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Katahdin's Splendor
Big Moose Inn: Annual Tour |
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More moose sightings than chickadees?
Hard to believe, but true. Participants on the first Katahdin's
Splendor tour of 2008 shared many moose sightings, often quite close.
Because Baxter State Park is extraordinarily beautiful and the
Big Moose Inn is so relaxing, it's common for tour
guests to arrive a day early or leave a day late. As a result, moose
totals varied by guest. The high score was 16, a couple of them
too close for telephoto lenses.
On the other hand, chickadees were just coming off the nest and
were unusually secretive while tending young. The total sightings
of Black-capped Chickadee - the Maine State Bird - was: one. This
was one of those rare trips when the Boreal Chickadees outnumbered
their cousins, though they also were just coming off the nest and
required a little searching. Indeed, recent hatchlings added a great
deal of fun to the tour, including a Ruffed Grouse with chicks,
a Pine Warbler feeding fledglings, and a Common Merganser hen herding
adorable babies. One Hooded Merganser tended seven chicks and a
Ring-necked Duck had eight.
Baxter State Park is a Mecca for purists: no tape-playing allowed.
Birders must enjoy the birds in their natural state, unharried by
modern methods. Thus, some views were fleeting and not everyone
saw the Bay-breasted Warblers or any of the multiple Blackpolls.
At one point, a curious Gray Jay juvenile approached the group for
a close look but the parents remained distant. Other lifer looks
were merely glimpses, such as the Northern Goshawk that flew directly
over the group and into the woods, or the female Philadelphia Vireo
that held still only long enough to ID. Some breeders were abundant,
including the Least Flycatchers and many of the warblers. Good looks
at Olive-sided and Yellow-bellied Flycatchers were appreciated.
The swallow show at Abol Bridge was highly entertaining as Cliff,
Barn, and Tree Swallows swirled against the backdrop of Mt. Katahdin.
In the Maine woods, even two days can make a big difference.
Thanks to the growing reputation of Baxter State Park and the Big
Moose Inn, the first tour sold out so quickly that a second was
added in 2008 to accommodate the overflow. The decision was fortuitous.
The second group scored many of the same birds and moose as the
first did. Indeed, some of the largest bull moose cooperated with
even closer views. Chickadees, now tasked with feeding fledglings,
became more numerous and vocal. Bay-breasted Warblers also became
more vocal.
The Olive-sided Flycatcher that has claimed Tracy Pond as his own
for the last several years is now so reliable that we've named him
"Tracy" after the pond that he dominates. The group scored close
views of Boreal Chickadees and encountered an unusually high number
of Canada Warblers. The latter were vocal and feisty, having just
fledged their chicks. They disputed any disturbance, even the most
accidental and deferential. Yellow-bellied Flycatchers were still
in the same place as they had been two days earlier, but ventured
closer for easier viewing.
At our picnic stop on the 4th of July, the Swainson's Thrushes put
on a show. Several pair foraged around the parking lot in plain
view. Blue-headed Vireos were commonplace. That's good, because
while we were debating whether a Blue-headed Vireo in the grasp
of a Merlin was countable, the Merlin was debating whether it was
edibleas we watched the rain of feathers as the main course was
devoured.
That's the trade-off of Baxter State Park. Artificial means of attracting
wildlife are unnecessary. Critters are wary but accustomed to people.
Visitors who appreciate the boundaries between humans and critters
are often rewarded with astounding views. During an early morning
moose watch at Sandy Stream Pond, a mink prowled the waters at our
feet. Later that day, a doe peered in our window, trying to determine
if there was a threat to her calf. There wasn't. That's Baxter. |
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