On the evening of Saturday, 25 July, Patricia Lindsay and I  boarded the "Moon 
Chaser" for an old-fashioned Wilson Brothers Band Brews Cruise of Fire Island 
Inlet. Pat didn't even have her binoculars, but I had mine, and I scanned the 
marsh north of the Captree boat basin in an effort to find her an elusive 
Tricolored Heron for her year list. What I found was an egret that strongly 
reminded me of the Little Egret present at nearby Gardiner County Park in late 
May: long black bill, flat crown, and an angular nape lacking any visible 
plumes; and the lores appeared dark, so that the eye through the bill looked 
continuously dark. I showed the bird to Pat, and also to Holly Wilson and 
Phillip Camhi, and they all agreed with the impressions just described. Taking 
my turn with the binoculars again, I watched the bird rise and fly out of sight 
to the north, revealing all-black legs and bright yellow feet, indicative of an 
adult. Although the circumstances of our views were far from ideal, I have a 
hard time seeing an adult Snowy Egret with dark lores and and lacking a bushy, 
rounded nape, and furthermore standing stately and lanky-looking, as this bird 
had. The passage of two months could account for the loss of the two long head 
plumes and a shift from orange to yellow foot color. I mentioned our 
expererience to some local birders but saw little point in posting it unless we 
were able to nail it down--especially given the disappointingly limpid follow 
up searches back in May, after the bird first went missing.

When I returned to Captree today, I did not find the egret of interest (nor the 
Tricolor), but I did see something that surprised me: at least three brand-new 
juvenile Laughing Gulls, well out to the east of Sexton Island, in bad light. 
For years now we southwestern Suffolk County birders have suspected that 
Laughing Gulls were breeding in the Captree/Sexton/East/West Fire Island area 
of Great South Bay, based on the regular early spring arrival here of birds in 
high breeding plumage, earlier than and inland from our ocean-hugging passage 
migrants.

While pondering these things, a Royal Tern flew over heading east with a 
begging juv in tow, reminding me that it is by no means too early for juv 
Laughing Gulls to disperse east from Jamaica Bay. But it has been my impression 
that fledging there is late this year (I saw no juvs on my twice daily commutes 
on the Belt Parkway through 21 July). On a hunch, I drove over to Orowoc Lake 
in Islip, an epicenter of the sort of early spring LAGU activity has been 
making us curious, and was delighted to see a juvenile Laughing Gull fly 
in--surely one of the most beautiful birds in the world.

So, have folks been seeing juvs around Jamaica Bay lately? Does anyone know of 
actual nesting evidence in Great South Bay?

Shai Mitra
Bay Shore

________________________________
CSI Tops MONEY magazine’s Best Colleges list for 
2015-2016><http://csitoday.com/2015/07/csi-tops-money-magazines-best-colleges-list-for-2015-2016/>

--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.html
2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

--

Reply via email to