For any use of my photos, please contact me at monika.wieland (at) gmail (dot) com
Showing posts with label san diego. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san diego. Show all posts

Saturday, February 24, 2018

To San Diego in Pursuit of More Birds

After four nights in Mexico it was time to head back to the US, and we decided to make a day of driving out of it and head east to San Diego. Even on our "travel" days, however, we always looked out for a stop or two to break up the day and hopefully provide some new birds. Jason did some research and found a gem in Yuma West Wetlands, a park right on the California-Arizona border. While we didn't see any burrowing owls in their designated habitat similar to the one we saw at Zanjero Park in Gilbert, AZ, we did see more than 20 species including several we hadn't see anywhere else.

The small common ground-dove, a species I had only ever seen once before on a different trip to Mexico
Our first confirmed Costa's hummingbird - we had likely seen some before but had had trouble confirming due to difficult lighting. I love how they can look so cute and so angry at the same time!
It's so much fun visiting these local parks that are oases for both people and birds alike. Many of the species there are probably very common to local birders, but so exciting for us out-of-towners to see. 


Northern mockingbirds are as common as robins in much of the southern US, but they're a rare treat for us to see from the Pacific Northwest

This park featured a fishing hole for both its human and avian visitors. This great egret was hoping for an easy bite, but after the fisherman wasn't getting any bites the egret moved along and had better success on his own.


When we got to San Diego that evening, Jason returned to eBird to research what we might have a chance of seeing the next day. Two of our most hoped-for species on the trip to Mexico had been the blue-footed and brown boobies that are regularly seen there. We searched hard for them, but didn't have any luck. With the relatively low numbers of terns and pelicans also around, my guess is there wasn't enough fish for them in the northern most reaches of the Sea of Cortez. (I remember seeing similar things in San Ignacio Lagoon - some years the fish-eating birds were abundant, and others scarce, depending on the fish.) That's the way it is with wildlife of course; there are never any guarantees. But when Jason found the rare bird alert for the pair of Nazca boobies that have been in San Diego Bay since mid-December, well, we simply had to give it a shot!

I had never heard of a Nazca booby before, and that's because they are a recent split from the masked booby. Their primary breeding colonies are in the Galapagos Islands but they are also seen in other parts of the eastern tropical Pacific in southern Mexico and northern South America. They are considered a "mega-rarity" to the United States.

From reports from other birders, we knew the views from land were usually distant. The boobies tend to sit on the Number 34 buoy in the bay, near a Naval base, where the only viewing is from the far side of the bay. When they're flying around foraging, some have been lucky enough to get closer looks from land, but these sounded rare. The best views and photos were coming from those who got on a boat to go see them closer. We decided to start on land and make sure the birds were even present before deciding what to do next. From the shore-based lookout, we could barely make out a white speck on the buoy across the water - if it hadn't been for so many reports from others, I wouldn't have even been confident there was a bird on the buoy, let alone that it was a booby.

Do you see the Nazca booby? Do you even see the buoy it's on?
We did, however, see the white speck, and another birder with a scope said it was the booby. With having missed the boobies in Mexico, having this one so close, and being on vacation, we decided, "What the heck. Let's splurge and rent a boat and go see it." So we did just that! Loew's Action Sport Rentals was just down the road (and the booby has apparently been good for business!)

If the booby won't come to us, let's go to the booby!
We headed out for the Number 34 buoy and found....nothing.


Just our luck! The bird that had been sitting there had apparently taken off to forage, meaning it could be anywhere in the bay. We had less than an hour and counting to try and find it.

Finding a booby in a bay aka finding a needle in a haystack
We started cruising around at higher speed, stopping for any black and white bird soaring around.

Nope, not a Nazca booby - but a royal tern, that's cool too!
Then something caught my eye that was most definitely a different shape. We found one!!!

Plunge-diving Nazca booby
At first it was flying around at high speed and we only got distant looks. It would dive, and briefly sit on the water, but every time we got closer it would take off and resume foraging. 


But then it turned and flew right over us!

Wow! Success!
On our way back to the harbor we swung by the Number 34 buoy again, and this time we got lucky - the second bird had returned and let us get a great look.


We had definitely been concerned we were going to be skunked once we got out there, but it turned out to be well worth it! As we slowly motored back to port, I felt like we were being watched - and it turns out that we were, by this osprey:


On a roll, we decided to check out  the near by San Diego River estuary for some other great bird sightings that had been reported there in recent days. We found one of them - a little blue heron, a bird far more likely to be seen in the southeastern US than in the southwest.

Little blue heron - another great find!
By this point, however, us island dwellers had had enough of downtown, so we headed north out of the city and made a stop at one of my all-time favorite birding spots: Batiquitos Lagoon. I used to go here regularly when my grandpa lived in Oceanside and is one of the places that gets credit for getting young me excited about birding. I can't go through the San Diego area without making at least one short stop here. It's still basically in the city but regardless of time of year is home to an astounding amount of bird life.

Yay! Batiquitos Lagoon!
It didn't take long to start adding more year birds.

California towhee
While looking up for a possible great horned owl near a nest in the middle of the park, I spotted a merlin feeding on a vole or other small rodent. Their color is so much lighter here than the darker morphs back home that it took me a moment to recognize what it was!


I stopped at a pipe outlet where the water creates a dark puddle in the bushes. On a visit here with my dad probably about 20 years ago we had stopped here and seen a sora emerge from the reeds, still the only time I have ever seen that species. As I was telling Jason this story I couldn't believe my eyes when another elusive bird emerged from the grasses: a Virginia rail! I was trying so hard all of last year to get a chance to photograph this species and now I got a golden opportunity, right where I had seen a sora. Birding is so fascinating this way - how often you can go to the same little place and see the same type of thing even decades apart.

My first time photographing a Virginia rail!
Our trip was already winding down, but we still had a couple days in California, and we had plans to both soak up as much sunshine as possible and see as many birds as we could before heading back north! I'll wrap up our road trip story in the next blog post.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

San Diego From the Air and La Jolla Cove

Before heading back to San Juan Island, we spent a few more days in San Diego. We took a short scenic flight over the city, and my favorite part was flying up the coastline at about 1000 feet. I even saw a few gray whales and bottlenose dolphins from the air!

La Valencia hotel, also known as the Pink Lady of La Jolla

La Jolla Cove

Scripps Institute of Oceanography

The next day, we had a chance to visit La Jolla cove on the ground. It was insanely crowded as locals and visitors enjoyed the unseasonably warm early spring weather, and it never ceases to amaze me how the marine wildlife is living in such close proximity to so many people. Too close, really, I thought in this case.


People were showing little to no regard for the posted regulations about keeping your distance from sea lions.


It was really disheartening to see people not caring at all about the healthy sea lions, let alone the sick and dead ones. Here's someone taking a selfie with a pup; you can see one of them is really emaciated.


It's been a tough year for sea lion pup survival, and I'm sure the added stress of people isn't helping. But for some reason, the sea lions keep hanging out there.



We were commenting how amazing it was no one had been bitten, but apparently just a few hours before we were there a five year old kid got bitten in the face by a sea lion so....there you go.

In addition to the California sea lions, there were some harbor seals on the beaches as well. I was surprised to see so many pups; up here in Washington the pups aren't born until July, but I guess in California pups are born between February and April. This one was nursing despite having people all around it:


There were also lots of pelicans and cormorants around, plus one wandering tattler (137) to top off my year list additions for the California/Mexico trip.


Then, on Monday the 23rd, it was time to make the last leg of journey back north, where we welcomed by rain in Seattle.

Flying over the Space Needle on our descent into Seattle

Saturday, February 8, 2014

San Elijo Lagoon and La Jolla Cove

We got outta Dodge just in time, as much of the Pacific Northwest is covered in a fair amount of snow right now. There was just a dusting on the ground as we lifted off from Seattle and headed south for warmer climes - it was 69 (more than 40 degrees warmer!) and sunny upon landing in San Diego.

Today was our first full day in California and you can bet I was chomping at the bit to get adding to the year list. My goal was to reach 100 species (I was at 86) before heading to Mexico on Monday; little did I know it would take just an hour at San Elijo Lagoon to pass that mark!

First up was a black phoebe (87) as we pulled up the park, followed quickly by a white-crowned sparrow (88) and a pair of Anna's hummingbirds (89) right after stepping out of the car. Yellow-rumped warblers (90) flew everywhere among the scrub brush. There wasn't a lot of water in the lagoon, but enough to have a nice variety of waterfowl, including my first canvasback (91) of the year. The mud flats made good habitat for snowy egrets (92), willets (93), great egrets (94), and dunlin (95). 

Silhouetted black phoebe at San Elijo Lagoon

The lagoon wasn't really much to look at, but just over an hour of birding turned up over 30 species. Other year birds included a ring-billed gull (96), brown pelicans (97), orange-crowned warblers (98), an osprey (99), marbled godwits (100) a couple California towhees (101), and a common yellowthroat (102).

San Elijo Lagoon - right off I5, but great for birds!
In addition to all the birds, there were lizards everywhere too!


In fact, pretty much everywhere I looked, everything was totally different from home - not to mention the fact it's February and I was birding in a T-shirt!


Next, after getting some final provisions for the next leg of the trip, we headed to La Jolla Cove. It was a popular spot on this sunny Saturday, but that didn't keep the birds and marine mammals away. Again, right after stepping out of the car, I saw western gulls (103) and Heermann's gulls (104) - the latter species we won't see in the San Juans until July!


I also saw a small tern being harassed by some gulls, but wasn't able to get a good enough look to ID it. On the rocks, though, I found a single whimbrel (105) and wandering tattler (106), finishing off the year birds for the day with 20 new species, and easily making my goal of 100 before Mexico.

Brown pelicans at La Jolla Cove - love the "hairdo" of the one on the right

It's pretty cool that there are several places you can walk right out practically among the harbor seals and California sea lions. They don't seem to mind a bit.

People above, harbor seals below
I don't know why, but the harbor seals here looked so much bigger than the ones in Washington! Maybe it's just because I got so much closer to them.


It was cool to see so many California sea lions, too, the less common of our two sea lion species up north. There were only a few males, but lots of females and juveniles. I call this a sea lion "cuddle puddle":


The close observer could also find on terrestrial mammal underfoot - these ground squirrels on the cliffs:


This is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of wildlife sightings for this trip - I'll be out of internet contact for a bit, but I'm hoping there will be some pretty amazing stuff to share when I get back!