SUMMARY by John Quinn ...
... aspiring MBW Junior Tour Leader and pulp fiction author [with minor edits by KRE]
Prologue
Please check the MBW TikTok channel for my soon to be released Country Western song: “County Lister Blues.” Here are a few lyrics to tempt you:
I chased that bird, but she won’t be seen
I want it on my list so bad it makes me mean
I drive the back roads searching for wings
To set my heart all aflutter when she sings
MBW Overview
Five days is a lot of material. I write these stories the way I do because I have an appreciation for the eccentricities of life. However, if you prefer not to have the intimate details of your life laid bare, I am happy to change the names. Anyway, let me know. And my editor has a fine eye and holds all responsibility.
Ira Glass’s This American Life’s podcast this past week was about lists. I highly recommend listening because listing is a unique human phenomenon that includes people who watch birds. Here I must limit my allotted space to county listers. (I wonder if Kim would sit for an interview with This American Life. Wouldn’t that be a story.)
Let me start by saying I am not a county lister. Yes, the birds show up in my eBird by county by default. Yes, I do check it occasionally to see if I have any birds in a new county. And I wonder how many birds I would have to see to pass Kim in St. Louis County. But I am not a county lister. You’ll understand later.
Thursday
Our day started with discussing curmudgeons of MBW’s penultimate year. A list was quickly made. We were all sorry Roy could not join us. We wish him a quick recovery so he can return to muttering about Kim’s various cranky behaviors. Later our gentle mild-mannered co-leader gets on the list.
We pulled into the Big Stone NWR with an American Bittern and flycatchers calling. We listened and learned that “Free Beer” is Alder and “Fitzbew” is Willow. Leasts were also singing. A tip I learned for identifying nondescript flycatchers is “squeeze it till it sings.” Unsure if this is an Audubon-approved technique.
Quiz: Which was the best MBW stop on Thursday?
A. Amongst the glacial boulders and rock outcropping at the NWR with a Mourning Warbler and Olive-sided Flycatcher? Not quite drop-dead gorgeous, but it was a beautiful morning.
B. At a flooded field with American Avocets and Hudsonian Godwits in breeding plumage with an afternoon sun at our backs? That’s what we live for – beauty and grace. And a couple of nice year birds for me. And a five-day total of 21 shorebird species.
C. The bituminous production area and equipment boneyard hosting Say’s Phoebe and Black-billed Cuckoo? Would a casual birder ever go in there? Never. But it counts for my year list and for a few people’s life lists. And many Big Stone County lists. Interesting to observe how nature adapts or can’t.
Answer(s):
– All the above
– None of the above, because I didn’t need either of those birds for this county. I need American Redstart!
At the refuge we ventured across the bridge into Lac qui Parle, where I learned that years ago Kim would refuse to enter another county if it wasn’t scheduled. This earned him many curmudgeonly points. I’ll return to this point later. I think it’s an interesting position after I had the pleasure of riding with Ron, Craig, and Brad for both Big Stone days. They are all county listers with good numbers of birds in every county. They are all excellent birders. Ron and Craig have a few years on Brad. Brad has hearing that all of us envy.
In Lac qui Parle County I learned that Forster’s Tern’s, both immature and non-breeding adults, lack a distinctive black bar on the leading edge of the wing, known as a carpal bar. Common Terns have a carpal bar. I am likely to develop carpal tunnel in my tongue if I say Common Terns are conspicuous with black carpal wing bars.
Later we added breeding-plumaged American Golden-Plover at one of the many mud flats/flooded fields that populate western Minnesota in spring. The layered golden-leafed back contrasting with the black chest and belly was spectacular. It had rained hard recently so every few miles you strained to see if shorebirds were present among the ubiquitous Blue-winged Teal. Brad’s ability to spot shorebirds at 50 miles an hour is impressive. Maybe I do need to fill that prescription? And get hearing aids.
Friday: County listers
Ron’s enthusiasm for county listing after 50+ years of birding is remarkable. We had Alder Flycatcher in Big Stone County. He needs it for Traverse. On our way to Traverse, he must have asked a dozen times if we were in Traverse yet. My granddaughters are more patient. Finally, as we approached the county line, Craig said, “Tie those shorts on tight we’re approaching the county line.” Curmudgeon points for Craig! Ron was giddy. No Alder. Amazingly, Ron was unflustered. I guess you get used to not seeing birds when your lowest county list is 217.
Later in the trip Craig called him about the Barred Owl we found in LQP. He left home within the hour to drive 100 miles round trip. Here’s a sampling of county listers...
Birder Age Lowest Co. Highest Co.
Ron 70s 217 294
Craig ~70 184 284
Brad 50s 126 282
John 60s 0 unsure
My observations are that time, timing, and persistence are the keys to county birding. The obsession really kicks in when you subscribe to moumn.org and start adding your records. First you think, I’ll just get a dot in every county, then you find a compulsion to eradicate the dots, then to be “legitimate” you need to turn each square green with at least 150 birds. From there, it’s 160, 200, then how many does Linda have? Paul got this bird in Stearns County; I need that bird! Off you go on a jealous, zealous race to find that next bird.
Which leads me to what I think is Kim’s rationale. These people are not rational. If the county listers see the slightest opportunity to migrate towards another county, you end up with a multitude of “I need this bird!” You don’t end up watching and learning about the birds present and their environment, you’re off to the next acquisition for your county list.
As a leader it must be a fascinating decision process between spending 45 minutes looking at an American Redstart, or stopping at a dead-still row of trees, a prairie area, or a downtown park for 30 minutes. Or do we continue driving to locations that are known hot spots, at all times being aware that something interesting could show up anywhere, or better to spend time learning more about individual birds versus just ticking them off? Anyway, as Bob Russell once said: “Oh well, think about things.”
We stopped in Browns Valley (Traverse County), and if I had unlimited space I would love to share the story of Richard Johnson, the curator of the Sam Brown Historical Park. I’ll have to leave it at fascinating. Get out there yourself – he seemed desparate for company. We did add Lark Sparrow in the parking lot nearby. A good county bird.
We returned to Big Stone County and while traveling toward Graceville for a restroom stop, Claudia wondered “What is the motto of Graceville?” After a day of 20-30 mph winds with gusts to 40, Brett answered, “Hold onto your hats!” Claudia replied, “With grace.” Kim is contacting the Graceville community development committee. The motto is expected to be big on Twitter. We added Upland Sandpipers by the side of the road and were blessed with great looks at Red-necked Phalaropes at the Graceville WTP.
Saturday: Bird Bling
With the role of OJTLIT (Obsequious Junior Tour Leader In Training), you’ll need to demonstrate that your loyalty knows no bounds. In my case, I presented Kim with a gold-encrusted seashell hand-painted locally with a European type of chickadee complete with gold chain. Lear’s Fool perhaps?
We returned to Big Stone NWR. At the trailhead, some heard and some even saw Mourning Warbler, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, and Indigo Bunting. But no chickadee. That’s going to be important. An Eastern Phoebe had a nest under the outhouse roof. Amazing how after returning to MN just a couple of weeks ago so many birds are busy bringing food or sitting on nests.
We wandered around LQP county looking for chickadees, ending up in Madison for lunch. Madison is the county seat of Lac qui Parle and proclaims itself to be the "lutefisk capital of the USA.” The population was 1,518 as of the 2020 census. Lou T. Fisk is still a local celebrity. And somewhere along the way, Linda “sacked” Black-capped Chickadee – i.e., she now has seen the species in all 87 MN counties..An incredible achievement.
We stopped at one more wet spot. Or was it a dozen or two? Craig found an American Black Duck (which refused to morph into a Mottled Duck). Stilt Sandpipers and a lone Dickcissel were seen. I need that bird! American Wigeon, too.
I was tired after a long day of battling wind, rain, and chasing chickadees, and I was a little concerned my tent had blown away in the high winds. I stopped on the hillside overlooking Big Stone Lake State Park to eat and wait for the rain to subside. It was a spectacular view of the storm – dark clouds, lighting, and rain coming from the western horizon. Just at sunset a giant double rainbow appeared in the sky behind me. Even as the sun set the rainbow remained. Remarkable. I found my tent had held on by one stake and slept like a rock.
Sunday
Lac qui Parle is a French translation of the native Dakota name, meaning "lake which speaks.” Ah, if it would only tell us where the ibis are. Mariann was assigned the herculean task of finding us some. After a solemn transfer of the precious Bird Bling to Linda for her chickadee accomplishment, we headed off toward LQP again. A stop at the Plover Prairie SNA yielded Grasshopper Sparrow and great looks at an unexpectedly late Rough-legged Hawk and winnowing Wilson’s Snipe. I like unmistakable birds.
Sometimes a nostalgia stop is required on MBWs. We had to go by the massive brick schoolhouse in Louisburg. It’s even on Google Maps. Craig was a tad cantankerous in declining to tell the story since Kim’s car was not in radio range. At yet another flooded field at Louisburg we discovered a possible Snowy Egret. Craig’s texts to Kim about it suggested he was getting a little testy. “Probable Snowy Egret” at first, followed by “Defiantly a Snow Egret.” More curmudgeon points. Even if he really meant to type “definitely.” (By the way, we had found another Snowy plus a Cattle Egret on Thursday in Big Stone County.)
We were welcomed at our stop in LQP State Park by clouds of mosquitoes. First of the year for me and Minnesota’s State Bird. Our only good bird was Barred Owl. A Wood Thrush was heard by some, but just stepping into the woods raised voracious clouds of insects. (Even without stepping into the woods the clouds appeared.) We swept them out of the car as we hastily departed for the ride back to Ortonvillle.
I made another effort to find a Western Kingbird on my way back to Big Stone State Park. Although unsuccessful, I had dinner in the picnic area near the park observing Ring-necked Pheasants strutting and defending their turf until it was dark.
Monday: Memorial Day
Mariann was under a lot of pressure. It was ibis or else… Even Kim was excited as he shouted Ibis at another wet spot on the side of another road. We were treated with three White-faced Ibis in good light close enough to tell with binoculars they were not Glossys. It was already a good day.
We wandered toward Salt Lake and got an education on the SD-MN state line, as Rick and Kim had left the main group to check the far side of the lake. It’s somewhere beyond a tall “Rick Gibson Crane” rising above the grass, and past a trailing Kim, but before the white plastic encased hay bails which none of us ever saw. But they flushed Northern Pintails and called out Sanderlings. Visible to us as white-and-dark dots scurrying on the sandbar, but a good bird for ending the MBW. Time to head home.
My county list: Lac Qui Parle 110, Big Stone 111, Traverse 65, Swift 43, St. Louis 116.
Curmudgeon Points: the list goes on and on.
Mammal List: Richardson ’s Ground Squirrel, Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrel, White-tailed Deer, Eastern Cottontail, Raccoon (oddly in broad daylight in the same field as a Greater White-fronted Goose), bats (unidentified).
Reptile List: Garter Snake, Painted Turtle, Spiny Soft-shelled Turtle.
Prairie Plant List: On Monday we visited Yellow Bank Hills SNA near the SD border. There were not many birds, but I admired the beauty of the rolling landscape, and I took a moment to look down at the complexity and variety of plant species and their singular small beauty. Mouse-ear Chickweed, Wild Foxglove, Leadplant were just a few I stopped to identify. I can only imagine what it looked like prior to the industrialized farming landscape we live in today.
* * *
BIRD LIST [Compiled by KRE]
• Composite total 162 species (the exact same total as the Murray-Cottonwood MBW two
weeks previously)
• BS = Big Stone MBW, May 23-24
• LQP = Lac Qui Parle MBW, May 25-26-27
Note - The main BS and LQP annotations for a species refer to the MBWeekend, which usually – but not always – coincides with the county where the species was. Part of the Big Stone MBW was in Lac Qui Parle, Swift, and Traverse counties, and the Lac Qui Parle MBW was briefly in Big Stone, Chippewa, and Swift counties.
Greater White-fronted Goose LQP (injured?)
Canada Goose BS, LQP
Trumpeter Swan BS, LQP
Wood Duck BS, LQP
Blue-winged Teal BS, LQP
Northern Shoveler BS, LQP
Gadwall BS, LQP
American Wigeon LQP
Mallard BS, LQP
American Black Duck LQP (rare in western MN)
Northern Pintail BS (Traverse only), LQP
Green-winged Teal BS (Swift only), LQP
Canvasback BS, LQP
Redhead BS, LQP
Ring-necked Duck BS, LQP
Lesser Scaup BS, LQP
Hooded Merganser BS, LQP
Ruddy Duck BS, LQP
Wild Turkey BS, LQP
Ring-necked Pheasant BS, LQP
Pied-billed Grebe BS, LQP
Red-necked Grebe BS, LQP
Eared Grebe BS, LQP
Western Grebe BS, LQP (nesting along CR 62)
Rock Pigeon BS, LQP
Eurasian Collared-Dove BS, LQP
Mourning Dove BS, LQP
Black-billed Cuckoo BS, LQP (plus possible Yellow-billeds heard on both)
Common Nighthawk BS, LQP
Chimney Swift BS, LQP
Ruby-throated Hummingbird BS, LQP
Virginia Rail BS, LQP
Sora BS, LQP
American Coot BS, LQP
Sandhill Crane LQP (uncommon/rare in summer here)
American Avocet BS (along CR 21 north of CR 10)
Black-bellied Plover BS
American Golden-Plover BS
Killdeer BS, LQP
Semipalmated Plover BS, LQP
Upland Sandpiper BS (also in Swift)
Hudsonian Godwit BS, LQP
Marbled Godwit BS, LQP (Swift & Chippewa only)
Stilt Sandpiper BS, LQP
Sanderling LQP
Dunlin BS, LQP
Least Sandpiper BS, LQP
White-rumped Sandpiper BS, LQP
Pectoral Sandpiper BS, LQP
Semipalmated Sandpiper BS, LQP
American Woodcock BS, LQP (reported by Brad & Deb after dinner)
Wilson’s Snipe BS, LQP
Spotted Sandpiper BS, LQP
Lesser Yellowlegs LQP
Wilson’s Phalarope BS, LQP
Red-necked Phalarope BS, LQP ( = 21 shorebird species)
Franklin’s Gull BS, LQP
Ring-billed Gull BS, LQP
Black Tern BS, LQP
Forster’s Tern BS, LQP
Common Loon BS
Double-crested Cormorant BS, LQP
American White Pelican BS, LQP
American Bittern BS, LQP
Great Blue Heron BS, LQP
Great Egret BS, LQP
Snowy Egret BS (near jct of CRs 21 & 62), LQP (Louisberg)
Cattle Egret BS (along MN 7), LQP (loc?)
Green Heron BS, LQP
White-faced Ibis LQP (3 along CR 7)
Turkey Vulture BS, LQP
Northern Harrier BS, LQP
Cooper’s Hawk LQP
Bald Eagle BS, LQP
Broad-winged Hawk LQP
Swainson’s Hawk BS (Swift only), LQP
Red-tailed Hawk BS, LQP
Rough-legged Hawk LQP (very late migrant)
Barred Owl LQP (preying on mosquitoes at the state park?!)
Belted Kingfisher BS, LQP
Red-headed Woodpecker BS, LQP
Red-bellied Woodpecker BS, LQP
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker BS, LQP
Downy Woodpecker BS, LQP
Hairy Woodpecker BS, LQP
Northern Flicker BS, LQP
Pileated Woodpecker BS
American Kestrel BS, LQP
Great Crested Flycatcher BS, LQP
Western Kingbird BS
Eastern Kingbird BS, LQP
Olive-sided Flycatcher BS
Eastern Wood-Pewee BS, LQP
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher LQP
Alder Flycatcher BS, LQP
Willow Flycatcher BS, LQP
Least Flycatcher BS, LQP
Eastern Phoebe BS, LQP
Say’s Phoebe BS (1-2 stake-outs north of Odessa)
Yellow-throated Vireo BS, LQP
Philadelphia Vireo LQP
Warbling Vireo BS, LQP
Red-eyed Vireo BS, LQP
Blue Jay BS, LQP
American Crow BS, LQP
Black-capped Chickadee BS, LQP
Horned Lark BS, LQP
Bank Swallow BS, LQP
Tree Swallow BS, LQP
Northern Rough-winged Swallow BS, LQP
Purple Martin BS, LQP
Barn Swallow BS, LQP
Cliff Swallow BS, LQP
Cedar Waxwing BS, LQP
White-breasted Nuthatch BS, LQP
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher LQP (uncommon/rare in western MN)
House Wren BS, LQP
Sedge Wren BS, LQP
Marsh Wren BS, LQP
Gray Catbird BS, LQP
Brown Thrasher BS, LQP
European Starling BS, LQP
Eastern Bluebird BS, LQP
Swainson’s Thrush BS, LQP
Wood Thrush LQP
American Robin BS, LQP
House Sparrow BS, LQP
House Finch BS, LQP
Pine Siskin LQP
American Goldfinch BS, LQP
Grasshopper Sparrow BS, LQP
Lark Sparrow BS (Traverse only)
Chipping Sparrow BS, LQP
Clay-colored Sparrow BS, LQP
Field Sparrow BS
Vesper Sparrow LQP
Savannah Sparrow BS, LQP
Song Sparrow BS, LQP
Swamp Sparrow BS, LQP..
Yellow-headed Blackbird BS, LQP
Bobolink BS, LQP
Eastern Meadowlark LQP
Western Meadowlark BS, LQP
Orchard Oriole BS, LQP
Baltimore Oriole BS, LQP
Red-winged Blackbird BS, LQP
Brown-headed Cowbird BS, LQP
Brewer’s Blackbird BS, LQP
Common Grackle BS, LQP
Black-and-white Warbler LQP
Tennessee Warbler BS, LQP
Mourning Warbler BS, LQP
Common Yellowthroat BS, LQP
American Redstart BS, LQP
Magnolia Warbler LQP
Blackburnian Warbler BS
Yellow Warbler BS, LQP
Blackpoll Warbler LQP (also in Big Stone)
Northern Cardinal BS, LQP
Rose-breasted Grosbeak BS, LQP
Indigo Bunting BS, LQP
Dickcissel LQP
BIG STONE & LAC QUI PARLE MBWeekends
~ May 23 - 24 & May 25 - 26 - 27, 2024 ~
Mariann Cyr photo
Mariann Cyr photo