Posted by Robin Diaz on September 27, 2015 at 19:00:30
Twenty-three wonderful birders joined me this morning for the TAS walk in Bill Baggs Cape Florida SP. WOW - What a morning! A little bit of whining early on must have done some good because we later had a quality morning. Most birds that were stopped by last Thursday's rain have left but new birds came in - not in large numbers but in good diversity. As we started up the mound and admired a close, perched Bobolink, a call from Cape Florida Banding Station changed our plans. They had just mist netted a young MacGillivray's Warbler! While Michelle Davis showed us the bird, there was speculation whether it could be a young Mourning Warbler. Bill contends that there is no such thing as a Mourning Warbler so we had to settle for a MacGillivray's in the hand. Brandon Trentler's photo shows the undertail coverts, which eliminates Mourning Warbler. CFBS kept producing good birds so we didn't get far! A small group got on a cuckoo and after it flew across the path, we realized that it was a Mangrove Cuckoo. It sat in the open and posed for photos. If anyone from the walk wants to share their photos, please do so. We ended up with 12 warbler species and other good birds. Paul picked out some good birds while on the north end of the bike path. THANKS everyone!! Warblers: Prairie Ovenbird (plus in hand) Black-and-white Cape May Black-throated Blue Common Yellowthroat Northern Parula Yellow-throated American Redstart Worm-eating (plus in hand) Northern Waterthrush MacGILLIVRAY'S Other birds of interest: Merlin Cooper's Hawk Broad-winged Hawk Bobolink White-crowned Pigeon Traill's Flycatcher (in hand) Red-eyed Vireo Yellow-throated Vireo (in hand) Yellow-billed Cuckoo MANGROVE CUCKOO Baltimore Oriole Veery Catharus thrush (probably Swainson's) Great Crested Flycatcher Barn Swallow Common Ground-Dove