Drakes’ Beach Sanderlings Bird-A-Thon Team: A Bird Finding Machine!
November 19, 2019
Each year our Bird-A-Thon teams share a summary of their count day with their sponsors. It’s a way to for teams to let their supporters in on the action and excitement of the count day and of course share their prized species list. This year, the Drake’s Beach Sanderlings, composed almost entirely of young birders, counted 162 species, the most out of all teams as far as we know (reports are still coming in).
Here’s what their day looked like and what they shared with their supporters:
What a day! What a day! What a day! The Drakes’ Beach Sanderlings participated again in the Rich Stallcup Bird-a-thon on October 5th. The Drake’s Beach Sanderlings, which is Point Blue Conservation Science’s longest running youth bird-a-thon team, was a bird finding machine! Thanks to your donation, our team has raised over $2,500 this year! Thank you so much for your support!
As usual, our day began very early. At 5:15am, and in the 39°F chill of the pre-dawn morning, we met at the Bear Valley Visitor Center. The sky was spectacularly clear which made for beautiful star-gazing but did not bode well for finding migrants later in the day. As soon as we got out of our cars, we realized we were surrounded by Great Horned Owls, and after a bit of listening, we added Spotted Owl to our list for the day! A good start!
The team stopped by Olema Marsh which irrupted in a cacophony of Virginia Rails as soon as we clapped for them! We then sped off to Five Brooks Pond where we tried to find more owls while it was still dark. As dawn approached, we were treated to a terrific mixed flock of Bushtits, both species of Kinglet, and lots and lots of Townsend’s Warblers. We then drove past Bolinas Lagoon and birded Stinson Beach.
Leaving Stinson Beach we broke into the Oreos and headed for the Outer Point! It was still early, and a quick overview of the species list showed that we had already found over 100 species by the time we reached the Outer Point! This put us ahead of schedule on both time and species.
Confirming our concerns from the morning, the clear skies the night before resulted in there being no vagrant birds anywhere on the Outer Point, though there were tons of Red-breasted Nuthatches. It was somewhat frustrating to find no unusual birds at Chimney Rock or Drake’s Beach, but we did not get too attached to birding the area and left to head east. We did stop at an overlook near Chimney Rock to find Black Oystercatchers and got to watch a pod of Humpbacked Whales feeding off the coast.
The team then started zig-zagging across the east half of the county picking up more bird species all along the way. We certainly had some ups and downs. We made some targeted stops for particular species that mostly worked in our favor. The ponds at the Las Gallinas Water Treatment Plant were the emptiest I have ever seen them, but a quick change of course to the Hamilton Wetlands was gangbusters! As usual, we ended at our customary final stop at an east San Rafael marsh where the Ridgeway’s Rails were calling before we even got out of the car!
Over the course of the day, the team moved incredibly efficiently. When a site was not producing the species we were hoping for, we quickly made decisions to abandon those stops and to go look elsewhere. The knowledge of all the team members came together to produce a cornucopia of species even though we did not find a single species that would be considered noteworthy for Marin County. The list we ended up with included 162 species as a group, and 2 more that were only seen by a single team member and so don’t quite count! The full list is on the next page. We all had an amazing day. We enjoyed every bird, ate a lot of cookies, and shared a lot of stories and knowledge. All the things that make the Sanderlings great!
I want to thank you again for supporting this team. The Drake’s Beach Sanderlings are a very special group that I am honored to lead, and passionate to see continue. With your support, you help promote bird conservation and climate science, and you also something more. You help to show the role that young people can play. Bringing in funding in an event like this reminds the world, and the birding community in particular, that dedicated young birders can and do make significant contributions to the cause of protecting our world. I hope you return next year to support us again. I can’t wait!
Drake’s Beach Sanderlings 2019 Bird-a-thon Species List
Birds:
- Greater White-fronted Goose
- Canada Goose
- Mute Swan
- Muscovy Duck (Domestic)
- Cinnamon Teal
- Northern Shoveler
- Gadwall
- American Wigeon
- Mallard
- Northern Pintail
- Green-winged Teal
- Greater Scaup
- Surf Scoter
- Bufflehead
- Common Merganser
- Ruddy Duck
- California Quail
- Wild Turkey
- Indian Peafowl (Domestic)
- Red Junglefowl (Domestic)
- Pied-billed Grebe
- Horned Grebe
- Red-necked Grebe
- Eared Grebe
- Western Grebe
- Clark’s Grebe
- Rock Pigeon
- Band-tailed Pigeon
- Eurasian Collared-Dove
- Mourning Dove
- Vaux’s Swift
- Anna’s Hummingbird
- Ridgeway’s Rail
- Virginia Rail
- Sora
- Common Gallinule
- American Coot
- Black Rail
- Black-necked Stilt
- American Avocet
- Black Oystercatcher
- Black-bellied Plover
- Semipalmated Plover
- Killdeer
- Whimbrel
- Long-billed Curlew
- Marbled Godwit
- Black Turnstone
- Sanderling
- Dunlin
- Least Sandpiper
- Western Sandpiper
- Long-billed Dowitcher
- Red-necked Phalarope
- Spotted Sandpiper
- Greater Yellowlegs
- Willet
- Lesser Yellowlegs
- Parasitic Jaeger
- Common Murre
- Heermann’s Gull
- Ring-billed Gull
- Western Gull
- California Gull
- Herring Gull
- Forester’s Tern
- Elegant Tern
- Red-throated Loon
- Pacific Loon
- Common Loon
- Brandt’s Cormorant
- Pelagic Cormorant
- Double-Crested Cormorant
- American White Pelican
- Brown Pelican
- Great-blue Heron
- Great Egret
- Snowy Egret
- Green Heron
- Black-crowned Night-Heron
- Turkey Vulture
- Osprey
- White-tailed Kite
- Golden Eagle
- Northern Harrier
- Sharp-shinned Hawk
- Cooper’s Hawk
- Red-shouldered Hawk
- Red-tailed Hawk
- Ferruginous Hawk
- Barn Owl
- Great Horned Owl
- Spotted Owl
- Belted Kingfisher
- Red-breasted Sapsucker
- Acorn Woodpecker
- Downy Woodpecker
- Nuttall’s Woodpecker
- Hairy Woodpecker
- Pileated Woodpecker
- Northern Flicker
- American Kestrel
- Peregrine Falcon
- Pacific-slope Flycatcher
- Black Phoebe
- Say’s Phoebe
- Hutton’s Vireo
- Warbling Vireo
- Steller’s Jay
- California Scrub Jay
- American Crow
- Common Raven
- Chestnut-backed Chickadee
- Oak Titmouse
- Horned Lark
- Northern Rough-winged Swallow
- Violet-green Swallow
- Bushtit
- Wrentit
- Golden-crowned Kinglet
- Ruby-crowned Kinglet
- Red-breasted Nuthatch
- White-breasted Nuthatch*
- Pygmy Nuthatch
- Brown Creeper
- Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
- House Wren
- Pacific Wren
- Marsh Wren
- Bewick’s Wren
- European Starling
- Northern Mockingbird
- Western Bluebird
- Varied Thrush
- Swainson’s Thrush
- Hermit Thrush
- American Robin
- House Sparrow
- American Pipit
- House Finch
- Pine Siskin
- Lesser Goldfinch
- American Goldfinch
- Fox Sparrow
- Dark-eyed Junco
- White-crowned Sparrow
- Golden-crowned Sparrow
- Savannah Sparrow
- Song Sparrow
- Lincoln’s Sparrow
- California Towhee
- Spotted Towhee
- Western Meadowlark
- Red-winged Blackbird
- Tricolored Blackbird
- Brown-headed Cowbird
- Brewer’s Blackbird
- Orange-crowned Warbler
- Common Yellowthroat
- Yellow Warbler
- Yellow-rumped Warbler
- Townsend’s Warbler
- Wilson’s Warbler*
- Western Tanager
Mammals:
- Mule Deer
- Raccoon
- California Groundsquirrel
- Northern Elephant Seal
- Harbor Seal
- Harbor Porpoise
- Humpbacked Whale
Species marked with a * were only seen or heard by one team member.