Birding, August 31, 2024: Light and heat

Where: Tlahutum Regional Park (Coquitlam), Burnaby Lake (Burnaby)
Weather: Sunny, 22-29°C

The Outing

Piper Spit, Burnaby Lake

Piper Spit in mid-morning. Squint to see a coot on the right-hand side.

Today was a briefer outing, and we started at Piper Spit, which was perhaps a slight tactical error, as the sun was low and to the east, which is the opposite of where you want it, as most of the waterfowl at the spit hang out on the east side.

We made do with the conditions and were rewarded with the return of another migrant, or perhaps “migrant” since it allegedly doesn’t migrate, yet always disappears locally every summer. In this case, a couple of Northern pintails have returned, joining the growing coot population. No other migrants were spotted, but the geese kept honking and carrying on, as if to suggest why can’t we just be happy with them, huh? Huh? HONK HONK HONK.

Goldfinches proved elusive to shoot again, though we spotted a rare warbling vireo, so that was spiffy. We also saw some chickadees, one of which was especially generous and posed for quite a bit.

There were also some dowitchers, but today they were gathered farther away from the pier, boo.

More wood duck dudes are showing full mullet now. Soon the entire lake will radiate with their iridescent beauty. Or something.

We did not stay overly long, but took note that it was already quite warm by mid-morning. It would get hotter still!

Tlahutum Regional Park

Coquitlam River looking very shallow at Tlahutum.

Next up was Tlahutum. We did our usual circuit to the big pond before stopping at the community garden before leaving. The big pond was a big bust–no birds! We did see what Nic thinks was a swallow of some sort flying very high above, the only one we saw. The rest are probably relaxing in Mexico now, or wherever it is they go. I know, I am typing this on the internet and could just look it up, but I am lazy love a mystery.

We did see a number of cedar waxwings, including one that hung out atop a tree for quite a long while, occasionally preening, panting or poofing itself out. The others were not quite as close, but a few had their kids in tow.

A heron flapped into one of the side creeks, and we got some decent shots of it standing there, looking stabby, but birds were generally few, possibly because by this time it was around 29C and felt even hotter due to the humidity. At this point we’d also had our fill of walking in the open sun, with no shade at all, and leaded off. We wore sunscreen this time, so no burning!

In all, not a bad outing, but this definitely feels like the “between” season, where some migrants are about to depart, some are coming in, but everything is in flux.

The Shots

Soon™

The Birds (and other critters). Rare or rarely-seen birds highlighted in bold.

Sparrows and sparrow-adjacent:

  • American goldfinch
  • Barn swallow (probably)
  • Black-capped chickadee
  • Cedar waxwing
  • Downy woodpecker
  • Red-winged blackbird
  • Song sparrow (maybe?)
  • Spotted towhee
  • Warbling vireo

Waterfowl and shorebirds:

  • American coot (three!)
  • Canada goose
  • Great blue heron
  • Long-billed dowitcher
  • Mallard
  • Northern pintail (the return!)
  • Wood duck

Common:

  • American crow
  • Rock pigeon

Raptors:

  • None

Non-birds:

  • A fuzzy caterpillar that didn’t know how close it came to being smooshed by a bike
  • Assorted pollinators
  • Fewer dragonflies and butterflies

Leave a Comment