Food & Drink

Birding adrenaline kicks in with a great sighting

Cape May warbler
Cape May warbler Jeff Lewis

Last weekend’s Christmas Bird Counts in Gaston County and southern Lake Norman offered great birding weather, cold starts with gradual warmups through midafternoon, but I had to work pretty hard for everything I got. The numbers of birds just seem to be down so far this season. The activity in the brushy fields and thickets is a bit off.

That’s not to say there weren’t any highlights. Saturday in Gastonia I was surrounded by at least four American woodcock displaying at close range from 6:30 to about 7 a.m. I even got to see some sitting on the ground in the beam of my flashlight. Later, an orange-crowned warbler and a palm warbler in a weedy field were nice finds. At Rankin Lake I found more red-headed woodpeckers than ever before; this is clearly a good year for that species.

I met some other birders for owling at 5:30 a.m. Sunday at the Davidson College campus. A barred owl immediately let loose with a “hoo-aw” call, apparently startled by the slamming of a car door. An hour of playing playback of Eastern screech owl calls finally induced one of those little owls to answer. Well after sunup a great horned-owl hooted twice to give us the owl trifecta at one spot.

But birding the rest of the morning was more challenging. I was happy to pick up two brown creepers and up to four pine warblers in a small flock, but numbers were down. The same conditions continued at the Davidson Greenway, where many species we usually find were just absent.

It’s on such days that a real surprise can sometimes pop up out of the brush or drop down out of the trees. That was one of those days. A return trip to the college produced one of the most unexpected species ever recorded on that count.

A male Cape May warbler landed a few feet from us and offered great extended views. That bird is hundreds of miles north of where it should be this time of year. It also provided a much-needed shot of birding adrenaline that sustained us through the rest of the day.

When final results are in from each count in a few weeks I will fill you in.

Taylor Piephoff is a naturalist with an interest in the birds and wildlife of the southern Piedmont: PiephoffT@aol.com. Check out his blog at piedmontbirding.blogspot.com

This story was originally published December 25, 2015 at 5:15 PM with the headline "Birding adrenaline kicks in with a great sighting."

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