My first Rooks County Red Crossbill, a juvenile female at Webster State Park
A different view of the same bird
After the successful trip with Caid, I decided to check out any stands of coniferous trees in Rooks. After searching a few different spots, I managed to pick out the above juvenile female. It's so weird to see a crossbill in 105 degrees of heat.
A few days later, I made a jaunt over to Rooks Fishing Lake and found a few new birds: county, year, and state Short-billed Dowitchers (feeding next to Long-billeds for nice comparisons); county Banks Swallows; and a county year Black Tern.
Two days later I went back to Rooks Fishing Lake. The number of migratory shorebirds was down, but I did find one sweet bird: a county, year, and state Willow Flycatcher.
You can see by the primary extension (medium length), faint eye ring, and dullish wing bars that the bird is a Traill's Flycatcher (what Willow and Alder Flycatchers used to be collectively lumped as). The single "whit" call the bird gave distinguished it from Alder as identification by sight alone is impossible.
Finally, Tiff, Caid, and I went to Wilson Lake to chill with Grandma and Grand-dude for part of a day. While we waited for the grandparents to show up, I walked around the Bur Oak Nature Trail. I found some good birds, but the most surprising was to hear the grunt call of a Virginia Rail in a small marsh next to the trail. This was in the early afternoon with temps around 100!
Now for some numbers: I sit at 227 Kansas birds for the year, 18 away from my goal. I still believe that my goal is attainable, but it will not be easy, either. I am running out of birds that I expect to see, so I will need to pick up some surprises along the way. Also of note, I now have 213 Rooks birds. This is one more than my 212 for Kent County in Michigan. I topped that county in less than a year in Rooks!
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