I found this Great Horned Owl sitting on a nest not far from my house on Sunday.
I am planning an attempt to see or hear as many species as I can, with the ultimate goal being one-thousand or more. My focus will be on birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, insects and spiders.
Sunday, March 30, 2014
March Big Day
Jim Malcom and I did a Shawnee County big day for March on Saturday. We finished the day with 87 bird species. As a bonus, Jim’s quick eye spotted a
Mourning Cloak butterfly in Felker Park.
The day started at Shawnee State Fishing Lake where we found 15 Greater
Prairie Chickens, a Merlin, 5 Baird’s Sandpipers, and a bunch of Song and Fox
Sparrows. We moved on to Shawnee Lake where
the best find were two Horned Grebes. A
Great-tailed Grackle was heard calling at Iwig’s Dairy. We finished at Colbenz Marsh where we found two
Greater Yellowlegs, four Wilson’s Snipe and an American Pipit. For the week-end, I gained 10 new species,
bringing my total to 156.
Monday, March 24, 2014
March Madness
First things first, my daughter was married this past
Saturday. The wedding and bride were
beautiful, and she married a great guy.
Congratulations to both of you, and may you have many happy years
together. Now, back to chasing species. Despite much time devoted to wedding
preparation, I was able to sneak out occasionally over the past several weeks
and chase new species. As the spring
migration floodgates slowly start to trickle in, I found most of the expected
March migrants – such as Purple Martin, Tree Swallow, Eastern Phoebe, Great
Egret, Turkey Vulture, and American Woodcock.
On the mammal front, I added Red Fox, Common Raccoon and American
Beaver. On a one warm rainy day, the
Boreal Chorus Frogs commenced their spring serenades at Baker Wetlands. Between occasional cold fronts and snow
showers, spring is starting make its appearance; waking up insects and
prompting territorial behavior in all manner of creatures. My year total is now 145 species.
Redhead duck (wonder why they call it that?) seen at John Redmond Reservoir.
A Great Egret, living up to its name, at John Redmond Reservoir.
Monday, March 10, 2014
First Reptile for the Year
On a trip to central Kansas to visit family on Saturday, I
added Common Grackle and Ring-necked Pheasant.
On the way home, a quick stop at Waconda State Park in Mitchell County
yielded a very hungry and photogenic Virginia Opossum. Monday morning, I found six Greater Prairie
Chickens at Shawnee State Fishing Lake.
Later that day while doing work in the yard, I saw a skink sunning
itself on a rock wall. I believe it was
a Five-lined Skink. This brings my year
total to 130 species.
Greater Prairie Chickens in the middle of a field South-west of Shawnee State Fishing Lake.
A Five-lined Skink enjoying the sun on Monday morning at my house.
Virginia opossum at Waconda State Park. Check out that pink nose.
Sunday, March 2, 2014
This Week’s Wanderings
I was able to make several quick trips to area lakes this
week. I saw a Long-tailed Duck at Wyandotte
Lake and a Lesser Black-backed Gull at Clinton Lake. Both are excellent finds for Kansas. On Sunday, a lone male Purple Finch made a
quick visit at my feeders. He didn’t
even stick around long enough for a photo.
Other birds added this week were Northern Shoveler and Ruddy Duck. On the mammal front, I found a Least Shrew
under an overturned wheel barrel in my yard. Least Shrews rarely live more than one year and their only defense
is venomous saliva, so get let one bite you.
Lesser Black-backed
Gull at Clinton Lake. I know, not a good
photo. The bird was 100 yards away and
it was a cloudy day.
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