Mostly sunny, light
breeze, low 30s
Sounds ominous, doesn’t it. Well today is the last day…the last day
of the year 2012 in the Gregorian calendar. It’s also the last day of the daily Natural Digital
Blog. Don’t despair, faithful
readers. The blog will continue to
be published on a more irregular basis for the upcoming year. Entries will be published periodically
on a more or less weekly basis or as a special “bulletin” when some sighting of
extreme noteworthiness occurs. So,
please continue to check in with natdigital.blogspot.com from time to time.
On this final day, we made a
stab at one last “year bird”, the Lapland longspur. Spotted yesterday by a couple of more than reliable birders
out in the black dirt farms of Pine Island, we just had to follow up and see if
we could end the year with a bang.
Well, we missed the longspur, but we did find two great “snow birds” in
the forms of the Horned lark and the Snow bunting.
Horned lark |
The larks were found along
Missionland Road in Pine Island and were present in large numbers. They continually flew back and forth
across the road, often landing right next to the snow banks deposited by the
plows over the past three days.
With the ground under more than a half foot of snow, the larks were busy
feeding on the seeds of the grasses which peeked above the blanket. Occasionally, you’d see a lark reaching
for the highest seeds since the lower crop had already been picked bare.
There were a number of Snow
buntings mixed in, but for the life of me, it seemed every time I had one in
the viewfinder, along came another of my favorite birds, the Northern
harrier. The smaller birds would
invariably take flight, and I ended up with either a blank field or a blurred
bunting.
Eventually, we found a large
flock of the larks with many more buntings sharing the fields along Rudinski
off of Missionland. While a bit
distant, I did manage to get enough of an image to prove that we did in fact
see them.
The longspur would have been
nice, but we know he’ll be on site for a while to come as the snow cover is not
going anywhere in the next week or two.
“Our destinations are our new beginnings”, so as we wind down this year,
our new year-list begins tomorrow and who knows…perhaps the longspur will be
one of the first birds to be added to that log.
And so, we wish you all a most
Happy and Healthy New Year for 2013 and thank you all for following our birding
adventures this past year. Montreal,
Montana, Cape Ann, Cape May, Australia, New Zealand, the entire east coast,
Florida, California, the Adirondacks and all other parts of New York and
more. It’s been a great birding
year for us and we look forward to new birds and new adventures in 2013. Hope to see you in the field!