Several other birders were present to see the previously reported Red-necked 
Phalarope. But today, there were 5(!), including one in adult breeding plumage, 
seen fairly close from the blind. 7 other species seen, including:
-Solitary Sandpiper (one at drying-out pond on the way to blind)
-Least Sandpipers (abundant)
-Semipalmated Sandpiper (one with a flock of 2 Least's at drying-out pond)
-Lesser Yellowlegs (most abundant)
-Pectoral Sandpipers (abundant)
-Spotted Sandpiper (total of 2)
-Semipalmated Plover (at least 1; possibly two. One from bridge near parking; 
other 1 or 2 viewed from blind)

There was also a beautifully-marked peep that had the similar crisp plumage of 
a Least (and same size) except it had a buffy rust/rufous color on its chest. 
We never came to a consensus as to what the peep was, but I'm leaning towards a 
juve Least...?

Also a few other birds of note include Willow Flycatcher, Bald Eagle, and a 
possible Rusty Blackbird viewed by Chet Meyers and Howard Towle from the blind. 
Feel free to e-mail me for any directions, and good birding!

Alyssa DeRubeis
Golden Valley
tiger150 at comcast.net 
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
http://moumn.org/pipermail/mou-net_moumn.org/attachments/20070804/e325ab9e/attachment.html
 

Reply via email to