I was feeling
antsy and unproductive yesterday afternoon, for, with Dave gone,
nest-checks done and any attempt at analyzing playback videos only
leading to serious procrastination on tumblr, I wasn't really getting
anything done. It was a nice, breezy, cloudy day and so, after my
umpteenth tumblr dashboard refresh, I snapped the lid of my laptop
shut, grabbed my camera and set off to stake out the Spotted
Sandpiper nest.
I hid myself
in a convenient bush of stinging nettle across the trail from Yellow
Flower Nest. The sandpiper flushed off when I got there, of course,
but I was prepared to wait for it to come back, however long it would
take.
It took a
while.
I
crouched in the nettles for over an hour, getting stung to no end by
fire ants and, quite hilariously, not being noticed by the five
people that walked by, two of them actually stopping to have a
conversation right in front of Yellow Flower Nest. I was tempted to
jump out at them, binoculars and camera at the ready, yelling
“sandpiper!” and gesticulating wildly. Needless to say, I
controlled the urge.
However,
just as my attention was starting to wander and I was looking up
trying to spot a gull that had just wooooshed
by, I heard a soft weet.
And there it was, not more than two meters away from me, a cautious
little Spotted Sandpiper, fidgeting, looking around and running up
and down the trail on its surprisingly fast, spindly little legs.
Spotted Sandpiper, checking out its surroundings |
Presenting, Spotted Sandpier from Yellow Flower Nest |
Eventually
it hopped onto the rock and started preening, trying to look as
nonchalant as possible but avoiding even looking its nest. I fired
away.
Fluffing out its feathers, trying to appear nonchalant |
After
much cautious weeting,
and after cleaning each flight feather at least twenty times,
the little shorebird hopped down onto its nest... and disappeared
from sight.
I
had stupidly chosen the worst vantage point possible for Yellow
Flower's shrubbery was completely blocking my view of the nest. I
tried to move as silently as I could, but the sandpiper was having
none of it and flushed in an instant. Oh well. Better luck next time,
I suppose.
Today,
it was the Eastern Kingbird nest's turn to be stalked. Who would have
known that they would prove even harder to
stalk than the fidgety sandpiper. I crouched in a, thankfully
stinging nettle-less, bush for over three hours as the sun set around
me, watching the pair of kingbirds fly back and forth between two
trees, calling, preening, fly-catching, and, best of all mobbing
an adult Herring Gull, but never
venturing close to their nest.
The pair of Eastern Kingbirds. An overexposed shot that turned out artsy! |
The pair. |
Eastern Kingbird with moth |
Eastern Kingbird, preening |
The
female was being such a tease! The nest was on a tree that was right
in the middle of her flight path between the two other trees, and
every time she swooped by my heart would leap into my mouth for it
would look like she was going to land on the nest.
The female, taking off yet again |
The
bursts of adrenaline, and associated sightings of Grey Catbirds,
Carolina Wrens and Herring Gulls getting mobbed, kept me rooted to my
spot, despite the steady loss of feeling in my legs.
Catbird! |
I managed to trace the entire process of my dessert being digested before the female finally decided to pay a brief visit to her nest, allowing me to snap a grainy picture, before flying off again, landing on a nearby perch and sitting there looking pretty in the light of the setting sun.
The female on the nest! |
Lookin' pretty |
Ah,
the setting sun. When it finally got too dark to get a good picture
of the nest, regardless of whether the bird decided to return to it
or not, I made my way back to Kiggins and, emerging from the bushy
walls of the Turbine Trail, I was treated to the most marvellous
sunset I have ever seen. The sky was on fire; broad, colourful
streaks of the most magnificent fire, stretching across the entire
swath of sky like a rich tapestry. Nothing, nothing,
compares to an Appledore sunset.