I found a Purple Sandpiper on the Pelletier Island causeway on Long Lake in St. Agatha on Saturday 14 May 2011. This was unexpected because Purple Sandpipers are just about unknown in Maine away from the rocky coastline where they overwinter.
The causeway is a low rocky road with little vegetation. It links the island which is part of St. Agatha with the eastern (Madawaska) shore.
The bird was feeding along on the rocks and was fairly easy to approach and I was able to get the documentation photos you see here..
This little shorebird really doesn't have much that sets it apart from other sandpipers. Note the heavily gray-streaked head with the dark crescent in front of the eye. Also the orange-ish base to a medium length dark bill. The legs are short and orangey-yellow. The belly was relatively unmarked and the neck and sides were streaky. On the back were some fresh black feathers with white margins. (My books say that if you could pluck one of these back feathers and hold it up to the light, you would see a deep purple iridescence that gives this sandpiper its name.)
When a rattly truck went by, the bird flushed and flew a bit and I was able to see the tail was light with a dark black center. I didn't notice any pattern of the wings.
The bird was a first for me in Aroostook county. An unexpected discovery for sure.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Summer Tanager at U. Maine Presque Isle, May 7
Bob and Sue Pinette found a fabulous male Summer Tanager today at the University of Maine at Presque Isle. The bright male was seen late in the morning along the foot path that winds down hill from the tennis courts at a point near where the trail crosses the railroad track. Bob and Sue said the bird was quite confiding and very easy to view.
Sue sent along two great photos of the bird. Seen in the pics is the birds overall bright red plumage and thick tanager bill. Unlike our breeding resident Scarlet Tanagers, the male Summer Tanagers have red wings rather than black.
Their normal breeding range being in the southern portions of the eastern US, Summer Tanagers are rare but regular vagrants to coastal Maine in spring. This species is all but unknown in the northern half of the state. I'm fairly confident that this is first for the county and certainly the northern-most record for the state.
It leaves me wondering what other southern goodies might have wandered north with the last storm system?...
Sue sent along two great photos of the bird. Seen in the pics is the birds overall bright red plumage and thick tanager bill. Unlike our breeding resident Scarlet Tanagers, the male Summer Tanagers have red wings rather than black.
Their normal breeding range being in the southern portions of the eastern US, Summer Tanagers are rare but regular vagrants to coastal Maine in spring. This species is all but unknown in the northern half of the state. I'm fairly confident that this is first for the county and certainly the northern-most record for the state.
It leaves me wondering what other southern goodies might have wandered north with the last storm system?...
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Northern Maine Birds: 23 April- 4 May 2011
Northern Maine is slowly emerging from winter. The past ten days passed without a flake of snow falling and the temperature pushed up into the 60's on several days. April ended with slightly above normal precipitation total (2.95 inches at Caribou) and slightly cooler temps for the month.
Only the bigger lakes in the region are still ice covered. Our favorite central Aroostook impoundments Christina Reservoir and Lake Josephine, lost their ice on the 28th this year. Water levels in streams and rivers remains quite high with the St John River just reaching flood stage late last week due to snowmelt.
Hardwoods have begun to flower and amphibian and insect activity has increased substantially.
New and arriving species seen during this period:
Snow Goose 4/27
Gadwall 4/26
American Wigeon 4/23
Northern Pintail 4/23
Blue-winged Teal 5/1
Redhead 4/23
Lesser Scaup 4/29
Greater Scaup 5/1
Black Scoter 5/4
Surf Scoter 5/4
Barrow's Goldeneye 4/26
Bufflehead 4/29
Ruddy Duck 5/4
Red-necked Grebe 5/1
Pied-billed Grebe 4/26
Broad-winged Hawk 4/23
Peregrine Falcon 5/3
Ruby-throated Hummingbird 5/3
Blue-headed Vireo 5/1
Brown Thrasher 5/4
Palm Warbler 5/1
Northern Parula 5/3
Yellow-rumped Warbler 4/27
Black-and-White Warbler 5/1
Northern Waterthrush 5/3
Fox Sparrow 4/23
Chipping Sparrow 4/23
Swamp Sparrow 4/28
Waterfowl diversity took a big jump in the county this week with ice-out occurring at the premier duck ponds: Lake Josephine in Easton and Christina Reservior in Fort Fairfield. Eighteen species of waterfowl have been reported this period.
Snow Geese returned to the St. John River flats in Grand Isle last week. Over 500 were estimated to be feeding in the potato fields there on the 27th. 13 including one Blue phase were also spotted in Madawaska on the 3rd. Flocks of Canada Geese continue to be reported as they move through. As mentioned earlier, many locally breeding Canadas are already on nests.
Expected arrivals this week included Gadwall and Blue-winged Teal (at Lake Jo), American Wigeon (at Collins Pond in Caribou) and Lesser Scaup (at Lake Jo and Christina Reservoir). Most noteworthy of the ducks was a pair of Redheads returning on the 23rd to a pond near Lake Josephine. Paul Cyr photographed the pair on the 25th. Among numbers of Commons, three Barrows Goldeneye's (26-29th) were nice finds at Lake Jo.
A Long-tailed Duck and a Bufflehead arriving as the ice left Christina Reservoir on the 29th were also notable. These were joined by more of their kind by May 4th at Lake Josephine. Yet another Long-tail was spotted by the UMPI Ornithology class on Presque Isle Stream in Presque Isle on the 3rd. Greater Scaup were spotted in Grand Isle 3 May and at Lake Jo 4 May. Black and Surf Scoters put down into Christina Reservoir on the 4th. Three males were the first Ruddy Duck arrivals at Lake Jo on the 4th.
The first Pied-billed Grebe was heard calling at Christina Reservoir on the 26th. Another was heard near the Muscovic Road in Stockholm on May 1st. A special discovery was a Red-necked Grebe photographed in breeding plumage on Lake Josephine on the 1st. The attractive diver is seen in Paul Cyr's photo at the top of this post
Double-crested Cormorants and Common Loons were quick to crowd into open water as the await the opening of the ice cover on the larger lakes. This nice breeding plumaged adult was photographed by Paul Cyr. You can even seen one of its "crests"!
A Great Blue Heron was photographed in Littleton on the 27th and other was seen at Easton on the 2nd. A Turkey Vulture was seen feeding on the roadside in Conner Twp on the 4th.
Birders found a good diversity of raptors in northern Maine this week with 11 species noted. Bald Eagles continue on the nests at Ashland, Fort Fairfield, Presque Isle and Van Buren. Ospreys are also now occupying most nest sites in the area including the large nest on the power poles near Route 1 in Van Buren. A previous report noted a young Bald Eagle adding sticks to the structure...
Sharp-shinned Hawks were seen in Fort Fairfield on the 23rd, as was the first arriving Broad-winged Hawk of the year. A Red-tailed Hawk was a Square Lake Township on 1 May and a Northern Goshawk flew over Barren Lake in Caribou on the 28th. A large Coopers Hawk was chased by an American Kestrel near the Presque Isle Airport on Wednesday the 4th.
Always a notable sight in Aroostook, an adult Peregrine Falcon was spotted feeding on a Ring-billed Gull beside the Roosevelt School in Hamlin on the 3rd. Merlins were seen and heard in Caribou on May 1, Quimby (Winterville) on 25 April and Stockholm on the 25 April and 1 May. American Kestrels were widely reported.
Boreal Chickadees were heard on the Muscovic Road on the 1st of May and Gray Jays were spotted in New Sweden on May 1. Both Ruby-crowned and Golden-crowned Kinglets are singing loudly the conifer woods these days. The first Ruby-throated Hummingbird for the county was reported from Stockholm on the 3rd...early for sure.
The first Blue-headed Vireo of the year arrived on schedule at New Sweden on 1st. Loud couplets announced the arrival of a Brown Thrasher at Presque Isle Airport on the 4th.
The first warblers of the season were trickling in to northern Maine as April gave way to May. Yellow-rumps were reported across the area in moderate numbers. Other warbler arrivals in central Aroostook included Palm Warblers at the Muscovic Road in Stockholm and the Burnt Landing Road in Cross Lake Twp on the 1st; a Black-and-White Warbler at Mantle Lake Park in PI on the 1st; a Northern Parula at Madawaska Lake on the 3rd; a Black-throated Green Warbler at Barren Lake in Caribou on the 3rd; Northern Waterthrushes at Arnold Brook Lake in Presque Isle on the 3rd and Collins Pond in Caribou and Christina Reservoir in Fort Fairfield on the 4th.
A pair of Northern Cardinals are visiting a Presque Isle feeder. Ted Roberts got this shot of the pair on Wednesday the 4th.
Blackbird numbers continued to increase as territories are occupied in area marshes. Paul Cyr sent over this nice shot of a singing male.
Notable change in the finch department were lots of Purple Finches arriving at the end of the month.
Evening Grosbeaks continue in pairs and small flocks at Castle Hill, Caribou, Fort Fairfield, Fort Kent, New Sweden, Portage Lake, Presque Isle, St. Francis, St. John Stockholm, Winterville and Woodland. Though most have now departed, small numbers of Common Redpolls are still being reported around the area. A Hoary Redpoll was part of one of the last flocks to visit my feeders in Woodland on the 23rd. A handful of Pine Siskins were seen (Caribou, Madawaska Lake, Presque Isle, Woodland) and numbers of these seem to be increasing.
Only the bigger lakes in the region are still ice covered. Our favorite central Aroostook impoundments Christina Reservoir and Lake Josephine, lost their ice on the 28th this year. Water levels in streams and rivers remains quite high with the St John River just reaching flood stage late last week due to snowmelt.
Hardwoods have begun to flower and amphibian and insect activity has increased substantially.
New and arriving species seen during this period:
Snow Goose 4/27
Gadwall 4/26
American Wigeon 4/23
Northern Pintail 4/23
Blue-winged Teal 5/1
Redhead 4/23
Lesser Scaup 4/29
Greater Scaup 5/1
Black Scoter 5/4
Surf Scoter 5/4
Barrow's Goldeneye 4/26
Bufflehead 4/29
Ruddy Duck 5/4
Red-necked Grebe 5/1
Pied-billed Grebe 4/26
Broad-winged Hawk 4/23
Peregrine Falcon 5/3
Ruby-throated Hummingbird 5/3
Blue-headed Vireo 5/1
Brown Thrasher 5/4
Palm Warbler 5/1
Northern Parula 5/3
Yellow-rumped Warbler 4/27
Black-and-White Warbler 5/1
Northern Waterthrush 5/3
Fox Sparrow 4/23
Chipping Sparrow 4/23
Swamp Sparrow 4/28
Waterfowl diversity took a big jump in the county this week with ice-out occurring at the premier duck ponds: Lake Josephine in Easton and Christina Reservior in Fort Fairfield. Eighteen species of waterfowl have been reported this period.
Snow Geese returned to the St. John River flats in Grand Isle last week. Over 500 were estimated to be feeding in the potato fields there on the 27th. 13 including one Blue phase were also spotted in Madawaska on the 3rd. Flocks of Canada Geese continue to be reported as they move through. As mentioned earlier, many locally breeding Canadas are already on nests.
Expected arrivals this week included Gadwall and Blue-winged Teal (at Lake Jo), American Wigeon (at Collins Pond in Caribou) and Lesser Scaup (at Lake Jo and Christina Reservoir). Most noteworthy of the ducks was a pair of Redheads returning on the 23rd to a pond near Lake Josephine. Paul Cyr photographed the pair on the 25th. Among numbers of Commons, three Barrows Goldeneye's (26-29th) were nice finds at Lake Jo.
A Long-tailed Duck and a Bufflehead arriving as the ice left Christina Reservoir on the 29th were also notable. These were joined by more of their kind by May 4th at Lake Josephine. Yet another Long-tail was spotted by the UMPI Ornithology class on Presque Isle Stream in Presque Isle on the 3rd. Greater Scaup were spotted in Grand Isle 3 May and at Lake Jo 4 May. Black and Surf Scoters put down into Christina Reservoir on the 4th. Three males were the first Ruddy Duck arrivals at Lake Jo on the 4th.
The first Pied-billed Grebe was heard calling at Christina Reservoir on the 26th. Another was heard near the Muscovic Road in Stockholm on May 1st. A special discovery was a Red-necked Grebe photographed in breeding plumage on Lake Josephine on the 1st. The attractive diver is seen in Paul Cyr's photo at the top of this post
Double-crested Cormorants and Common Loons were quick to crowd into open water as the await the opening of the ice cover on the larger lakes. This nice breeding plumaged adult was photographed by Paul Cyr. You can even seen one of its "crests"!
A Great Blue Heron was photographed in Littleton on the 27th and other was seen at Easton on the 2nd. A Turkey Vulture was seen feeding on the roadside in Conner Twp on the 4th.
Birders found a good diversity of raptors in northern Maine this week with 11 species noted. Bald Eagles continue on the nests at Ashland, Fort Fairfield, Presque Isle and Van Buren. Ospreys are also now occupying most nest sites in the area including the large nest on the power poles near Route 1 in Van Buren. A previous report noted a young Bald Eagle adding sticks to the structure...
Sharp-shinned Hawks were seen in Fort Fairfield on the 23rd, as was the first arriving Broad-winged Hawk of the year. A Red-tailed Hawk was a Square Lake Township on 1 May and a Northern Goshawk flew over Barren Lake in Caribou on the 28th. A large Coopers Hawk was chased by an American Kestrel near the Presque Isle Airport on Wednesday the 4th.
Always a notable sight in Aroostook, an adult Peregrine Falcon was spotted feeding on a Ring-billed Gull beside the Roosevelt School in Hamlin on the 3rd. Merlins were seen and heard in Caribou on May 1, Quimby (Winterville) on 25 April and Stockholm on the 25 April and 1 May. American Kestrels were widely reported.
Boreal Chickadees were heard on the Muscovic Road on the 1st of May and Gray Jays were spotted in New Sweden on May 1. Both Ruby-crowned and Golden-crowned Kinglets are singing loudly the conifer woods these days. The first Ruby-throated Hummingbird for the county was reported from Stockholm on the 3rd...early for sure.
The first Blue-headed Vireo of the year arrived on schedule at New Sweden on 1st. Loud couplets announced the arrival of a Brown Thrasher at Presque Isle Airport on the 4th.
The first warblers of the season were trickling in to northern Maine as April gave way to May. Yellow-rumps were reported across the area in moderate numbers. Other warbler arrivals in central Aroostook included Palm Warblers at the Muscovic Road in Stockholm and the Burnt Landing Road in Cross Lake Twp on the 1st; a Black-and-White Warbler at Mantle Lake Park in PI on the 1st; a Northern Parula at Madawaska Lake on the 3rd; a Black-throated Green Warbler at Barren Lake in Caribou on the 3rd; Northern Waterthrushes at Arnold Brook Lake in Presque Isle on the 3rd and Collins Pond in Caribou and Christina Reservoir in Fort Fairfield on the 4th.
A pair of Northern Cardinals are visiting a Presque Isle feeder. Ted Roberts got this shot of the pair on Wednesday the 4th.
Blackbird numbers continued to increase as territories are occupied in area marshes. Paul Cyr sent over this nice shot of a singing male.
Notable change in the finch department were lots of Purple Finches arriving at the end of the month.
Evening Grosbeaks continue in pairs and small flocks at Castle Hill, Caribou, Fort Fairfield, Fort Kent, New Sweden, Portage Lake, Presque Isle, St. Francis, St. John Stockholm, Winterville and Woodland. Though most have now departed, small numbers of Common Redpolls are still being reported around the area. A Hoary Redpoll was part of one of the last flocks to visit my feeders in Woodland on the 23rd. A handful of Pine Siskins were seen (Caribou, Madawaska Lake, Presque Isle, Woodland) and numbers of these seem to be increasing.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Lake Josephine at dawn
Friday, April 22, 2011
Northern Maine Birds: 13-22 April 2011

Northern Maine has been blustery, cold and damp for most of the past ten days. At least some snow fell at the National Weather Station in Caribou on 7 days and 4 to 8 inches blanketed the area on the 20- 21st.
Ice continued to retreat from area waterbodies but oh-so-slowly....There were some moments when insects were active, but these have been few. Waterfowl and hawk migration expectedly continued at a decent pace, but the unfavorable weather conditions seem to have retarded movements of the smaller birds. "Winter" birds continue to be seen in good numbers.
New and arriving species reported this period:
Green-winged Teal 4/13
Northern Shoveler 4/19
Long-tailed Duck 4/22
Common Loon 4/19
Double-crested Cormorant 4/20
Osprey 4/16
Wilson's Snipe 4/22
Glaucous Gull 4/16
Belted Kingfisher 4/22
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 4/16
Winter Wren 4/22
Eastern Bluebird 4/13
Hermit Thrush 4/22
Purple Finch 4/17
Waterfowl diversity and numbers are a bit below last year's tallies for this late in the month.
Over the period, Canada Goose numbers climbed quickly throughout the county, with a high count of 680 on Collins Pond in Caribou on the 21st. A goose was already found on a nest in Fort Fairfield on the 17th!

A Northern Shoveler was spotted near Lake Josephine in Easton on the 19th. (Like most ponds and lakes in the area, both Lake Josephine and Christina Reservoir remain mostly icebound.) An arriving drake Green-winged Teal made a brief appearance at a streamside yard in Presque Isle. Though the little duck didn't stay long, Vickie Ketch was able to snap this shot of the bright bird before it departed.
The rarest duck seen so far was a breeding plumaged drake Long-tailed Duck found on the Aroostook River in Fort Fairfield. usually seen on salt water in bays along the coast, this bird was resting a bit, on its long journey to the Canadian arctic.
Mallards and American Black Ducks continue to dominate the reports with good numbers of divers being seen where ever there is open water. Common Merganser reports seemed increase while Hooded Mergansers seemed to thin out a bit. (The Hoody's vanishing act was probably due, in part, to increasing availability of open water in the small wooded ponds that they prefer.) 78 Ring-necked Ducks were crammed into a small patch of open water at Lake Josephine on the 22nd.
Wild Turkeys are strutting their stuff in Mapleton and Presque Isle. Neale Adams sent over a picture of an impressive gobbler in full display in the middle of his driveway on the 13th! A Ruffed Grouse was budding high in a poplar tree at Arnold Brook Lake in Presque Isle on the 20th.
The first Common Loons quickly overspread the area from Danforth (4/19) to Blaine (4/21) to Fort Fairfield (4/22). Right on schedule, the first arriving Double-crested Cormorant was seen on Presque Isle Stream on the 20th. Great Blue Herons remain the only wader reported in the county to date.

An honorary raptor, a Turkey Vulture was reported again at Mars Hill on the 21st. Bald Eagles continue at the nest in Fort Fairfield. Paul Cyr sent over this shot of the pair after the recent snow.
Other hawk highlights this week was the arrival of Ospreys, increasing numbers of Northern Harriers and American Kestrels and a debated falcon in New Sweden. On the early side of the normal arrival time, a high-flying Osprey in Easton on the 16th was a bit of a surprise. Other arrivals were birds in Sherman (4/21) and Island Falls (4/19). Sharp-shinned Hawks were reported in Bancroft, Castle Hill, Island Falls, New Sweden, Presque Isle and Woodland
Northern Harriers were seen gliding over open fields across the county and American Kestrels were again, reported widely (Ashland, Bridgewater, Caribou, Easton, Fort Fairfield, Hodgdon, Limestone, Mapleton, Sherman, Washburn and Woodland). An apparent Merlin snagged a Mourning Dove at a New Sweden feeder on the 20th. A dark phase Rough-legged Hawk was enjoyed in Fort Fairfield on the 13th. Two light phase individuals were seen near Lake Josephine on the 16th.
Killdeer have crowded into bare spots following the snow. An American Woodcock was heard doing its peenting display in Mapleton on the 13th. Arriving in Fort Fairfield on the 22nd, the first reported Wilson's Snipe was a bit later than average for central Aroostook.

Collins Pond continues to be the spot to find unusual gulls in northern Maine. As many as a thousand gulls are congregating here each evening to bath and roost. As expected, the flock is dominated by migrant Herring and Ring-billed Gulls with a smaller number of Great black-backed Gulls also present. More notable among the flock is a first cycle Glaucous Gull that was seen from 16th to the 20th of April and a first cycle Iceland Gull that was first found on the 11th and continues here to date. The ghostly white Glaucous Gull is seen here with a couple similarly aged Herring Gulls. Another 1st cycle Iceland Gull was seen by the UMPI ornithology class during a visit to the Presque Isle landfill.
Also noteworthy are two and possibly three adult Lesser Black-backed Gulls. The color marked Ring-billed Gull "A 608" continued to be seen at Collins Pond through to the 21st.
Barred Owls were heard at Trafton Lake in Limestone, Woodland and Presque Isle. The first Belted Kingfisher of the year for me showed at Collins Pond on the 22nd.

Ravens seem to have completed their nest building and there are decidedly less territorial squabbles these days. American Crows however have not yet settled down and nests are still under construction. A pair of dueling crows were fighting in my yard in the pouring rain on the 18th. The battle was particularly vicious, with clawing and heavy blows from their bills. I
watched them tumble around in the mud for well over 30 minutes when they both appeared too exhausted to continue fighting but neither was willing to back down. Heres a shot of the boys going at it. Notice the claw IN the eyelid... ugh.
A few Tree Swallows were noted at Portage Lake (4/16) and in Patten but it appears the early arrivals from the first week of April did not fare well in the cold and rainy weather. Dyer Brook was the location where the first Winter Wren was heard on the 22nd.
Eastern Bluebirds arrived in Bancroft in southern Aroostook county by the 13th and the first Hermit Thrush was reported in the same town on the 22nd.

American Robins have dominated the landscape for the full period and were particularly notable following the snows. I counted
almost three hundred on one small patch of lawn at Trafton Lake on the 16th. Alton and Brenda Ketch sent over this nice photo of an apparently unhappy group of robins in their yard at Madawaska Lake on the 21st.

A late spring pulse of Bohemian Waxwings appeared in Central Aroostook ahead of the snow storm. Small and medium sized flocks were noted in Caribou, Easton, Fort Fairfield Woodland and Presque Isle. Paul Cyr sent over this shot of one of a flock he photographed while they were feeding on some last bits of fruit in Fort Fairfield on the 19th.

Sparrows numbers have been increasing throughout the period with Dark-eyed Juncos and Song Sparrows making up the majority of the flocks crowding under feeder these days. Up at the top of the post you'll find a great shot of a junco that Patty Jennings sent up from Stacyville on the 21st. The bird appears to be looking up into the sky and wondering when the snow would stop...Thanks to the deep snow cover in their favored fields, Savannah Sparrows also showed up at feeding stations in the area. This bird's bright yellow lores drew Paul Cyr's attention. American Tree Sparrows continue to linger at area feeders...the very similar Chipping Sparrows should arrive soon, giving an opportunity to compare the two species side-by-side.
Large blackbird flocks continue. Typically arriving a bit later than the male dominated vanguard, female Brown-headed Cowbirds and Red-winged Blackbirds were first noted in flocks this week.

The continuing finch show has been spectacular this week with Common Redpoll counts reaching high hundreds at some area feeders. A Hoary Redpoll was teased out of a horde visiting a New Sweden feeder. Ernie Easter got this nice shot of the silvery finch. After a long absence in northern Maine the first returning Purple Finches were noted last week. Males were seen on the 17th in Caribou, New Sweden and Woodland. Pine Siskins and American Goldfinches are also being spotted in small numbers. Evening Grosbeaks continue to be seen regularly across the area.
Good Birding
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Sick Redpolls

Northern Maine birders are reporting big numbers of Common Redpolls visiting area feeders. These are likely some of the flocks that wintered in southern Maine and elsewhere starting to move back north towards their summer haunts.
I wanted to pass on that there have also been a high number of reports of sick redpolls appearing in across this area as well. In addition to personally spotting a couple in my yard, I have heard of almost a dozen other cases in northern Maine. These were reported in Caribou, Castle Hill, Sherman, Monticello, Easton and Presque Isle. In one yard I visited, the homeowner and I found 14 dead Common Redpolls and 6 or 7 apparently ill birds still sluggishly hopping around on the snow. I haven't heard of other species of birds being found sick or dead.
The sick birds were easy to approach and looked puffed up. Some had droopy wings. Russ Mount sent me this photo of a struggling bird.
According to my biologist friends, it looks like the redpolls around here are suffering from Salmonellosis, a severe infection from the bacteria Salmonella ssp. This disease is spread readily among birds congregating at feeders at this time of the year. The smaller finch species are most susceptible to its effects. Pets and humans can also be effected.
The professionals in-the-know recommended removing and cleaning the feeders in 1 part bleach to 10 part water dilution (NOT in the kitchen sink). Rubber gloves and good hygiene are in order when handling these.
It's also imperative to clean up the end-of-winter gurry of waste seed, hulls and feces that piles up under many of our feeders this time of year. This pile is usually soggy, dark colored and warms easily in the strengthening spring sun and provides a great spot for bacteria to incubate.
Last, it may be a good time to just bring in the feeders for a while and let the redpoll flocks disperse. This is a time in northern Maine when lots of non-bird critters are showing up and causing trouble at feeders anyway. My black bear is probably due any day....
According my reading, its tough to predict when and where a Salmonella outbreak will occur but late winter and early spring are reported to be the most likely times. Preventative regular scrubbings of feeders and debris clean up are good ideas.
Just to continue to track the local outbreak, I'd like to hear if anyone else sees sick birds in their area.
Theres all kinds of good info online on Salmonellosis for those inclined to read more. Heres a link to good synopsis of the disease:
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Marked Ring-billed Gull, Collins Pond Caribou

Back on the 11th, I spotted a marked Ring-billed Gull at Collins Pond in Caribou. The adult bird was banded with both the standard USF&WS aluminum band and a color band but was also fitted with an orange patagial (wing) tag with the number 608 on it. Craig Kesselhiem was able to relocate the bird the following day.
I suspected the bird was marked as part of an ongoing study of gulls that winter on drinking water reservoirs in Massachusetts since another gull with patagial marks had be found in Aroostook County previously. A quick email check in with the biologists in Mass confirmed that our new bird was part of the study. The bird was apparently banded just a month ago in the famous Price Chopper Plaza on Route 20 in Worcester, Mass! Heres what bander Ken MacKenzie had for statistics about the bird:
Captured 3/15/11 at Price Chopper Plaza, Rt. 20, Worcester, MA
Capture location (GPS): 42.21324, - 71.79617
Captured using a rocket net baited with crackers and bread
Adult male ring-billed gull
Orange wing-tags: A608
Red leg band: 264
Federal leg band: 0994-21427
Released on site
Sightings:
This is the first sighting of this gull since it capture. Thank you!
You can read more about the gull banding effort here.
These are true waterfoul!
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