Ox Beetle

July 13th, 2007

Large horned beetle

Ox Beetle, Strategus antaeus
Gabreski Airport, Suffolk County, 2007-07-08
Thanks to Steven Barney for the ID

#383: Western Reef Heron

July 12th, 2007

As usual, I woke up about 5:00 A.M. on Monday morning. I debated heading out to Drier-Offerman/Calvert Vaux Park to see if the previous day’s Western Reef-Heron had returned. It had not been relocated on Sunday by anyone besides the original observer (though he had posted good photos so there was no doubt what it was) and I needed to go to work, so I hemmed and hawed about whether to make the trip. I thought maybe I’d try after work, though the tides would be wrong.

Then shortly after 7:00, news went out over the local rare-bird alert that Doug Gochfeld had seen the Western Reef Heron fly in about 6:50 and it was now being well seen by multiple observers. That was too much to take, so I threw my binoculars and camera into my backpack and called a cab.

The cab dropped me off at the Eastern entrance to the park about 7:45. I hopped over the concrete barrier and walked very briskly down to the inlet. (Fortunately I know this spot well.) I scrambled down the hill to the water through a lot of very tall mugwort, thoroughly staining my beige pants. (I knew I should have worn the black jeans today. Oh well. Dress code at work is pretty casual.)

Various herons and egrets were feeding in the inlet near the tideline eighty meters or so to the south of me, mostly Snowys. I scanned the group with my binoculars and there it was: a blue heron with a white face, black legs with yellow feet, long thin black bill, about the size of the nearby Snowy Egrets. Even from a distance it was unmistakable. (I’d researched it online the night before, and knew what to look for. Otherwise I’m not sure what I would have thought: Snowy Egret-Little Blue Heron hybrid maybe? It’s not in any of the North American field guides.)

This should be a picture of the Western Reef Heron but in my hurry to get out to the site I left the memory card for my camera at home.
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Eastern Pondhawk

July 11th, 2007

Green dragonfly

Eastern Pondhawk, Erythemis simplicicollis – Male
2007-07-08, Suffolk County, Peconic River headlands

#380-382 in Suffolk County

July 11th, 2007

Sunday I joined the New York chapter of the Linnaean Society for a trip to “Eastern Long Island for 9 Sparrows”. It was close, but we did get all 9 sparrows (saw 8, heard 1) as well as about 50 other interesting species including 3 personal life birds. It’s been a long time since I got three life birds in one day in New York. Heck, it’s getting hard to add three life birds in one day in California these days. I think the last time I did this well in New York was the February 2006 pelagic.

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ESPN Chokes

July 9th, 2007

I almost never watch ESPN, but tonight they’re venturing into new territory with a miniseries entitled the Bronx is Burning. They’ve been hyping it heavily, and I’m actually interested in New York in the 70s, so I was all geared up to watch it. Then I turn it on at the advertised time of 10:00 P.M. and what do I see? The National Home Run Derby.

I have no idea what this is, nor do I much care. If it were an actual baseball game I could almost see the point; but some silly, made-up event that does little but fill dead air? For this they preempted their new flagship show?

Screw it. If the miniseries is any good, I’ll watch it on DVD in a few months, but I probably won’t bother with ESPN again for another ten years.

Spangled Skimmer

July 8th, 2007

Blue dragonfly with white dots on wings

Spangled Skimmer, Libellula cyanea – Male
2007-07-08, Suffolk County, Peconic River

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