Re: 1/30/99 Mid-winter Count @ APG (long)

Bob Baughan (wilmabob@sentex.net)
Fri, 5 Feb 1999 16:42:33 -0500


----------Hi Dave:
Sounds like you guys had a good count, and a few adventures to boot!!  At
4.10$/species, an expensive outing.  You`re not trying to catch up to Greg
Miller are you?  
Leslie Fisher
( temporarily from Canada )

> From: David W. Webb <webb@netfox.net>
> To: MDOsprey discussion group <MDOsprey@ARI.Net>
> Cc: Ziolkowski, Dave <dziolkow@indiana.edu>; Wheeler, Jean
<wheele@jhmi.edu>; Watson-Whitmyre, Marcia <mww@copland.udel.edu>;
Robertson, Randy <robertsn@netgsi.com>; Procell, Sue
<saprocel@CBDCOM-EMH1.APGEA.ARMY.MIL>; Kovach, Russ
<rkovac1@tiger.towson.edu>; Kirkwood, Dennis <kirkwoodd@netfox.net>;
Johnson, Mark (home) <piranga@bellatlantic.net>; Fry, Larry & Fry
<jlfry@netfox.net>; Congersky, Tom <jnjtcon@erols.com>; Boling, Harold
<owlman@erols.com>; Bowers, Debbie <dbowers@harford.campuscwix.net>
> Subject: 1/30/99 Mid-winter Count @ APG (long)
> Date: Thursday, February 04, 1999 2:20 AM
> 
> Folks,
> 
>    Here’s a summary of the mid-winter count that Sue Procell and I did
> on Aberdeen Proving Ground (Harford County) this past Saturday.
> 
>       1 RED-THROATED LOON (Chesapeake Bay near Abbey Point)
>       1 Pied-billed Grebe
>       4 Great Blue Heron
>      11 Tundra Swan
>     577 Canada Goose
>     151 American Black Duck
>     203 Mallard
>       4 Northern Pintail
>       3 Green-winged Teal
>       2 Gadwall
>       2 American Wigeon
>       4 Canvasback
>     195 REDHEAD (with scaup raft at mouth of Bush River)
>     459 Ring-necked Duck
>    1000 Greater Scaup
>    6703 Lesser Scaup
>    2050 scaup sp.
>       5 Common Goldeneye
>       1 Bufflehead
>       8 Hooded Merganser
>       2 Common Merganser
>     110 Red-breasted Merganser
>    4440 RUDDY DUCK (Bush River near Sod Run)
>       5 Black Vulture
>      74 Turkey Vulture
>      25 Bald Eagle
>       7 Northern Harrier
>       3 Cooper’s Hawk
>       9 Red-tailed Hawk
>       1 American Kestrel
>       7 Killdeer
>       7 COMMON SNIPE (in flooded impact area, near Towner Cove)
>       4 AMERICAN WOODCOCK (displaying at dawn, near Briar Point)
>      16 Bonaparte’s Gull
>     421 Ring-billed Gull
>       3 Great Black-backed Gull
>       5 Rock Dove
>      24 Mourning Dove
>       9 Eastern Screech-Owl
>       6 Great Horned Owl
>       1 Barred Owl
>       1 NORTHERN SAW-WHET OWL (calling at dawn, near Briar Point)
>       1 Belted Kingfisher
>       4 Red-bellied Woodpecker
>       1 Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
>       6 Downy Woodpecker
>       3 Hairy Woodpecker
>      37 Northern Flicker
>      14 Blue Jay
>       7 American Crow
>      13 Carolina Chickadee
>       8 Tufted Titmouse
>       5 White-breasted Nuthatch
>       1 Brown Creeper
>       3 Carolina Wren
>       1 Winter Wren
>       2 MARSH WREN (in marshes of Romney Creek)
>       4 Golden-crowned Kinglet
>       7 Eastern Bluebird
>       1 Hermit Thrush
>       1 American Robin
>       1 GRAY CATBIRD (near Old Baltimore)
>       9 Northern Mockingbird
>      57 European Starling
>       2 Yellow-rumped Warbler
>      12 Northern Cardinal
>       7 Eastern Towhee
>       3 American Tree Sparrow
>       5 Savannah Sparrow
>      23 Song Sparrow
>       6 Swamp Sparrow
>      54 White-throated Sparrow
>      68 Dark-eyed Junco
>    1350 Red-winged Blackbird
>    3278 Common Grackle
>    3450 Brown-headed Cowbird
>  300000 blackbird sp.
>       4 American Goldfinch
>      76 TOTAL SPECIES
> 
>         Missing:  House Finch & House Sparrow.  Hooray!
> 
> (If you only care about the count data, stop reading here)
> 
> ***************************************************************
> 
> This was one of the best MWCs in my 10 years of counting on post.
> Nearly every stop we made turned up something worthwhile, whether
> it was the rafts of bay ducks on the Bush River or secretive Marsh
> Wrens among the phragmites at Romney Creek.
> 
> Birding on an Army proving ground is wonderful – there are large
> tracts of undeveloped land, and on weekends there is very little test
> activity.  Given this backdrop, there are usually lots of
> birds, both in number and diversity.
> 
> Birding on an Army proving ground can also be quite adventurous – I
> submit to you these pieces of evidence.
> 
> 1.  Sue and I had just completed our first owling stop at about 1:30
> AM, when we noticed a vehicle driving in our direction.  When the
> vehicle's driver saw our back-up lights come on, he turned on the
> emergency lights.  Yes, it was an MP (military police).  As the
> MP pulled up behind us, we shut off our engines and opened our
> doors to get out and walk towards him.  To put it bluntly, he did
> not want us to do this and shouted for us to remain in our vehicles.
> A second MP pulled up and they proceeded to interrogate us.
> Fortunately, we carry authorization letters with us for such
> occasions.  Within a minute you’d have thought the four of us were
> old college buddies, smiling and joking about.  All the while our
> only Barred Owl of the count continued to hoot in the background,
> but I don't think the MPs gave a rat’s ass about the owl.
> 
> 2.  At about 8:00 AM, I noticed a loud noise from the rear of my
> truck driving to our next stop.  I had only registered this
> pickup the day before, and so was not quite used to all the sounds
> it normally makes.  I assumed the noise was from either the rugged
> road we were on, or perhaps the vibrations from the tape player
> which I’d left in the bed.  When we finally reached our destination,
> we saw a large raft of bay ducks and I forgot all intentions of
> checking the source of this noise.  After an hour spent looking at
> the ducks, we had to quickly return to Sue’s vehicle so that she
> could attend her daughter’s first confession.  But the noise from
> the back of the truck continued and then I noticed the truck
> beginning to fishtail.  I stopped, got out, and saw that the rear
> tire was chopped up and that we had been riding on the rim for
> probably the last half mile.  Oh $*%@!!!  I’m so new to this
> vehicle I didn’t even know where the jack and lug wrench are
> stored.  Luckily, a fuel delivery truck passed by and saw us
> broken down.  The driver happened to own the same model pickup and
> so within 15 minutes he had us back on the road.  I drove Sue back
> to her car, and she eventually made it to the church, but not
> before her daughter had already made her confession.
> 
> 3.  At about 4:00 PM we were in Sue’s car (to save wear on my spare
> tire).  We were driving on a stretch of dirt road used by Army test
> vehicles.  I did not call in for clearance to be here because from
> past experience I had learned that weekend tests conducted on this
> road are completed by early afternoon. (Oh, also, I had left the
> range radio back in my truck – oops!)  Sue parked the car right in
> the middle of the road, and we proceeded to scan a nearby field for
> sparrows.  I was suddenly shocked to hear a distant rumbling, then
> looked across a large open field to see a cloud of dust moving along.
> It was a tank -- headed our way!  I yelled for Sue to get her car
> completely off the road immediately.  She did, and shortly afterwards
> the tank roared past us at high speed.  All we could do was grin
> and wave at the tank as it sped by, cover our optics from the
> trailing dust storm, and pray that the driver did not radio to the
> MPs about two trespassers on the test course.  Lest we spend a night
> in the brig, Sue and I got the hell off that dirt road as quick as
> her car could go. (Just for a little extra sense of danger we
> included a one-minute stop along the way to check a pond full of
> dabbling ducks.  Hey, that’s how we found our only wigeons and
> Gadwalls).
> 
> 4.  We finished the day at sunset watching a massive flight of
> blackbirds swarm into the marshes of Mosquito Creek for their
> evening roost.  Despite a brisk wind gusting at about 20-25 knots,
> we did so from atop a nearby 100-foot tall range-control tower.
> This poor old tower is not used anymore by the Army – they know
> better.  It’s a steel-framed structure with eight flights of wooden
> steps and a dilapidated observation booth at the summit.  While
> ascending the last two flights you hear the wood creak with each
> step.  Honestly, I would not be surprised to hear that it collapses
> tomorrow.  Ah, but the view at sundown is breathtaking, and the
> vision of a string of blackbirds extending for miles is one not
> soon forgotten.
> 
> P.S.:  According to my tire dealer, the cost per species for this
> count came to $4.10.
> 
> Dave Webb
> webb@netfox.net
> Havre de Grace, MD
> Harford Bird Club
>