Sunday, October 29, 2017

Debie Shearwater Pelagic




The Boat!!


Hello everybody!! This late post is from my summer trip to California. It was all based around doing a west coast pelagic trip in hopes of getting enough new life birds to put me over the 600 mark, and I did just that. I decided that if I was going to make this trip, I wanted to do it with my birding friends and go on the best pelagic trip in the business. Ms. Debie Shearwater of Shearwater Journeys. http://www.shearwaterjourneys.com/

So with everything set, and the gang all here, we meet at 7am at the dock at Half Moon Bay marina.

We ended up with 29 birders, 6 guides and 2 crew members, so it was a full boat. After the welcome and safety instructions, we where off. We took about an hour birding around the marina and rock jetties, we saw several birds up close.  American Brown Pelicans, Heerman's Gulls, Elegant Terns, Black Oystercatcher, Surfbirds, Black Turnstones

The Ohio people

Debbie in Aqua

The puke bucket!!

Harbor departure

Jetty birding





How about some videos!!!






Common Murres, by the 1000s
The boat headed north from Half Moon bay up to Pacifica along the coast, then up to Devils Rock. I was surprised how many Californians where enjoying the water sports early on a Saturday.  In the marinia, there where several boats loaded with people for whale watching and salmon fishing.

GPS

Surfers
Once we got to Pacifia, there where 50 surfers, paddle boarders, solo fisherman kayak's, big boats with fisherman, Humpback Whales feeding, birds. It was crazy busy. Everyone just out enjoying the ocean on a Saturday.




Devils Rock w Sam

Deep water
Looking for BIRDS!!
Look, Buller's Shearwater
 Then we made the turn west, and headed out to the Continental shelf. We were around 400 ft depth in the morning, but by afternoon, when we got to the shelf, it dropped to 1200 ft depth, and that's when the birds showed up!!






Inside the cabin

Puker!!!



Stellar's Sea Lion
Happy Brad, +9 lifers 



And with that, by 4pm, we where back in the harbor, ready to dock.  The sea sickness was not bad. I took Dramamine and ate snacks/water all day on the boat, so that really helped. I good Mexican dinner and off to bed early, I was tired.

Next up:  Viva Las Vegas!!!! Fall birding in Nevada. 


Saturday, September 2, 2017

Western Screech-Owl #602




So this is how a story in bird watching goes. One of the hardest species of birds to see are owls. Why?  Well, there's not that many of them, only come out at night, stay up in trees all day, more often heard not seen, you know . . . they are wise owls after all. So when to plan to search for a life bird owl, and you only have limited time and a place to bird during a trip. You think how can I see an owl?

So thanks to ebird.org and reports of local birders, a spot was reported and pictured of this new lifer owl for me. Blackberry Farms Park, at dusk, and pictured in a hole in a sycamore tree at this park. So a plan was made to visit that park while in California. We stopped by on Friday night at the park, and find it to be a community pool area and back end of a golf course. There is a parking lot, we get out and look around, and I see a guy in a Brown shirt, riding a golf cart, towards the entrance area. I know from birding, to always ask a person with a Brown shirt or hat on for/about birds. They will help! Sure enough, he says "yes, the owl is in this tree, and comes out at 8pm pst. Great!! We know the place, see you Sunday night mister owl.



Sure enough, Sunday night, after the boat trip Saturday, and 11 hours birding Sunday around, we get to set up shop at 7pm and wait.


And we wait some more . . .



And then at 8 p.m., just like clock work.

Western Screech-owl ABA lifer #602


These compact owls—not much taller than a standard pair of binoculars—hunt in woods and deserts of western North America, where their wide-ranging diet includes everything from worms and crayfish to rats and bats. Found in urban parks and residential areas as well as wilder places, Western Screech-Owls nest in tree cavities, and will readily take to backyard nest boxes.

They are superbly camouflaged birds with a base color that can be grayish, brownish, or reddish-brown (rufous). The face is pale, outlined with dark arcs. The eyes are yellow.

Next up: West coast pelagic with Debbie Shearwater

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Im going going back back to Cali Cali +13 Lifers!!

Good things do come to those who wait . . . . like 25 years wait.  You see back in November 1991 was the last time I birded southern California. I was with my grandparents during Thanksgiving break, visiting my great Aunt, and the instruction from my father was to have Red&Louise take me out so see enough new life birds to hit #500. And I did just that! I was a freshmen in high school, and just about done with birding. I was about to get a job, car, school and sports. So no time for birds.

Fast forward to March 2012 when on a visit to LRGV to see grandparents, they take me to Benston SP to see a rare code 5 Black-Vented Oriole, and that's when I picked up my binoculars again. The past five years, I've been traveling, birding, and documenting all the new ones I've seen. This has lead me up to almost getting bird #600. So I had planned on doing a west coast palegic, and who better than in the business to go to, Debbie Shearwater of http://shearwaterjourneys.blogspot.com/

The Ohio People



We booked in March for the August 12th, Half Moon Bay boat trip. So with that planned, and some much needed land life birds too, an itinerary was planned to make the most of this trip. After all California is expensive, so I had to make every bird count!!

Below is a  review of the trip, places visited, birds seen and food eaten!!  Birds listed are FOYs(bold)/Lifer(#)

Friday August 11th:
Don Edwards NWR
Marbled Godwit
Western Sandpiper                                                                
The Boat

Red-necked Phalarope                                                
California Gull
Black Phoebe
Western Kingbird 
California Towhee
Ed Lavin Dog Park, Milpitas
Yellow-Billed Magpie  #590
Acorn Woodpecker

Saturday August 12th:
Half Moon Bay Palegic
Elegant Tern #591                                                                               
Yellow-billed Magpie, #yolo

Sooty Shearwater #592
Pink-footed Shearwater#593                                                
Cassin's Auklet #594
Buller's Shearwater #595
Black-footed Albatross #596
Tufted Puffin #597
Ashy Storm-Petrel #598
Northern Fulmer #599
Heerman's Gull--Missed in Washington in April, fall bird there
Western Gull
Northern Gannet--Devils Rock. It's the worlds only Northern Gannet in the Pacific ocean. This seabird is an east coast only bird, which I've seen before, FL, NC, & ME, but somehow this particular Gannet flew over and down probably from the top of Canada, or something. Debbie said it's been there on Devils' Rock now for five years!! Wow what a treat.   
Northern Gannet, far left, white bird
Elegant Terns, can't miss lifers:)










Sunday August 13th:
Burliegh State Park
California Quail #600 Finish line?
Pacific-slope Epmdix. 
Wrentit
Pygmy Nuthatch
Pescadero State Beach
Sanderling
Whimbrel                                                                                     
Cali Quail, male, #600

Black Oystercatcher
Black Turnstone
Surfbird
Wandering Tattler--My #500 ABA bird in 1991. Its the one that started this gig!!
Alemada
missed the Red-necked Stint. Birded for hours but never clean good countable look
MLK marsh
Ridgeway Rail #601
Forster's Tern
Blackberry Farm Park
Western Screech-Owl #602                                                                  
Ridgeway Rail, lifer

Nuttall's Woodpecker
Alemada 2nd time
missed the Red-Necked Sting again.


Whimbrel, neat

Wandering Tattler, #500 in 1991--FOY 2017

Black Oyster Catchers, 3 birds




















Surfbirds!!!
 Final bird stats:
94 species seen
35 FOYs
13 Life birds

 California is huge state, and defiantly deserves to be visited/birded in often.  The state list is over 500, for just the state!
I will be back Cali . . . I will be back
Pescadero State Beach, off US 1










 
Food Review:
  Welcome to a new section in the blog, I'll be reviewing food/meals while on trips. So with that said, how was the food??

Free Breakfast

Fajita Salad w Steak
 Breakfast: Served daily at the Comfort Inn, all the staples, fresh waffles, processed eggs, bacon & sausage helped give you a good base to start the 11-hour day birding, everyday. Saved money, came w room rate. Grade: B
Inn N Out Single, Animal style

Udon Soup w Pork & beer

TacoTruck: El Pastor tacos grande, $2.10 each, delicious, always count on a taco truck. Grade: B

 Dinner: Tres Amigos. Wow, my kind of place. Look at that Fajita Salad pic. Included are chips, 3 types of salsa(including green) & pickled carrots and jalapenos. Grilled steak, black bean, lettuce, red onion, cheese, beautiful garnish. $12.95 Grade: A+


Lunch: Inn N Out Burger. Good, tasty burger, get it animal style. Fries of bad bad, like straws. $7.95 with drink. Quick and easy. Grade: B   no fries next time, just double burger Animal, potato chips

Airport lunch: Udon soup w Pork and Soba Buckwheat Noodles, Japanese beer and sriracha. $12. Very very good, again I love noodle bowls, just what I needed for long flight home. Grade: A


Half Moon Bay, CA

Nissan Pathfinder, 358 miles, 22.4MPG










Next up: Gambill is gambling in Vegas!! Nov 2-5th. Birds too +10 foys maybe?

Sunday, July 30, 2017

R.I.P Mary Louise Gambill


It is with a heavy heart that I blog the news that my grandma went to be with the Lord on July 6, 2017. She passed away due to complications with cancer. She was 89 years old. Grandma was a survivor and warrior. She twice survived breast cancer--once in the '90s and again in late 2010. She rode, walked, hiked, biked, flew, and boated across all 50 States, Canada, and into deep Mexico several times.

Since this blog is about Retracing the Steps of the Gambills, I wanted to dedicate this post about Grandma Louise and her birding history. Of course Grandpa Red is right there with her all along the way. They where inseparable after Red's retirement from the railroad in 1984. He saved up his vacation that year until the end, took it all in May 1984 for their Attu Island, AK trip. Then came back, worked June, July, August, and retired!! July 1985 was the year of my first "official life bird." I remember going to an ABA birding convention in Arizona, and getting my first National Geographic birding book, then documenting what bird, when, and where it was seen.


There are so many ways to honor someone. I figured the best I could do is share some pictures that I've taken in the later years, thanks to my first iPhone in 2012. Also, when grandpa died in September 2013, I was lucky enough to get his binoculars (which I still use to this day) and his hand-written life list. So in 2014, I printed off the current ABA area bird list and transferred that data over to modern day bird list. I wanted to see how many birds and special places they traveled and when.

So I wanted to share a timeline below of the year, trips taken and life birds seen.
PickPonds, January 2014


1980--Cuba, 36 birds

1982--502 for year
White-Crowned Pigeon(2) #500ABA
Grace's Warbler(2) #600ABA
Red-billed Tropicbird(3) #633
Craveri's Murrelet(3) #647
Streaked Shearwater(4) #648
California Condor(6) and in 84' 86'
Barnacle Goose(4)

1983--373
Budgerigar(3) #651 
White-tailed Tropicbird(3) #653
Curlew Sandpiper(3) #655
Ross's Gull(3) #656



1984--611 for year, 3rd most ever
Masked Bobby(3) #654
Brown Bobby(3)
Tufted Duck(3) #663
Common Pochard(3) #664
Falcated Duck(4) #667
Garganey(4) #668
Pin-tailed Snipe(5) #671 
Tundra Bean-Goose(3) #674                                                         
Artic Loon Attu,AK                                                                     
1984 Attu Island, AK
White-tailed Eagle(4)
Eurasian Dotterel(4) #687
Little Curlew(5) #698ABA
 Roadside Hawk(4) #702 Falcon Dam,TX
 Common Sandpiper(3)
Spotted Redshank(4)
Common Greenshank(3)
Wood Sandpiper(2)
Red-necked Stint(3)
Long-toed Stint(4)
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper(3) #694
South Polar Skua(2) #691
Ruddy-Ground Dove(3) #701 SantaAna,TX
Eurasian Kestel(4) #676
Fork-tailed Flycatcher(3) #703 RioHonda
Brown Shrike(4) #677
Sky Lark(3)
Artic Warbler(2) #679
Lanceolated Warbler(5) #678
Siberian Rubythroat(3) #673
Eyebrowed Thrush(3)
Red-throated Pipit(3)
McKay's Bunting(2) #686
Rustic Bunting(3)

1985--434
Northern Jacana(4) Nogales,AZ
Black-tailed Gull(4)
Blue Bunting(4) #705 BenstenSP,TX
White-collard Seedeater(3) #706
Ferruginous Pypgmy-Owl(3) #708 Salineno,TX
Eurasian Jackdaw(4) #709 Lewisburg,PA 
Plain-capped Starthroat(4) #710LR48
White-eared Hummingbird(3)
Gray Silky-flycatcher(5) #714 LagunaAcosta,TX
Crimson-collard Grosbeak(4) #716 McAllen,TX


1986--571 for year
Black-faced Grassquit(4) #723 BigBenSP,TX
Ruddy Quail-Dove(5) #725 BenstenSP,TX
Aplomado Falcon(3) #726 Laguna,TX
Gyrfalcon(2) 96' 98' 99'


1987--501
Rufus-backed Robin(3) #727 RenoSprings,AZ
Golden-crowned Warbler(4) #728 Brownsville,TX 02' 03' also
Key-West Quail Dove(4) #731 Marathon,FL
Shiny Cowbird(3) #733 Flamingo,FL
Berylline Hummer(3) #734
Yellow-Green Virero(3) #735 BenstsenSP,TX
Gray-crowned Yellowthroat(4) #736 Sanignaico,TX
Crane Hawk(5) #737 SantaAnaWR, TX


1988--524
American Flamingo(3)
Bahama Swallow(4) #739 Homestead,FL 
Eared Quetzal(4) #740 Southfork,AZ


1989--579
Streak-backed Oriole(4) #741 BenstsenSP,TX 
Flesh-footed Shearwater(3) #743
Black-vented Oriole(5) #744 Kingsville,TX 12' too w me


1990--574
Yellow-faced Grassquit(4) #747 SantaAna,TX
Masked Tityra(5) #748 BenstenSP,TX
White-throated Thrush(4) ##749 LaugaVista,TX
Social Flycatcher(5) #750 AnzalduasPark,TX 
Blue-footed Booby(4) #753 Salton Sea,CA
Double-striped Thick-knee(5) #750ish? Yuma, AZ
Fork-tailed Swift(4) #760



1991--644 for year, most ever
Emperor Goose(2)
Gray-tailed Tattler(3)
Whooper Swan(3) #754 Nome,AK
Bristle-thighed Curlew(2) #755 Nome,AK
Bluethroat(2) #756 Nome,AK
Norhern Wheater(2) #757 Nome,AK
Great Knot(4) #758 Nome,AK
White-wagtail(3) #759 Nome,AK
 Bahama Mockingbird(4) #761 KeyWest,FL
White-faced Storm-Petral(3) #762 VA palegic
Tufted Flycatcher(5) #763 BigBenSP,TX

1992--572
Green-breasted Mango(4) #764 CorpusChristi,TX
Blue Mockingbird(5) #765 Patagona,AZ
La Sagra's Flycatcher(3) #766 SugarloafKey,FL
Little Egret(4) #768 Chinochicqu,VA Me too!!
Crescent-chested Warbler #769 Patagona,AZ 12/31/92

At the end of 1992, they started with the number of 700 birds for lower 48 states. So then they would travel to see certain birds, that would be new for lower 48 states. Not counting Canada or Alaska birds seen any more. For example, they had already seen the Yellow-Billed Loon in Alaska as a life bird. But when a strange vagriant showed up in the west part of Texas, they drove to see it. That was another year bird, lower 48 bird and state of Texas life bird.

1993--510 for year
Yellow-billed Loon(2) #704L48 Lake Balmorhea,TX
White-winged Tern(4) #767 Watertown, NY
Pacific Golden-Plover(2) #770ABA; #702L48

                                                                                            
1994--616 for year, 2nd most ever
Crane Creek aka MaGee Marsh, OH cira 1990s
Emperor Goose
Rufous-capped Warbler(3) #771
Herald Petrel(3) #773ABA;#707L48 NC palegic
Brown-capped RosyFinch(2) #774 GlacierSP,MT
Black Rosy Finch(2)
Worthen's Sparrow(5) FalconDam,TX 2nd time
Collared Forest-Falcon(5) #775 BentsonSP,TX January--First US Record
Stygian Owl(5) #776ABA BenstenSP,TX Dec'


1995--603
Least Storm-petral(3)
Buff-collard Nightjar(3)
Green Violetear(3) #777 Austin,TX
Bicknell's Thrush(2) #778 CraneCreek,OH

1996--604
 Kelp Gull(4) #780 Galvenston, TX
 Ivory Gull(3) #781 Pickwick Dam,TN
Amazon Kingfisher(5)
White-checked Pintail #787 Merritt Island,FL
Aztec Thrush(4) #788
Flame-colored Tanager(3) #790 MaderaCanyon,AZ
Stygian Owl(5)  BenstenSP,TX Dec' first US Record

1997--580
1998--608
Nutting's Flycatcher(5) #797 PatagoniaLake,AZ 
Short-tailed Albatross(3) #800ABA;#735L48
Bodega Bay,CA
Yellow Grosbeak(4)

1999--445 for year
2000--514
2001--490
2002--478

2003--500
Yellow-nosed Albatross(4) #808
Slate-throated Redstart(4) #809
--Allen Williams backyard Pharr,TX

2004--448
Black-headed Nightingale-Thrush(5) #810ABA;#758LR48; #580TXstate

2005--441
2006--455
Piratic Flycatcher(4) BenstenSP,TX
with Bruce Simpson, naturalist, Blendon Woods MP, OH

Bentsen State Park, TX w Javi, park manager




















2007--458
Fan-tailed Warbler(4) #816 PineCanyon,BigBenSP,TX




2009
Bare-throated Tiger-Heron(5) #819ABA; #863US including Hawaii; #595 Texas state
Estero Grande SP, TX 2013 first and last year together

Seldom Rest Ranch, TX

Life statics
820 to 830 ABA life birds, including all newly "split/lump" species current with 2017 list.
800 and more Mexico life birds.
36 Cuba birds
40-50 Hawaii birds
6 times/years they saw over 600 birds

Mexico visits: Since they wintered in Texas staring in 1986, they had time to bird both the valley and the country of Mexico. The partnered up with a man who ran yearly trips during the winter months. So each year, Red and Louise would go on 7 to 10 day birding trip into Mexico, especially the Yucatan. Thus started their life list of Mexico birds. I have a booklet that shows from 1988 to 1997 birds seen each year in Mexico. After getting their #800th ABA bird in 1998, they worked on their Mexico list until also reaching #800. Thus, they where one of the first, if not the first to have both
 800/800 ABA-Mexico

Keep birding . . .

In closing, I would like to stay thank you and I love you very much, to GrandMa Louise. You will be missed. You where inspirational to me, and I do appreciate IT now that I'm older.

Love,
Bradley

Next up:  Made up my mind, Make a new start, Going to California w an achin' in my heart . . . Quest to #600 BABY!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3BU1p3tCBk 
"Between 2 birds" special guest Louise Gambill

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