species they were digging.

I scoped the gull flocks, hoping for a 'rarity', but only found the expected species.

First-year California Gull

One of the Western Gulls had a colored leg band, but it was too far out for me to see if the band had any specific information on it or not.  I've seen a few color bands that indicated the gulls were from the Farallon Island colonies off California, but that was about as much info as you could get.
The bird has a color band on its left foot
I’d worked at the US Fish and Wildlife Service office here in back in 1988, and was kind of surprised at all the development at the Science and Management center.  It’s kind of ironic that the facilities were built on dredge spoil and former intertidal wetland: Nowadays, the agencies who are headquartered here would never allow a business or agency to build in this type of habitat!

There is a construction project ongoing at the Marine Studies Building at Oregon State University's Hatfield Marine Science Center.  This new facility will “support critical research, education, administrative and technical support, and outreach and engagement.”

Go Beavs!

I made my way back to the motel and readied myself for tomorrow’s Pelagic!

Mary’s Peak eBird Checklist is Here
Newport - Orchard Oriole eBird Checklist is Here
Hatfield MSC Trail eBird Checklist is Here
Orchard Oriole - So Cool!!