18 March 2025

Posts Tagged ‘alder flycatcher’

Cool and Quiet

Saturday, August 5th, 2023
Black-capped Chickadee, Beech Hill Preserve, Rockport, Maine, 05 August 2023.
Black-capped Chickadee.

’Twas a cool and quiet morning when dog and I started up the wooded trailhead. A few bird vocalizations greeted us, but not a lot. Adults still talking to their young ’uns, mostly or, rarely, singing—or teaching their young ’uns the family tunes.

Fog at the summit, and dimness elsewhere early, so no award-winning photos, but a chickadee posed toward the end of our hike.

Later in the day the sun came out and giant billowy clouds rose above the bay.

Beech Hill List
Starting at 6:58 a.m. EST (7:58 DST), I hiked all trails.

1. Tufted Titmouse (v)
2. Black-capped Chickadee
3. Black-throated Green Warbler (v)
4. Red-eyed Vireo (v)
5. American Goldfinch
6. Black-and-white Warbler
7. Eastern Towhee
8. White-breasted Nuthatch** (v)
9. Eastern Wood-pewee** (v)
10. American Crow*
11. Hairy Woodpecker (v)
12. Hermit Thrush
13. Alder Flycatcher (v)
14. Common Yellowthroat
15. Gray Catbird*
16. Song Sparrow**
17. Purple Finch
18. Downy Woodpecker (v)
19. Northern Cardinal (v)
20. Northern Flicker (v)
21. Blue Jay (v)

Elsewhere

22. Mallard
23. Mourning Dove
24. Herring Gull
25. Ruby-throated hummingbird

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere
**Voice only elsewhere

†First-of-year

Noise

Thursday, August 3rd, 2023
American Robin (juvie), Beech Hill Preserve, Rockport, Maine, 03 August 2023.
American Robin (juvie).

Dog and I hiked up through such a cool and breezy and luscious wood this morning. Also rather quiet. Birds don’t sing or call so much when they’ve got youngsters to raise (as I’ve certainly mentioned before), and the numbers were low this day—but what I heard and saw in the nearly silent trees (as usual) moved me.

Birds occupied the open summit and airy barrens also—but they were drowned out by the sound of machines. Noise, I should say. It’s a pet peeve, I must say—the horrible metallic whines and groans and growls and clanks and screeches of humanity. A plane flying low above, an annoyingly loud tractor across the valley.

If we humans are so smart and creative, how come we can’t engineer machines that make no noise—or at least very, very little? Too often I find myself yearning for quietude.

Some days aren’t so bad, though. Maybe tomorrow will be like that (it’s supposed to rain).

Beech Hill List
Starting at 7:05 a.m. EST (8:05 DST), I hiked all trails.

1. Red-eyed Vireo (v)
2. Black-capped Chickadee
3. Tufted Titmouse
4. Downy Woodpecker
5. Northern Cardinal
6. American Goldfinch
7. Eastern Wood-pewee
8. White-breasted Nuthatch
9. Veery
10. Gray Catbird
11. Eastern Towhee
12. Alder Flycatcher
13. Mourning Dove
14. Cedar Waxwing
15. Song Sparrow
16. Common Yellowthroat
17. Barn Swallow
18. American Robin
19. Common Raven
20. Blue Jay

Elsewhere

21. Herring Gull
22. Canada Goose
23. Osprey
24. Eastern Phoebe

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere
**Voice only elsewhere

†First-of-year

Cool in the Woods

Wednesday, August 2nd, 2023
Black-and-white Warbler, Beech Hill Preserve, Rockport, Maine, 02 August 2023.
Black-and-white Warbler.

When dog and I started up the wooded trail this morning, the temperature was in the 50s (F). Mostly sunny, and I knew this summer day would warm, but the coolness invigorated us both, I think. Also a few birds.

Before long, for instance, standing in one place, I added five woodpecker species to my early list. Near the top of the woods, I heard the loud, croaking calls of two ravens (first in weeks). At the end of our hike, I spied the first redstart in a while—and, for good measure, heard the unmistakable cry of an Osprey.

In other news, before our hike I heard a Carolina Wren in the woods at the edge of the yard, and afterward, I helped reintroduce a lost juvie robin to its parent(s). An all-around good day.

Beech Hill List
Starting at 7:05 a.m. EST (8:05 DST), I hiked all trails.

1. Red-eyed Vireo (v)
2. Black-throated Green Warbler (v)
3. American Goldfinch
4. Black-capped Chickadee**
5. Downy Woodpecker (v)
6. Red-bellied Woodpecker (v)
7. Hairy Woodpecker
8. Northern Flicker (v)
9. Pileated Woodpecker (v)
10. Chestnut-sided Warbler
11. Eastern Towhee
12. Black-and-white Warbler
13. Eastern Wood-pewee
14. Hermit Thrush (v)
15. Common Raven (v)
16. Alder Flycatcher (v)
17. Gray Catbird*
18. Cedar Waxwing
19. Common Yellowthroat
20. Song Sparrow**
21. Yellow Warbler (v)
22. Northern Cardinal (v)
23. American Robin*
24. Eastern Phoebe*
25. Broad-winged Hawk*
26. American Redstart
27. Osprey (v)

Elsewhere

28. Carolina Wren
29. Mourning Dove
30. Herring Gull
31. Tufted Titmouse
32. House Finch

(v) Voice only
*Also elsewhere
**Voice only elsewhere

†First-of-year

 
Bird Report is a (sometimes intermittent) record of the birds I encounter while hiking, see while driving, or spy outside my window. —Brian Willson



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