Saturday, December 13, 2025

Eight Greater White-fronted Geese at the Church Road Pond ~ December 13, 2025

I left around 12:30 and checked the Regency Boulevard retention ponds. There was no sign of the Tundra Swan that was there recently. I scoped the field at the end of Steuben Road and briefly saw about 40 Horned Larks way in the distance.

I drove down Arrowhead Road looking for field birds but instead found at least 500 American Crows and a Red-tailed Hawk in the treeline.

Most of the retention ponds were frozen. When I stopped at Green Pond, I found a couple Eastern Bluebirds on the fence around one of the ponds and a Northern Harrier hunting the edges of them.

While I was there, Paul Shanahan stopped to talk with me. He told me that the Church Road retention pond was still partially open, so I drove over there. I scanned through the 250 Canada Geese and 26 Mallards and found 8 Greater White-fronted Geese! Four were on the ice near the center of the pond and four were on the ice along the western edge of the pond.

While there, 4 Bald Eagles flew over and got the geese all worked up for a while. An adult, a sub-adult, and two immatures were seen.

I sent out a text about the White-fronteds and then headed for the Nazareth Quarry. There were roughly 20,000 Snow Geese there. Scanning the rest of the quarry revealed 48 Ruddy Ducks, 18 Ring-necked Ducks, 11 Buffleheads, 6 American Black Ducks, 2 Common Mergansers, and 27 American Coots.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

A Garganey in Pennsylvania! ~ December 11, 2025

When my phone rang in the late afternoon and I saw the caller was Jason Horn, I thought, "Oh boy, what did somebody find now?" I answered and he told me that a Garganey had been photographed on a pond in Bedford County by Connor Schmitt! I just went and asked him. "What time in the morning do you want me at your house?" We agreed that 3:30 AM plus the 3-plus hour drive would get us there just before light. Another birder, Marjorie Keefe would also be going with us. So we met at his house, loaded everything into his car, and got to the pond as scheduled, just before light.

We walked the short way down to the pond and started searching the area as soon as we could see. While searching among the Mallards, several American Black Ducks, a few Green-winged Teal, and a Northern Pintail, we quickly found the Garganey! Its tan-colored head sported a dark cap, dark eye line, dark ear spot, and short dark line from the gape. It also had a fairly long bill (longer than that of the Green-winged Teal's) and two white bars on the wings. As soon as it got light enough to try and get photos, I started snapping away.
I got this photo of the Garganey between two Green-winged Teal, showing the distinctive markings on the lighter head, rufous breast, and lighter sides.
Even though the wind chill was 12 degrees, we happily spent the next few hours getting more looks and photos of this rare vagrant. I got these photos when it stood atop a fallen log.

It walked along the ice close enough that we could tell that it was not banded and had both of its hind toes intact, ruling out the possibility of it being an escaped bird. Many bird collectors will clip their birds' hind toes to mark them. This bird showed no evidence of that.

When a Canada Goose lunged toward the Garganey as it walked by, it caused it to fly a short distance. Luckily, I got a series of shots of it. Unfortunately, many of them were blurred, but they still show the distinctive upper and underwing patterns of the bird. The upperwing shows the speculum bordered by two broad white stripes, and the underwing shows a dark leading edge, a white center section, and a gray trailing edge.



Other birds seen there were 2 Snow Geese among the many Canadas, plus a Bald Eagle that flushed most of the ducks, including the Garganey.


They all eventually returned to the area. We left there with big smiles on our faces and enjoyed getting the feeling back in our fingers and toes on the ride home in the warm car. I got back home in the late afternoon.

It was the first confirmed Pennsylvania record of Garganey! I heard that there were a couple previous sight records, but they were without documentation. This sighting is even more significant given that there are only about a dozen records or so for the entire eastern quarter of the country. This was my fourth Garganey sighting. I saw my 'life' Garganey at Brigantine, New Jersey in June of 1997 and saw a pair on St. Paul Island, Alaska in May of 2024.

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Nazareth Quarry ~ December 9, 2025

I made another late afternoon run up to the Nazareth Quarry to check it out. I scanned through the continuing large amount of geese. There were about 35,000 Snow Geese there and about 800 Canadas. Nothing different was spotted.
Other notables were 25 Ruddy Ducks, 7 Ring-necked Ducks, 5 Buffleheads, an American Black Duck, and a Common Merganser.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Nine Greater White-fronted Geese and a Huge Influx of Snows ~ December 6, 2025

Mike Schall checked out the Trio Farms Boulevard retention ponds and found 9 Greater White-fronted Geese there. I was planning on checking the Nazareth Quarry at the end of the day, so I swung by that way beforehand. I found all nine. Among about 500 Canada Geese, I found two on the larger pond, two on the berm between the two ponds, and five on the north bank by the houses.


Also there were 6 Cackling Geese showing their lighter-colored backs, short necks, and stubby bills, plus a Great Blue Heron.

I then went to the Nazareth Quarry as planned. A huge number of Snow Geese had apparently moved into the area overnight. After seeing 6000 there two days ago, there were roughly 35,000 Snows there today, filling two-thirds of the quarry and dwarfing the 3000 Canadas. At one point, about a third of them took off.
Adam Miller and Guy de Bruyn were there. Adam pointed out a group of about 40 scaup that appeared to be mostly Greater Scaup, but they were too far back in the quarry to be sure.

Several Redheads were also with them. Other birds seen there included about 30 Ruddy Ducks, 20 Ring-necked Ducks, 9 Buffleheads, 3 American Black Ducks, 5 Common Mergansers, 22 American Coots, and a Pied-billed Grebe. After 4:30, a small group of gulls dropped in and briefly landed long enough for me to notice a first-winter Iceland Gull with 23 Lesser Black-backed Gulls and 9 American Herring Gulls before taking off again.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Nazareth Quarry ~ December 4, 2025

With the unseasonably cold temperatures freezing up all of the local ponds, I made a late afternoon run up to the Nazareth Quarry to see what might be there. I spent most of my time going through the geese and gulls. I didn't find anything notable among the 6000 Snow Geese and 4000 Canada Geese, but I did pick out two Iceland Gulls among the roughly 600 Lesser Black-backed Gulls, 16 American Herring Gulls, and 4 Ring-billed Gulls.


Other notables were 18 Ruddy Ducks, 7 Ring-necked Ducks, and a Pied-billed Grebe.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Twelve(!) Greater White-fronted Geese at the Silver Crest Road Pond ~ December 3, 2025

In the morning, Adam Miller sent out a text that he had found 12(!) Greater White-fronted Geese at the Silver Crest Road pond. This impressive number became the most ever seen at one site in Northampton County. I took a ride over there in the afternoon and located all twelve, which was a little difficult since they weren't all together and some were in among the roughly 700 Canada Geese. I got photos of a group of seven and a group of five.

There were at least two immature Greater White-fronteds in with the adults. I got a pretty nice photo of one of them with one of the adults, which shows the lack of white on the face.
There was also a group of 7 Cackling Geese there.

Here's another comparison photo between a Cackling Goose and a Canada Goose.
When I got back home and went through my photos, I came across these two of a White-fronted Goose showing what appeared to be a light eye ring. This is one of the traits of a Lesser White-fronted Goose, which would be a super rarity for the United States, so it was eye-opening, but I was very skeptical that it was one because of the probability. I have never seen one, so I went on the internet to look at photos. The bill on a Lesser is usually much stubbier than what this bird was showing and it is usually more pinkish, although this bill was pink while all of the Greater White-fronteds there showed a more orange color to their bills. Here are the only two distant photos that I got of this bird.

The photos are just a bit out of focus. I wasn't sure whether this eye ring was a trick of the lighting or not. It appeared that it could be the sun reflecting the iris, but I just couldn't be sure. Anyway, I let others know just in case it would stick around and more documentation could be obtained.

A Great Blue Heron was also there, and a Common Raven circled overhead at one point.

Five Ruddy Ducks, 2 Hooded Mergansers, and a Common Merganser were also seen there.

I went down the road to the Regency Boulevard ponds. There were only a few Mallards among the many Canada Geese, but an adult female Northern Harrier was seen hunting along the edge of the south pond while I was at the north pond, so I was only able to get these distant photos of it.

On the way home, I stopped at the Green Pond area. The male Bufflehead continued in the back middle pond with about a hundred Canada Geese, and a Northern Flicker was in the treeline by the golf course. I couldn't find the lingering Killdeer, so it had apparently finally moved on.