On Sunday I left the house around 7:30 am. The tide was very low so I crossed the road and walked down to Back beach. There were a lot of shorebirds at Back beach so I slowly walked out onto the beach so that I didn’t scare them. I spooked them a little bit any ways but they came back. I walked out and just stood still out by the water line. The sandpipers came back and landed a little bit away from me then they walked around me some of them as close as a few feet. I watched and took photos of them poking their little bills in the ground looking for food. After watching them for a bit I slowly moved away from them so that I didn’t spook them. After I had gotten a little ways away I walked more quickly, I walked over to the river and found a spot that looked crossable but it would be over my boots so I pulled my rain pants from the inside of my boots and put them over the outside so that little to no water would get into my boots. I carefully made my way across the river, after I had made it across the river I started looking at the shorebirds and other birds that were there. In with all the sandpipers and turnstones I saw that there were three Lesser yellowlegs. I slowly and carefully walked closer to them to get photos of them. While I was taking photos of one of them it got low to the ground like it was trying to hide from something. The last time I had seen a shorebird do this a Peregrine falcon flew over but this time I didn’t see any raptors fly over. After a few moments it stood back up and the other shorebirds (that had flew about the same time the Lesser yellowlegs had ducked down) were back and acting normal. I walked around the beach more and saw some Short-billed and Long-billed dowitchers, Black-bellied plovers and Greater yellowlegs. While I was walking on the trail toward the visitor center I heard a Orange-crowned warbler singing.Lesser yellowlegs
I proceeded from the park to the Turnaround. When I got to the Turnaround I saw that there were some shorebirds out by the water so I walked out there. They were Dunlins, Semipalmated plovers, Western sandpipers, Short-billed dowitchers and a couple of Marbled gowits. I sat down on a dry spot on the gritty, rotten egg smelling, mud and watched the birds for a while. After I was done watching the bird I got up and walked towards the lake. Short-billed dowitcher
When I was walking up the side of the lake I saw a brown swallow flying around. It took me a few moments before I decided that it might not be normal here and I should try to get photos of it. I was able to get a few not very good photos before it disappeared. I walked over and sat down on a bench to wait and see what was there and watch for the swallow. After a bit I saw the swallow again. It was obviously more brown than the Tree swallows that were around and it appeared to have a brown throat and half brown belly. It disappeared again and I was left anxiously sitting there thinking that it might be a Northern rough-winged swallow, which would be rare for the state and would be the first one I have seen in Alaska, and trying to decided weather or not I should send dad a text since I wasn’t supper sure that it was a Northern rough-winged swallow. I decided that I should text him just in case it was a Northern rough-winged swallow. Shortly after I was done texting with him it showed back up and I was able to get good looks at it and feel more confident that it was a Northern rough-winged swallow. I watched it for quite a while trying to get photos of it before it landed on a wire and I was able to get better photos of it and see that it was indeed a Northern rough-winged swallow. Which means I now have 200 Photographed birds in Alaska!Northern rough-winged swallow
After I left the lake I went back by the park. The tide was up so there weren’t very many birds there. There were a few gulls and a couple of Marbled godwits. I crossed the river again then headed across the estuary for home. On my way across the estuary I saw that there was sand floating as the tide same in. Floating sand
Did you dad get there to see the brown swallow?
Grams,
He got to see it the next day.