This morning I got to sleep in till almost 3:20 A.M. before I had to get up to catch the bus for the ABA Convention’s Boreal Forest trip. We drove north from Bangor, almost to the Canadian border, before entering the Baskahegan Co.’s timber lands. Warblers abounded, as did the mosquitoes and other insects they were feeding on. Heavy DEET was a necessity.
I was hoping for some of the Boreal specialties: Black-backed Woodpecker, Gray Jay, and Boreal Chickadee. Sadly that was not to be. None of those species made more than brief appearances; and none of them showed up anywhere I was looking. (No one saw or heard a Boreal Chickadee at all; and only a few people caught fleeting glimpses of Gray Jay and Black-backed Woodpecker.) However our leader Mike O’Brien did quickly find and point out a Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, my life bird for the day. (Our Australian and South American visitors did better with between 10 and 20 life birds apiece. The prize, though, was taken by an American on his first birding trip who picked up 32 life species.)
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