"Fallout" Conditions - Landbird Migration, Santa Cruz, 29 Sep 2017

Drove down to the Pajaro River mouth this morning, on a hunch that the sudden cool weather might drop a bunch of migrating landbirds.

The offshore fog/dense marine layer appears to have been enough to sufficiently disorient some southbound migrant warblers especially, and the shorebirds pond at the end of Shell Road (limited public access) was amazingly dense with warblers.

I'd never felt so fully surrounded and overwhelmed by birds in Santa Cruz as I did this morning. I encountered Yellow, Orange-crowned, Townsend's, Common Yellowthroats, Yellow-rumped, and one Tennessee Warbler, with a total of 77 individual warblers in the small area of the pond, entrance road, and back pond.

The back pond area is especially interesting by virtue of the presence of some native plants I rarely encounter elsewhere in the county. Hoita macrostachya, Bidens laevis among them.

Posted on 30 de setembro de 2017, 12:42 AM by leptonia leptonia

Observações

Fotos / Sons

What

Mariquita-Do-Tennessee (Leiothlypis peregrina)

Observador

leptonia

Data

Setembro 29, 2017 08:06 AM PDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

leptonia

Data

Setembro 29, 2017 08:59 AM PDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

leptonia

Data

Setembro 29, 2017 08:48 AM PDT

Comentários

Fascinating! @dpom @gyrrlfalcon

Publicado por metsa mais de 6 anos antes

We are hoping for similar conditions tomorrow at San Bruno for the Blitz!

Publicado por gyrrlfalcon mais de 6 anos antes

Very cool,thanks for the post!

Publicado por bigsurwild mais de 6 anos antes

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