- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
| Fort Rock | 
| Anna's Hummingbird (pretty sure) Summer Lake Rest Area | 
Canada Goose  50
Trumpeter Swan  2
Gadwall  230
American Wigeon  1
Mallard  30
Pied-billed Grebe  3
Eared Grebe  1
Western Grebe  6
Clark's Grebe  6
Common Nighthawk  20
Virginia Rail  1
Sora  2
American Coot  2
Black-necked Stilt  56
American Avocet  15
Black-bellied Plover  1
Snowy Plover  5
Semipalmated Plover  4
Killdeer  5
Baird's Sandpiper  2
Least Sandpiper  28
Western Sandpiper  9
Long-billed Dowitcher  200
Wilson's Phalarope  115
Red-necked Phalarope  1
Spotted Sandpiper  1
Greater Yellowlegs  30
Lesser Yellowlegs  5
Franklin's Gull  50
Ring-billed Gull  2
Caspian Tern  55
Black Tern  1
Forster's Tern  50
Double-crested Cormorant  1
American White Pelican  91
Great Blue Heron  1
Great Egret  2
Black-crowned Night-Heron  1
White-faced Ibis  30
Turkey Vulture  3
Northern Harrier  4
Common Raven  2
Northern Rough-winged Swallow  6
Bank Swallow  35
Cliff Swallow  1
Marsh Wren  1
Yellow-headed Blackbird  1
Red-winged Blackbird  10
Brown-headed Cowbird  1
Common Yellowthroat  2
Distances in the west are deceptive. On the map, Lake Abert doesn't look that far from Summer Lake. On the road, it is about 70 miles, through the most boring landscape I have ever been through and that includes the Bonneville Salt Flats which, while monotonous, have an otherworldly quality to them, while here, it was thousands of acres of sagebrush. And because the road runs along a high rim around the lake, what there was to see was dots. Lots of dots that were mostly Red-necked Phalaropes, Wilson's Phalaropes, and American Avocets. Dave pointed out clouds of brine flies that the dots were eating. The flies looked only slightly smaller than the dots. I was singularly unimpressed. We did add Willet to the trip list.
From there it was another two hours through sagebrush back to Sisters. We stopped very briefly at Riley Pond alongside the road, where there were a couple of hen Redheads, which I was surprised to find were year birds for me (I didn't go to their usual spot in Ocean County this year), and then, on E. Hwy 20, in Brothers, we saw, sitting on a utility pole, a Golden Eagle. It upped and flew around for us. That was impressive.
Comments
Post a Comment