Tag Archives: birdwatching virginia

Snow Geese in eastern Virginia

By Sally Siko

Now that winter is well underway here in the eastern US, all kinds of waterfowl have flown in to spend the cooler months along our coast. One of my favorite annual visitors are the Snow Geese.
I spotted this flock while on a recent birding trip to Chincoteague, Virginia.



Approaching on foot until I was about 100ft away, I then dropped down onto the sand to crawl on my belly so that the geese wouldn’t be spooked off by my presence.
Though it took a bit of maneuvering, it was well worth the sand scratches to grab a few photos of the flock at a relatively close range as they rested in this shallow pond.

As you can see, Snow Geese are handsome birds sporting pure white plumage with black primary feathers on the tips of their wings.
But check out the photograph below and you’ll see a blue morph goose dressed in dark charcoal plumage with a white neck.

A difference so striking that the blue morphs used to be considered separate species
There’s even a Snow Goose with a white and grey body with it’s head tucked under it’s wing here in the flock which was really cool to see too!



Color variations aside, only one population of Snow Geese exists in the world. In addition, the species movements as a whole is almost entirely confined to the Atlantic flyway of North America.
This elegant species breeds in the Canadian High Arctic, and on the western coast of Greenland so it’s pretty neat to be able to spend time with them all the way down here in Virginia.


Aren’t they gorgeous?

Photos by @sally_siko of @bestlife_birding on my mighty mirrorless monster, the @canonusa #R5

Rare Bird Alert Virginia: Trumpeter Swans at Sky Meadows State Park in Delaplane

By Sally Siko

Yesterday I left my home in Raleigh NC at 2:30am and headed north for a trip to Sky Meadows State Park in Delaplane, VA.
There had been reports that a pair of Trumpeter Swans had been sighted there.
*check out my personal account @sally_siko for a behind the scenes story on this trip



Thankfully when I arrived on sight at 7:30 am, I was able to locate these beauties right away. The surprising thing was that there were 3 swans gliding on the water instead of the 2 which had been previously reported on @ebird
Right away I realized that one of the birds was not a Trumpeter Swan but in fact a lonely Tundra Swan.


While the Trumpeter’s were quite amicable to my presence, the Tundra was much more wary and kept a good distance from my position on the shoreline.
So cool!



Standing at nearly 4ft tall with a wingspan stretching 5.2ft, and a hefty weight topping 30lbs, Trumpeter Swans are both the largest and heaviest species of waterfowl native to the United States.
It’s pretty easy to see the tremendous size difference shown in these photos between the two Trumpeter’s and the smaller Tundra Swan.



The reason that I was thrilled to see the pair is because although the numbers of this species are increasing (currently estimated at 63,000 birds), Trumpeter Swans are a rarely spotted here in the eastern US.
These elegant birds originally graced wetlands across a broad region of North America from Illinois all the way up into northwest to Alaska.
Unfortunately though, throughout the 17- and 1800s, they were hunted relentlessly for their meat, skins and feathers.
That combined with habitat loss meant that by the 1930s, only 69 Trumpeter Swans remained in the lower 48 states, living in the remote Red Rock Lakes area in southwestern Montana.




Thanks to modern conservation practices, this species is recovering however their future remains uncertain due to continued habitat loss and lead shot poisoning.
We almost lost them but at least we’ve got a chance to today to ensure the survival of this magnificent bird.

Photos by @sally_siko of @bestlife_birding on my mighty mirrorless monster, the @canonusa #R5

Oh btw- I did report the presence of the neck banded bird to https://www.usgs.gov/labs/bird-banding-laboratory