top of page

Keep up to date!

Read our Blog below to learn more about Seawatch and our other programs

Seawatch_color_Audubon (1) (1).png
Screenshot 2023-06-02 at 08-19-37 Sand1218a (1 of 1)-2_edited.png

Sign up for the Little Sanderling
e-newsletter.

Updated: Nov 27, 2024

Today's Seawatch excitement came in the form of a plover that, at this writing, is still yet to be positively identified. It dropped in and landed on the beach just below where we count from, and hunkered there, seemingly exhausted, for roughly the next hour. More details on this bird can be found within the 0700 checklist contained in this report, but in short, it didn't seem quite right for a Snowy Plover. The possibility of Kentish Plover (an old-world species which Snowy Plover was lumped with until 2011) was raised, which created quite a bit of excitement in the local birding community, but despite the notes and photos that were obtained, I'm not sure this is a bird that can be confidently identified. And--even though Snowy Plovers are a regularly occurring species not far from the Seawatch--they don't turn up at Pt. Pinos often at all. Per eBird, there are just a handful of site records. So regardless of identification, it was an unexpected bird that added a fair amount of excitement to our morning.



We did have another nice loon flight today, with 1219 Red-throated (sunrise hour peak, 405) and 6114 Pacifics (0700 hour peak, 3185). The flight was high, with some flocks cutting the bay behind the buoy but no heavy loon traffic on the far outer bay-cutting line.



The morning murre flight was busy, too, with 550 coming by in the 0700 hour. Our day's cumulative tally was 1553, and we also had 3 Ancient Murrelets.



The Surf Scoter flight was pretty quiet--just 205.



The wind today was light south until around 0900, when it switched to NNW and built to 15 knots NW by count's end. With those winds, I would have expected a little more tubenose diversity during the afternoon, but alas, aside from plenty of Northern Fulmars (200), we had just 2 Short-tailed Shearwaters on the tubenose front.


See the full checklist here: https://ebird.org/checklist/S203089600


- Alison Vilag

 
 
 
White wagtail

Today was a memorable day at Point Pinos. The morning flight was lively, dynamic, and punctuated by noteworthy rarities. We had a strong showing of MAS counters and docents who enjoyed the day, counted thousands of birds, and engaged with many dozens of visitors.



The clear and cold early morning hours provided our highest counts of loons and alcids. While alcids dropped off precipitously in the late morning, the loon flight remained steady throughout the day. In the morning, Pacific and Red-throated Loons would appear in small flocks anywhere in the sky, requiring constant scanning to pick out 7 here, 12 there, and, oh, wow, 5 over there. Pacific Loons dominated the morning, and after a lull in the early afternoon, Red-throated Loons were in the majority, primarily on a westbound flight line above the distant Santa Cruz hills.



During the morning alcid flight we tallied a nice count of 25 Ancient Murrelets. We also had a thrill when Kai spotted and got everyone on a/the very rarely recorded fully dark Common Murre. The day's scoter and tubenose numbers were modest.



The unforgettable highlight came suddenly when an exceptionally rare vagrant White Wagtail appeared in front of us for a few moments and bounded away to the east, calling. We were thrilled to find we had managed documentation photos. It is the first record for Point Pinos, the Monterey Peninsula, and for this millennium in Monterey County (last was 1998). See inline notes and photos.



Winds and waves were much milder than previous days with mostly clear skies and generally very high visibility. A king tide was very much in evidence throughout the day with an exceptionally low tide near sunset. Tidepool enthusiasts were able to enjoy a variety of showy nudibranchs, including the bright pink Hopkins' Rose Nudibranch (Ceratodoris rosacea). Marine mammals were cooperative today with Humpback Whales rarely out of sight. Risso's Dolphins were spotted in the distance and Orcas were reported on the Bay but not seen from Pinos. California Sea Lions and Pacific Harbor Seal were seen active and close to shore. Two of the many local Southern Sea Otters lounged on nearby rocks, allowing passersby to enjoy particularly good scope views.


- Bill Hubick


See the full checklist here: https://ebird.org/tripreport/293637

 
 
 

Updated: Nov 27, 2024

Another fun day at the Seawatch, highlighted by: not one but TWO Short-eared Owls that came by at hours when they could be appreciated by Seawatch regulars; a very confiding and close Leach's Storm-Petrel; some less-common waterfowl (a Redhead, 2 Black Scoters, 7 Common Mergansers); 6 Black-legged Kittiwakes; 3 Marbled Murrelets and 45 Ancient Murrelets; a Northern Harrier; a distant flock of Snow/Ross's Geese flying high towards the northeast. (The geese had been seen by Bill Hubick over El Carmelo cemetery just prior to detecting them at the Seawatch!)



I did not expect the loon flight to be so diminished from the 20,000+ flight yesterday, but, I'll be honest: it was nice to start the morning in a calmer fashion. We tallied 1051 Pacifics, 556 Red-throats, and 42 Commons; sunrise hour was the busiest for Red-throated (262) and the following hour the busiest for Pacifics (418). The loon flight we observed today was above and in front of us; we were not detecting flocks on the outer line.



We had another nice Surf Scoter flight: 2871, with the first and last hours of the count bringing us over 500 each. During the sunset hour, some of the large flocks were cutting behind us over the golf course, like they do fairly predictably late in the day.



The murre flight this morning was intense: for the first two hours, we had well over 1000, and ended the day with 5279 total; Rhinoceros Auklets were also numerous, 684 for the day; we had 4 Cassin's Auklets as well as the 3 Marbled and 45 Ancients mentioned above.



Tubenose numbers were diminished from yesterday: 11 Pink-foots, 19 Sooties, and the Leach's. Fulmars were plentiful in the morning, with >100 being clicked during each of the first two hours of the count.



The wind was <5 kt from the ENE at the outer buoy this morning, switching to 8-12 kt west in the afternoon, but remaining <5 kt at the Point. Swell was minimal, visibility was fairly good, and it was mostly sunny.


See the full checklist here: https://ebird.org/tripreport/293436


- Alison Vilag

 
 
 

Join our mailing list

MONTEREY AUDUBON SOCIETY, PO BOX 5656, CARMEL, CA, 93921, USA   

Contact us: Info@MontereyAudubon.org

The Monterey Audubon Society is a 501(c)3 tax-exempt, nonprofit organization, EIN 94-2397544. Contributions are tax-deductible.

bottom of page