Fall migration continues!

Anne and I arrived home, safe and sound, just around midnight last night, and I had gotten some sleep on the flight, so I was awake again by 4 am. Luckily, it was a perfect morning in Estabrook Park, and I only had to wait until 6 am to have enough light to see who might be home.

Better yet, there were also plenty of critters up getting a jump on the holiday weekend, and here’s a wide-awake osprey perched high above the northern island.

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I was a little nervous when we left that I might have seen my last warbler of the year, but I needn’t have worried because it didn’t take me long to spot this pretty little magnolia warbler, my first for the fall migration.

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There were also quite a few Swainson’s thrushes, which we haven’t seen since the spring, tanking up along the river to fuel their journeys south to Central and South America.

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Meanwhile, this red squirrel was busily shucking a walnut, perhaps to store up for the Wisconsin winter ahead.

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Back by the pond, I was thrilled to learn that monarch butterflies are still here.

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Out on the water, this green heron struck quite a pose as it stretched one wing at a time.

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The weeds beside the southern soccer fields are still full of blossoms and bugs, and here’s a handsome Peck’s skipper on a thistle.

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We still have dragonflies, too, and here’s a dashing blue dasher.

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Finally, I found this tiny and pristine, eastern tailed-blue butterfly (Cupido comyntas) enjoying some goldenrod in the pollinator garden, and that’s gonna be our butterfly of the day.

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Lastly, I do have a few pictures from our trip, despite our focus on savoring the mostly-urban sights, sounds, tastes, and smells of the Baltics.

I came across this Eurasian tree sparrow (Passer montanus), my very first, while strolling along the top of an earthen portion of the ancient city wall of Tallinn, Estonia. There were a bunch feeding on the seeds of weeds, and I first thought they were house sparrows, but that dark patch on their cheek gives them away.

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A couple of days later, we were in Riga, Latvia, and I found my first hawfinch (Coccothraustes coccothraustes), a juvenile, in a park just outside town.

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Finally, I found my very first black redstart (Phoenicurus ochruros), an eastern morph female, in a city park in Vilnius, Lithuania. The males look a lot more like the American redstart males we get to see in Estabrook Park.

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See ya next month!

Published by Andrew Dressel

Theoretical and Applied Bicycle Mechanic, and now, apparently, Amateur Naturalist. In any case, my day job is researching bicycles at UWM.

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