2017 Ohio Big Day / Birdathon
Bay-breasted Warbler – Photo by Dylan Vasapolli |
02:00 16 May 2017: We grabbed our binoculars and headed to our already packed vehicle. Our team, the Benannaquits, was off to beat last year’s Columbus Audubon Big Day of 144 species on nearly the same date. Our route was similar but slightly revised, and our team gained an additional member. This year in addition to my mom, Julie, and my husband, Ben, we also had Dylan, our friend and a Birding Ecotours guide from South Africa, along for the day. A great advantage that we had this year was the opportunity for myself, Ben and Dylan to spend a good amount of time scouting many of our Big Day stops, during the Biggest Week in American Birding!
Our first bird of the day, en route to our first official stop was an American Robin.
05:02 We arrived in the Oak Openings region just in time for a full dawn chorus. As we sifted through the sounds of Grasshopper Sparrows, Common Yellowthroats, and American Woodcocks, we heard three distant calls that we were not expecting! The first was the low hoot of a Great Horned Owl! Next was an Eastern Whip-poor-will, and finally, and probably the most unexpected was a King Rail calling from a wet corner of the grassland!
We continued through several other hotspots within Oak Openings Preserve Metropark. We added our likely targets, such as Lark Sparrow, Henslow’s Sparrow, Summer Tanager, and Red-headed Woodpecker. Among our highlights of Oak Openings were a singing Brown Creeper and Prairie Warbler! We ended our time at Oak Openings with all of the woodpecker species we would have for the day and a total of 77 species!
Brown Creeper – Photo by D. Vasapolli |
We continued north, stopping at several of Toledo’s fantastic parks, including Irwin Prairie State Nature Preserve, Secor Metropark, and Pearson Metropark. We were able to add a staked-out Louisiana Waterthrush and Hooded Warbler to our total!
While driving through Irwin Prairie, Julie spotted a bird perched atop a dead snag over the marsh. The lighting was poor as it had just started to rain, but there was no mistaking a Wilson’s Snipe high above the wetland and calling Sora!
Wilson’s Snipe at Irwin Prairie – Photo by D. Vasapolli |
Julie, Dylan, and Ben enjoying an Eastern Screech-Owl |
11:22 We made it to the Lake Erie coast! Our first stop along the lake was Maumee Bay State Park. We visited several locations within the park, quickly increasing our list with several species of gulls, terns, and swallows, a Ruddy Turnstone, Eastern Screech-Owl, and more! While we were in the lodge parking lot, we looked up to see a kettle of raptors migrating! 12 Broad-winged Hawks, 8 Turkey Vultures and a Bald Eagle swirled high in the sky above us!
Continuing our journey east along the coast, we stopped at a flooded field to find good numbers of Dunlin and Semipalmated Plovers, but not the species diversity we were hoping for.
By now, it was already starting to warm up beyond what we were hoping for. We arrived at Metzger Marsh. Several of our target birds were more difficult to find than we had anticipated, or worse, we couldn’t find them at all. We finally managed a distant view of a Common Gallinule, and a single Pied-billed Grebe. The Least Bittern we had hoped for, and had previously heard and seen remained silently hidden in the cattails.
Eastern Screech-Owl – Photo by Ben Warner |
13:43 The Warbler Capital of the World! We arrived at the Magee Marsh boardwalk, and it was rather hot. On top of the heat, we were all feeling a bit sleepy, so perhaps we spent too much time at this stop. As we birded, we picked up several new warblers for the day, such as Wilson’s Warbler and Black-throated Blue Warbler. The boardwalk was crowded with birders still on their post-Biggest Week buzz. Along the way, we bumped into Jen Brumfield, leading a group of Cleveland-area birders. Ben asked if she had seen a few of our target species and she directed us to where she had seen an Olive-sided Flycatcher. Sure enough, we finished the first loop and Ben looked up to see not one, but TWO Olive-sided Flycatchers perched high! Thanks Jen!
A bit further down our walk, we came across this Protonotary Warbler enjoying a nice snack!
Prothonotary Warbler at Magee Marsh – Photo by D. Vasapolli |
Just moments later, we came across a Common Nighthawk resting on a limb, then a Black-crowned Night-Heron foraging along the back side of the boardwalk! As we continued along, Dylan heard a bird calling that we had missed earlier in the morning: Sandhill Crane! We had tallied 11 species of warblers when we left he boardwalk. We checked the beach and as we were leaving, Dylan and I noticed a Lesser Black-backed Gull!
Napping Common Nighthawk – Photo by D. Vasapolli |
After leaving Magee Marsh, we continued east along the lake. Our next new bird flew across Route 2 in front of the vehicle…Â Snowy Egret!
16:48 Pipe Creek was our next stop, and we successfully added two staked out waterfowl species: Greater Scaup and a Ring-necked Duck! We quickly walked the loop hoping to hear rails or bitterns (and also hoping to find a Fox Snake!) We didn’t have much luck, but we did see several Northern Water Snakes and as we neared the start of the middle dike, we heard and briefly saw a Virginia Rail!!
Continuing east, we made a brief stop to Huron Pier, where a Black-headed Gull had been seen throughout the previous week. It would have been a life bird for me, but not today. The stop wasn’t a total dip though, because we added Mute Swans to our list for the day.
We jumped back into the van for the long drive to our next stop. We needed to head south to pick up some other species such as Cerulean Warbler, Carolina Chickadee, Worm-eating Warbler, Kentucky Warbler, Veery and Winter Wren.
20:22 It was getting close to dark when we arrived at Mohican State Park. As we drove in, the evening chorus was in full swing! We were certain we would be able to easily add at least 6-8 new birds. A Wild Turkey darted across the road and a chorus of Veerys greeted us! Then we were unpleasantly greeted by a “Road Closed” sign! In order to get to the area we wanted, we would have to double back, then take a longer route around the Pleasant Hill Dam and back into the park from the other side. We were quickly losing light but we continued along. By the time we reached our destination, many of the birds had stopped singing for the night. No signs of the summer resident Cerulean Warblers or Worm-eaters. Not even a chickadee. We hiked along the river listening for a late Winter Wren, and still nothing. As we headed back to the car, Dylan stopped behind us. He heard a noise and as he shined his flashlight up, a Barred Owl peered back down at us!
21:30Â We finished our official birding for the day and just had a few remaining stops, to drop off Julie in Lexington, Ohio, and then continue the trek back to Columbus. By the time we got back home, we had been on the road for a total of 22 hours and we tallied an exciting 153 species for he day! Now starts the planning for our 2018 Columbus Audubon Big Day with a goal of 150+ (hopefully beating our current record!)
Black-thoated Green Warbler – Photo by D. Vasapolli |
If you enjoyed our story, please consider supporting our efforts by donating to Columbus Audubon. Bird-a-thon monies raised will go to local conservation and conservation education efforts, as well as supporting the Central Ohio chapter of the Ohio Young Birders Club! Click Here to Support the Benannaquits!
Thank you!
Here’s our complete Big Day list:
- Canada Goose
- Mute Swan
- Trumpeter Swan
- Wood Duck
- Mallard
- Ring-necked Duck
- Greater Scaup
- Hooded Merganser
- Wild Turkey
- Pied-billed Grebe
- Double-crested Cormorant
- Great Blue Heron
- Great Egret
- Snowy Egret
- Green Heron
- Black-crowned Night-Heron
- Turkey Vulture
- Osprey
- Bald Eagle
- Cooper’s Hawk
- Broad-winged Hawk
- Red-tailed Hawk
- King Rail
- Virginia Rail
- Sora
- Common Gallinule
- American Coot
- Sandhill Crane
- Semipalmated Plover
- Killdeer
- Spotted Sandpiper
- Solitary Sandpiper
- Ruddy Turnstone
- Dunlin
- Least Sandpiper
- Wilson’s Snipe
- American Woodcock
- Ring-billed Gull
- Herring Gull
- Lesser Black-backed Gull
- Caspian Tern
- Common Tern
- Forster’s Tern
- Rock Pigeon
- Mourning Dove
- Yellow-billed Cuckoo
- Eastern Screech-Owl
- Great Horned Owl
- Barred Owl
- Common Nighthawk
- Eastern Whip-poor-will
- Chimney Swift
- Ruby-throated Hummingbird
- Red-headed Woodpecker
- Red-bellied Woodpecker
- Downy Woodpecker
- Hairy Woodpecker
- Yellow-shafted Flicker
- Pileated Woodpecker
- American Kestrel
- Olive-sided Flycatcher
- Eastern Wood-Pewee
- Acadian Flycatcher
- Alder Flycatcher
- Willow Flycatcher
- Least Flycatcher
- Eastern Phoebe
- Great Crested Flycatcher
- Eastern Kingbird
- White-eyed Vireo
- Yellow-throated Vireo
- Warbling Vireo
- Philadelphia Vireo
- Red-eyed Vireo
- Blue Jay
- American Crow
- Horned Lark
- Purple Martin
- Tree Swallow
- Northern Rough-winged Swallow
- Bank Swallow
- Cliff Swallow
- Barn Swallow
- Black-capped Chickadee
- Tufted Titmouse
- White-breasted Nuthatch
- Red-breasted Nuthatch
- Brown Creeper
- House Wren
- Marsh Wren
- Carolina Wren
- Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
- Eastern Bluebird
- Veery
- Swainson’s Thrush
- Wood Thrush
- American Robin
- Gray Catbird
- Brown Thrasher
- European Starling
- Cedar Waxwing
- Ovenbird
- Louisiana Waterthrush
- Blue-winged Warbler
- Black-and-white Warbler
- Prothonotary Warbler
- Tennessee Warbler
- Nashville Warbler
- Common Yellowthroat
- Hooded Warbler
- American Redstart
- Cape May Warbler
- Northern Parula
- Magnolia Warbler
- Bay-breasted Warbler
- Blackburnian Warbler
- Yellow Warbler
- Chestnut-sided Warbler
- Blackpoll Warbler
- Black-throated Blue Warbler
- Pine Warbler
- Yellow-rumped (Myrtle) Warbler
- Yellow-throated Warbler
- Prairie Warbler
- Black-throated Green Warbler
- Canada Warbler
- Wilson’s Warbler
- Yellow-breasted Chat
- Eastern Towhee
- Chipping Sparrow
- Field Sparrow
- Lark Sparrow
- Savannah Sparrow
- Grasshopper Sparrow
- Henslow’s Sparrow
- Song Sparrow
- Lincoln’s Sparrow
- Swamp Sparrow
- White-throated Sparrow
- White-crowned Sparrow
- Summer Tanager
- Scarlet Tanager
- Northern Cardinal
- Rose-breasted Grosbeak
- Indigo Bunting
- Red-winged Blackbird
- Eastern Meadowlark
- Common Grackle
- Brown-headed Cowbird
- Orchard Oriole
- Baltimore Oriole
- American Goldfinch
- House Sparrow