Wood Duck hunt in 'Da Swamp 12/27/23 |
Trout Fishing on 12/1/23 |
To view past blog entries from my New Year's Eve Toast click on 2022 - 2021 - 2020- 2019- 2018- 2017- 2016 - 2015- 2014 - 2013 - 2012 - 2011 - 2010 - 2009
Wood Duck hunt in 'Da Swamp 12/27/23 |
Trout Fishing on 12/1/23 |
To view past blog entries from my New Year's Eve Toast click on 2022 - 2021 - 2020- 2019- 2018- 2017- 2016 - 2015- 2014 - 2013 - 2012 - 2011 - 2010 - 2009
Anhinga over Duck Pond |
Palmetto Bluff CBC Team hard at work |
We went on to spot 3,114-individual birds encompassing 73-species of birds. This data is included in the Hilton Head Audubon circle. The data from the South Carolina 2021 CBC and the 2021 National CBC are both available now for Birders to review and enjoy.
To view past CBC counts at Palmetto Bluff click on 2022 - 2021
To view 2023 Birding Trips click Yawkey Center / Winter - Nemours Wildlife Foundation - Yawkey Center / Fall - Botany Bay WMA - Fripp Island - Wings Over Beaufort - Sea Island Shorebird Festival - Beidler Forest - Harbor Island- Kiawah Island - Webb Wildlife Center - Whooping Crane Pond - Jarvis Creek Park - Caw Caw Bio Blitz - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Botany Bay WMA - Pinckney Island NWR - ACE Basin NWR Combahee Unit
Pair of Bald Eagles: one mature, one immature |
Hermit Thrush near Barge Landing |
Elusive Sora (click on pic for larger view) |
Short-billed Dowitchers flocking |
To view past blog enrtries from Yawkey Center click on 2023 Fall Birding - 2023 Formula For Success - 2023 Winter Photo Safari - 2018 Walk Through History - 2016 Birding Tour - 2015 Shorebirds with Manomet - 2015 Yawkey Legacy Story
To view birding trips from 2023 click on Nemours Wildlife Foundation - Yawkey Center / Fall - Botany Bay WMA - Fripp Island - Wings Over Beaufort - Sea Island Shorebird Festival - Beidler Forest - Harbor Island- Kiawah Island - Webb Wildlife Center - Whooping Crane Pond - Jarvis Creek Park - Caw Caw Bio Blitz - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Botany Bay WMA - Pinckney Island NWR - ACE Basin NWR
Hawk patrolling the marsh |
Coots (in foreground) and migratory waterfowl |
Beautiful Hasty Point Plantation |
Great Pee Dee River at Welcome Center |
While migratory waterfowl and songbirds are a primary focus of management here, game species abound including hogs, bear, deer and turkey. Public access hunting, especially for youth, is a hallmark of the Waccamaw NWR. In regards to Hasty Point plantation the USFWS stewardship efforts include maintenance of a historic Rice Barn, and this boat landing offers the easiest access to the managed impoundments on Sandy Island. During my visit on December 6 with biologist Craig Sasser, he related that thousands of wood ducks were seen roosting on the island the evening prior when USFWS were holding an end of day gathering. No tour of Hasty Point is complete without seeing lots of fox squirrels scurrying about the mature live oak allee.
Bear Taxidermy at Welcome Center |
Refuge Boundaries |
To view past blog entries from the Pee Dee region click on 2018 Waterfowl Workshop - 2014 SALTT Trail - 2014 Warrior Tribute Duck Hunt - 2012 TNC acquires Carvers Bay - 2012 Duck Hunt
Team Blazer Boys claim First Place |
Team Laid Back waiting on a Striper to Bite |
Team Blazer Boys won first place with a two-fish aggregate weight of 29.9-pounds, good for the First Place prize of $14,150-dollars. Angler Dusty Pearson helped this team by weighing in a 20.7-pound striper that also won for heaviest fish of the day. His father Rocky Pearson and crew member Jason Brock came from Edgefield to fish the Santee tourney. The Top Ten places were awarded a prize, and so were the best youth angler and best lady angler. In addition to tourney prizes, a $6000 donation was made to Christian Adoption Services as a way to give back to the community.
Damon Melcho weighs in his Stripers |
Santee State Park Ranger, Santee Cooper Country Rep Jane Powell, and DNR staffers |
To view past blog entries from Santee Cooper click on 2023 Crappie Camp - 2022 Crappie Camp - 2016 Duck Hunt TV Show - 2011 SCWA Duck Hunt - 2011 Gator Hunt - 2010 Duck Hunt - 2009 Duck Hunt
Aft View in windy conditions |
Nao Trinidad in Georgetown on 12/6/23 |
Rigging looking up to Lookout |
Historical Maritime Tools |
While aboard, I learned that the Nao designates a type of ship, which was the most advanced Tall Ship of its time. Its design was the result of evolution of Spanish ship building in order to improve their characteristics like greater load capacity with minimum draught depths often required for exploring unknown channels. The replica Nao has called on the Caribbean, Mexico, the East Coast and the Great Lakes thus far on her journey. The fact that it is the Holidays was not lost on the crew and I saw a fully decorated Christmas tree and heard wishes of Feliz Navidad.
To view past blog entries from wooden boats click EOS - Windy - Grace- Aphrodite - Osprey - Annalee - Hinckley
To view past blog entries on Tall Ships click 2012 Savannah Challenge - 2009 Charleston HarborFest - Spirit of Carolina
Royal tern in non-breeding plumage |
Fripp Island Audubon Birders |
The group loaded onto the Birding Wagon after that and took a driving tour of the property that included stops at impoundments and woodlands. A large flock of 200 - 300 blue-winged teal were present and other waterfowl species were mixed in including pintail, mottled, gadwall and ring-necked ducks. Non-game fowl included Pie-billed grebe, Common gallinule and American coot. Other notable species flying over the Combahee River watershed were White Pelicans and Roseate Spoonbills. At another inland impoundment we saw terns, kingfishers, and gulls patrolling the area. At a freshwater impoundment we saw scores of alligators waiting for the warm up that was coming after noon, which is about when our tour was complete.
Combahee River Vista |
Combahee River Flyway Waterfowl |
To view past blog entries from Nemours click on 2022 Spring Birding - 2021 Fall Birding - 2021 Spring Birding - 2018 Waterfowl Workshop - 2014 Red-Cockaded Woodpeckers - 2014 USDA Under Secretary - 2012 Army Corps of Engineers - 2011 Mottled Duck Study - 2010 Plantation Managers Mtg.
To view past blog entries from Friends of Nemours click Fall 2023 - Fall 2022 - Spring 2022 - 2021- 2017- 2014- 2013 - 2012 - 2009
To view 2023 Birding Trips click Botany Bay WMA - Fripp Island - Wings Over Beaufort - Sea Island Shorebird Festival - Beidler Forest - Harbor Island- Kiawah Island - Webb Wildlife Center - Whooping Crane Pond - Jarvis Creek Park - Caw Caw Bio Blitz - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Botany Bay WMA - Pinckney Island NWR - ACE Basin NWR Combahee Unit
Mated Pair of Bald Eagles on Nov. 7 |
Warm Weather had the Wildflowers in Bloom |
To view 2023 Birding Trips click on Nemours Wildlife Foundation - Botany Bay WMA - Fripp Island - Wings Over Beaufort - Sea Island Shorebird Festival - Beidler Forest - Harbor Island- Kiawah Island - Webb Wildlife Center - Whooping Crane Pond - Jarvis Creek Park - Caw Caw Bio Blitz - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Botany Bay WMA - Pinckney Island NWR - ACE Basin NWR Combahee Unit
To view past blog entries from Yawkey Center click on 2023 Formula For Success - 2023 Winter Photo Safari - 2018 Walk Through History - 2016 Birding Tour - 2015 Shorebirds with Manomet - 2015 Yawkey Legacy Story
Yellowlegs Shorebird |
Published in the November Issue of Trilogy Outdoors |
In fact, the number of Bald eagles nesting in S.C. is at unprecedented levels as conservation efforts the past two decades have helped preserve prime coastal habitat. Bald eagles are the earliest birds to nest each year, getting a jump start on all others, with some bald eagles laying eggs in December and January. So if you observe bald eagles on a nest in November, they likely are shoring up its structure with fresh sticks or moss, and this behavior also serves as a prelude to mating. Bald eagle clutch sizes range from one to three eggs, with incubation taking five weeks, and young ones can remain in the nest for twelve weeks after hatching. Great-horned owls are also early nesters, usually laying eggs in February.
Bald eagles are no longer listed as an Endangered Species, as their recovery continues to soar. The S.C. bald eagle nest survey in 2009 recorded 253 eagle nests, and their population growth was estimated at 10% per year. Bald eagles eat roadside carrion, can catch fish with ease, and they feast on waterfowl that overwinter on coastal areas. An interesting fact is that Bald eagles do not have all-white heads and tailfeathers until they reach maturity at five years old. The immature eagles appear all brown, but at years three and four they can have a mottled appearance as white feathers begin to appear, giving advanced birders unique traits to look for.
As a volunteer for the Hawk Migration Association of North America (HMANA) I attended a training class ahead of the 2023 Fall migration. One thing I learned during training was that Turkey Vultures are migratory, and then during my days in the field I learned that they migrate A LOT! As of press time for The November issue of Trilogy Outdoors, the Edisto site has recorded 18,146 Turkey Vultures that flew right overhead, going down the coast. Other notable migration totals from Edisto are Osprey at 329, Bald Eagle at 241, Northern Harrier at 177, Sharp-shinned hawk at 128, Cooper’s Hawk at 155, Red-tailed Hawk at 82 and American kestrel at 358. To view data from any counting site in the HMANA database visit www.HawkCount.org on the Internet.
To view past blog entries from Trilogy Outdoors click on Kiawah Bird Banding - 2023 Crappie Camp - Early Birds of September - SCDNR Salt Fishing Clinics - Silver King Makes Big Splash - S.C. Mahi Series - 2023 Yawkey Wildlife Center - 2023 Hammock Coast Birding Festival - 2023 Lowcountry Oyster Festival - 2022 Sea Turtle Season - Navigating an S.C. Public Draw Deer Hunt - Crappie Camp - Blessings of a Sporting Father
Wet Osprey at Fripp Island on Oct. 5 |
A flock of Ibis sitting on the Dock in September |
Closer to the coast, the return of bald eagles and white pelicans began the first of October, and they should become more prevalent in November. Some shorebirds were already passing by the coast in early October but many of them stayed stationed on barrier islands to refuel during this same time. A new endeavor going on at Edisto Island is a HawkWatch Count program designed to capture the number of migrating raptors during the months of Sept, Oct. and November. Thus far the observations were slow in September, then heavy in October (perhaps signaling the peak of migration) and the numbers for November are not in yet. Overall, the fall migration of raptors and songbirds is greater that the spring migration, making this a great time of year to listen for birdsong and to carry optics to try and identify avian life.
To view the most recent birding observations click on July / August 2023
To view past Birding Journal Observations for Sept. / Oct. click on 2022 - 2021 - 2018- 2017 - 2016 - 2015 - 2014 - 2013 - 2012 - 2011 - 2010 - 2009