Where: Reifel Bird Sanctuary (Delta), Tlahutum Regional Park (Coquitlam), Burnaby Lake (Burnaby)
Weather: Cloudy, 13°C
I was feeling weird and tired in the morning, so I missed the entire Reifel section of birding today.
Reifel Bird Sanctuary
Nic saw a bunch of Snow Geese, some White-fronted Geese hanging with them, and the Killdeer still protecting their parking lot nest. The babbies are expected to hatch soon.
I have no photos from Reifel, so you’ll have to use your imagination.
Tlahutum Regional Park

We both went to Tlahutum and spoiler: no Mountain Bluebirds, but we did see a somewhat elusive Cinnamon Teal for the first time this season at the big pond, where all the cool birds were hanging out, ranging from Buffleheads to Gadwalls and shovelers.
We opted to skip the community garden, though we could see the flooded bits are starting to dry out. Soon™.
The bulk of the trails proved fairly quiet, with only a few Golden-crowned Sparrows and some crows, but not a lot else. Maybe birds like the sun, because it remained overcast the entire afternoon (though it did not shower, as the forecast had threatened).
The other highlight came when we took a path different from the usual on the way back to the car and came across, of all things, a Bewick’s Wren having a grand old time taking a dirt bath right in the middle of the trail. We took photos until it was done and flew off. It was very into the dirt bath.
In all, though, a quiet outing here today.
Piper Spit, Burnaby Lake Regional Park

By the time we got to Piper Spit, the wind had picked up and it felt a bit cool, a big shift from the last few days of summer-like weather.
While the lake level was lower, meaning more of the land mass is now above water, it was still too deep around the spit for shorebirds. Most of the usual gang were otherwise represented, including a single Glaucous-winged Gull, perhaps selected to check the status of the golf balls the gulls have collected there.
The coots seemed to be split into two groups: the clean-billed and the dirty-billed. The dirty-billed had black…stuff…along their “lips”. I have no idea what it signifies. Maybe we have two rival coot gangs and the coot war is coming.
A lot of the birds we saw today were looking scruffy, due to moulting, and among them were some Green-winged Teals who looked a bit like unfinished paintings, with their heads flecked with green instead of lovingly smothered in it.
The drama here was kept to a minimum, though the geese were still being geese. You can’t fight your nature.
I have still not gotten a decent photo of a cowbird yet.
And we saw a pigeon couple kissing and kissing and kissing some more. Another male, meanwhile, was trying and failing to impress the ladies again.
We ended with a stop at the butterfly garden, which is still absent of butterflies, but did have a Goldenrod Crab Spider tucked inside a tulip, its front legs spread out, ready to give a deadly hug to any early pollinators. The one we saw was an almost translucent white, though they can change colour to match their surroundings. How sneaky!
The weather was better than forecast, but it was still very gray. I guess it makes the motre colourful birds pop, so there is that. In all, a nice bit of afternoon birding.
The Shots
Shot with a Canon EOS R7 with 18-150 mm kit lens and 100-400 mm telephoto.
A few shots, gallery pending:





The Birds (and other critters)
Sparrows and sparrow-adjacent:
- American Robin
- Anna’s Hummingbird
- Barn Swallow
- Black-capped Chickadee
- Brown-headed Cowbird
- Common Yellowthroat
- Dark-eyed Junco
- Golden-crowned Sparrow
- House Sparrow
- Northern Rough-winged Swallow
- Red-winged Blackbird
- Song Sparrow
- Spotted Towhee
- Tree Swallow
- Violet-green Swallow
- Yellow-rumped Warbler
Waterfowl and shorebirds:
- American Coot
- American Wigeon
- Bewick’s Wren
- Bufflehead
- Canada Goose
- Cinnamon Teal
- Gadwall
- Great Blue Heron
- Green-winged Teal
- Killdeer
- Marsh wren
- Lesser Scaup
- Mallard
- Northern Pintail
- Northern Shoveler
- Ring-necked Duck
- Snow Goose
- White-fronted Goose
- Wood Duck
Common:
- American Crow
- Rock Pigeon
- Glaucous-winged Gull
Raptors:
- Bald Eagle
- Northern Harrier
Non-birds:
- Goldenrod Crab Spider
















