Hurricane Bonnie/OC Inlet-08/28/98

MHoff36100@aol.com
Fri, 28 Aug 1998 21:48:52 EDT


Hurricane Chasers --

With tropical storm Bonnie off the VA and MD coasts today (08/28/98), it was
an opportunity I couldn't pass up. I arrived at the OC Inlet at 6 am and
stayed there until 2 pm, occupying the southeast parking spot, from which I
could view the Inlet and Ocean protected from the strong wind, blowing sand
and intermittent rain. Despite the clouds and heavy surf, it never got too
ominous. Heavy rain occurred between 0830-0840 and 0900-0920. When I left, the
sun was coming out. There was a steady stream of onlookers and police for
crowd control.

Birds by hour		6	7	8	9	10	11	12	1    Total

Jaeger (sp.)				1				            	1	
Laughing Gull		200	150	100	40	50	x	x	x	540
Ring-billed Gull		80	x	2	5	x	x	x	x    90
Herring Gull		     30	20	20	10	20	x	x	x	100
Great Blk.-b. Gull    30	10	x	10	10	x	x	x	60
Caspian Tern		15	10	4				3	1	33
Royal Tern	      	10	10	10	5	10	5	x	x	50
Sandwich Tern	      2	2	1				1		6 (or less)
Common Tern		10	5	20	45	25	30	x	x	135
Forster's Tern		2					1		1	4
Black Tern				2	3		2	2	1	      10
Black Skimmer	      2    3							5

The only obvious storm bird was the jaeger, a very distant bird. There was no
real movement of these gulls and terns, some where going in and out of the
Inlet, others headed N or S offshore. Local or fly-by shorebirds were Semi
Plover (1); Black-bellied Plover (1); Sanderling (50+); Ruddy Turnstone (2).

There was a steady stream of Barn Swallows (50) and Purple Martins (20) headed
N over the ocean or the Inlet. The only other passerine was Rock Dove (4).

Hope others had better luck!

Mark Hoffman
Sykesville, MD 
Mhoff36100@aol.com