Where: Terra Nova, Richmond Nature House (Richmond), Burnaby Lake (Burnaby)
Weather: Sunny, 4-7°C
It was windy and kind of chilly, but also sunny. Hooray for the sun.
Terra Nova

We started at Terra Nova, where it initially reported 4C but “feels like 0”, which seemed accurate. Some wigeons were there to greet us just offshore, noshing among the marshy outcroppings. Farther off (too far, boo) were a bunch of herons brooding in the tall grass. We also spotted a few less social ones brooding off on their own.
When we moved away from the water, we came across a bunch of sparrows doing the sparrow thing. We looped off into the Terra Nova Natural Area (unclear on where the Artificial Area is–maybe the parking lots?) and when we came back, someone had scattered some seed, which drew the attention of all the birds, many of which were banded or banded and sporting a radio transmitter. This is probably how the “birds aren’t real” conspiracies get started.
I, of course, shot planes.
We did not see any grebes at the main pond, but we didn’t not not see them, either, if you know what I mean. There were some scaups, though.
In all, Terra Nova proved to be a perhaps unexpected bounty, just as Brydon Lagoon had been a few weeks earlier.
Richmond Nature House

We went to the Richmond Nature House next, unsure what to expect. Would there be seed in the feeders, and also possibly birds? The answer was yes to both. However, only a few feeders were filled (including the nectar feeders), so while there were birds, they weren’t ravaging the area like we usually see. Instead, we saw a small but nice collection of juncos, chickadees, hummingbirds, and towhees. And we saw our first Rufous Hummingbirds of the season, who may look even more “I’ll stab you” than Anna’s Hummingbirds (which we also saw).
Piper Spit, Burnaby Lake

We wrapped at Piper Spit and there were so many people feeding the birds (especially the blackbirds, which shamelessly pander for food) it was as if the signs said PLEASE FEED THE WILDLIFE. Alas.
The recent rains have reduced the adjacent island into a tiny little piece of land big enough for a few gulls and their golf balls, which is what we saw there.
One gull took a golf ball out and played the seagull equivalent of golf with it, which involves flying up over the water, hovering, dropping the ball, then retrieving it and doing it again. I mean, at least it wasn’t trying to eat it.
Most of the usual ducks were present, including a single adorable Bufflehead who got close enough for a few good shots before disappearing back into the Bufflehead dimension. We also saw the first sparrows of the year. I’m guessing Tree Swallows, but they were too far away to positively identify. The water level was too high for shorebirds, so the Dowitcher count was, sadly, zero.
Making up for that (?) were plenty of Canada Geese, and they were engaged in all kinds of goose shenanigans, some of which we captured in loving/terrifying detail.
The coots were downright ordinary in comparison.
With the sun out and a lot of close-range targets, I got much better shots than last week, so I am pleased.
Maybe next time we’ll finally return to Reifel. It could happen!
The Shots
Shot with a Canon EOS R7 with 18-150 mm kit lens and 100-400 mm telephoto.
The Birds (and other critters)
Sparrows and sparrow-adjacent:
- American Robin
- Anna’s Hummingbird
- Black-capped Chickadee
- Dark-eyed Junco
- Fox Sparrow
- Golden-crowned Sparrow
- Northern Flicker
- Red-winged Blackbird
- Rufous Hummingbird
- Song Sparrow
- Spotted Towhee
- Tree Swallow (probably)
Waterfowl and shorebirds:
- American Coot
- American Wigeon
- Bufflehead
- Canada Goose
- Great Blue Heron
- Green-winged Teal
- Mallard
- Northern Pintail
- Scaup
- Wood Duck
Common:
- American Crow
- Rock pigeon
- Seagulls aplenty
Raptors:
- Bald Eagle
- Red-tailed Hawk (probably)
Non-birds:
- Airplanes
- Golf balls












































