Category: Species (Page 12 of 14)

Add Pigeon Guillemot: LA County Life List

Pigeon Guillemot Point Dume

Pigeon Guillemots glide in grayscale at Pt. Dume (Malibu)

Pigeon Guillemots at Point Dume

On Father’s Day, I often get to go out birding by myself. It is a gift to have alone time in nature. I’d honestly prefer it if my boys or my entire family came along with me. But they’re hard to rouse at 6:30am on Sunday mornings. They’re especially hard to rouse if the reason they’d be getting up is to search the June gloomy horizon for something called a Pigeon Guillemot.

Which is not to say that Pigeon Guillemots aren’t worth it. They are. Pigeon Guillemots are alcids: web-footed diving birds of the ocean. They’re related to puffins. Pigeon Guillemots are jet black from bill to tail, with the exception of red-orange legs and a white patch on the wings. They prefer rocky coasts, and are exclusively West Coast birds. (This video doesn’t involve Pigeon Guillemots, but it’s a stark introduction to how rough life can be for a baby alcid. Jump from a cliff having never flown before, land without really knowing how to put on the brakes, and if you don’t make it to the water, run for your life from the foxes.)

Los Angeles county waters are the southern end of the Pigeon Guillemots’ expected annual summer range. Not sure if it’s water temperature or our lack of rocky coastline that keeps them from going further south. This June, a handful of Pigeon Guillemots have been spotted along L.A. County’s western-most coast and at Palos Verdes. I decided to use my Father’s Day morning on a shot at adding a lifer to my LA County list.

I got up at 6:30am and made the drive to Pt. Dume in Malibu. The coast at Point Dume runs west-east, and Pt. Dume juts out into the ocean. Birds and whales migrating along the west coast often make a line from Pt. Dume to Palos Verdes. A friend had seen 4 Pigeon Guillemots there the day before. The biggest challenge of birding Pt. Dume is probably the parking. Next to the short trails atop the bluff, where the best seawatching happens, is a 9 car parking lot. You can park down on the beach in a large parking lot, but you’ve got to pay for that one. Being both cheap and hoping for some pelagic species, I headed to the bluff-top parking lot. When I pulled up at 7:10am, it was full.  I decided to give it until 7:30am before driving down to the beach. Happily, in 10 minutes, a surfer returned from his morning ritual. After he took off his wet suit, and changed his clothes, and poured water on his head, and then dried his hair with his towel, and then stowed his surfboard, and then chatted with his surfer dude friend, and then checked his phone, I had my parking spot. 

It’s a short walk out to a couple wooden viewing platforms at the point. Upon arrival, I immediately saw a pair of Pigeon Guillemots swimming together maybe 100 yards off shore. They drifted a bit before flying over to some exposed rocks. A birding couple that had joined me at the platform with scopes pointed out a third Pigeon Guillemot on the rocks.

Pigeon Guillemot Pt. Dume Malibu

I stayed for another half an hour watching the sea. The viewing conditions were great despite the lack of sun. The ocean was super calm, and any bird in the air or water stood out easily. The birders spotted a flock of shearwaters way out, but I couldn’t ever find them with my binoculars. A loon flew by, as did a tiny Least Tern, an oystercatcher moved around on the rocks below, and a Wrentit popped up in the bushes right below the viewing platform. But no good pelagic birds.

Wrentit Point Dume Malibu

Wrentits may spend their whole life in a 2 acre plot of land

 

On the way back home, I stopped at Malibu Lagoon. A breeding-plumaged Wilson’s Phalarope was hanging around, and an adult Song Sparrow was feeding a begging Brown-headed Cowbird chick. Then I walked up the lower part of Tuna Canyon just off PCH. That looks like a great spot that I plan to check out again in the early morning some day.

 

A Summer Summer Tanager in the 5MR

A Summer Tanager at Kenneth Hahn SRA

Small-group outdoor social activities are slowly becoming a part of our lives these days. The other afternoon, we were hanging out at “the bowl” in Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area with family friends. The bowl (officially called Janice’s Green Valley, which is too much for me) used to be a reservoir behind Baldwin Hills Dam. The dam breached in December 1963 and flooded the neighborhood below, killing five people. Now, it’s a grassy play area with a bunch of oak and eucalyptus trees. A frisbee golf course is set-up in the bowl amidst hundreds of pocket gopher holes. The bowl can be a good spot for birds, like the Ferruginous Hawk that showed up there back in 2013.

As I was waiting for a frisbee golf game to get organized, I noticed a bird flush from a tree about 20 yards away. The bird flew directly away from me, and it looked to have been all red. Given its size, I immediately thought Summer Tanager. The bird landed in the middle of a tall eucalyptus tree. Since a Summer Tanager would be a nice summer find in my 5MR, I decided to walk over and see if I could get a better look. It didn’t take long. As I walked up to the target tree, I found a male Summer Tanager – all red, with a pale yellowish large bill – sitting perfectly still. I took a couple of pictures with my phone that are crap, but good enough to support the ID. 

Summer Tanagers are not super rare in Los Angeles. But if we were naming the bird, we’d call it a Winter Tanager. It is much more regularly seen in these parts from October to March. I had seen a Summer Tanager in my 5MR before (a pair, actually, that used to return each winter to West LA Community College, plus a female that wintered at Village Green for a couple of years). But this was only the 4th summer Summer Tanager ever reported in eBird in my 5MR, and my first summer sighting. Between this bird and the red Red Phalarope on Ballona Creek a few weeks ago, the names of my rarer sightings have been unusually accurate recently.

Birding Credibility

I wasn’t carrying a camera when I saw the Summer Tanager. Thanks to clear views and camera-phones, I was able to document the sighting, however poorly. But what if I hadn’t? Have I built up enough credibility with fellow L.A. birders and eBird reviewers that a photo-less sighting would have been considered legit? More importantly, how do you build up your birding credibility? Quick answer – ID cautiously (the birds you see are likely to be expected birds, not rare ones), observe carefully and describe what you saw, and document your sightings with photos. Finding rare birds on your own helps, too. More thoughts on credibility in an upcoming post.

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