Howard County Bird Club
A Chapter of the Maryland Ornithological Society
The Return of Hot Spots for Red Knots
Trip leader: Kurt Schwarz | Date of trip: June 3, 2023 |
Location: Eastern Shore | Number attending: 7 |
Details: Seven birders met at 5:45 on June 3, for an epic trip to Delaware. We were greeted at the park and ride by an adult Red-Shouldered Hawk. We drove for just over 1.5 hours to the Amalfi Drive Pond, where we found a pretty impressive 27 Black-bellied Whistling Ducks. We arrived at Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge at about 8:23, where we enjoyed 11 species of shorebird, with the highlight being two stunning adult female Red-necked Phalaropes. The number of Semipalmated Sandpipers was in the high hundreds, perhaps even a thousand plus. We recorded 53 species on the Refuge. The next stop was Port Mahon Road, but that was not productive. We got to Dupont Nature Center just before 1:00 pm. There were many shorebirds, mostly Semipalmated Sandpipers, but we finally found three Red Knots, and perhaps 8 Ruddy Turnstones plus two American Oystercatchers. A short drive to Slaughter Beach brought hundreds of Semipalmated Sandpipers, which was quit a spectacle, but species diversity there was not great, and no Red Knots found. The next spot was Prime Hook Road in Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge. Our main target was King Rails, which have put on some nice shows for the preceding few days, to include Saturday morning, but we could not locate them. High winds did not help. We were pleased, however, to see 22 Black Skimmers. The last stop, Broadkill Marsh, found no close birds, and the quality of the marsh has declined precipitously. There is a lot of encroachment of vegetation and no nearby mud flats to view. The drive home had a nice Pileated Woodpecker fly over Rt. 404 in Caroline County. Several participants got multiple life species on this trip. There were around 300 shorebirds (“peeps”) that could not be identified to species. Kurt Schwarz took the photos. The species list below combines the lists from each location. |
27 Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
123 Canada Goose
31 Mute Swan
17 Mallard
3 Mourning Dove
3 Clapper Rail
19 Black-necked Stilt
2 American Oystercatcher
66 Black-bellied Plover
3 Semipalmated Plover
2 Killdeer
3 Ruddy Turnstone
3 Red Knot
5 Dunlin
6 Least Sandpiper
1545 Semipalmated Sandpiper
36 Short-billed Dowitcher
2 Red-necked Phalarope
72 Greater Yellowlegs
6 Willet
11 Lesser Yellowlegs
146 Laughing Gull
15 Ring-billed Gull
2 Herring Gull
67 Great Black-backed Gull
11 Least Tern
1 Common Tern
3 Forster’s Tern
3 Royal Tern
22 Black Skimmer
33 Double-crested Cormorant
4 Great Blue Heron
6 Great Egret
15 Snowy Egret
1 Green Heron
64 Glossy Ibis
1 Black Vulture
4 Turkey Vulture
5 Osprey
3 Bald Eagle
1 Red-shouldered Hawk
21 Belted Kingfisher
2 Pileated Woodpecker
1 Northern Flicker
1 American Kestrel
1 Eastern Wood-Pewee
1 Willow Flycatcher
1 Great Crested Flycatcher
1 White-eyed Vireo
4 Red-eyed Vireo
2 Blue Jay
1 Fish Crow
24 Purple Martin
4 Tree Swallow
10 Barn Swallow
1 House Wren
8 Marsh Wren
1 Carolina Wren
14 European Starling
5 Gray Catbird
2 Northern Mockingbird
1 Wood Thrush
5 American Robin
16 House Sparrow
14 American Goldfinch
1 Grasshopper Sparrow
1 Chipping Sparrow
1 Field Sparrow
7 Seaside Sparrow
12 Song Sparrow
1 Yellow-breasted Chat
1 Orchard Oriole
30 Red-winged Blackbird
8 Common Grackle
8 Boat-tailed Grackle
1 Ovenbird
15 Common Yellowthroat
1 American Redstart
5 Yellow Warbler
1 Northern Cardinal
4 Blue Grosbeak
2 Indigo Bunting