Showing posts with label Upland Sandpiper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Upland Sandpiper. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Upland Sandpiper, Richmond, RI, May 2019

Upland Sandpiper is a rare migrant through New England, and a recent nester only in a few grassland locations in MA, NH, and ME.  In RI, this species is rare in migration, with just 3 eBird sightings in the last decade – one in spring and 2 in fall.  Most sightings occur at the sod farms in the southern part of the state, along with the slightly more likely Buff-breasted Sandpipers and regular (in fall) Golden Plovers.  I’ve been able to catch up with Buff-breasts and Golden Plovers in RI over the years.  But the Uplands have been a different story – not only are they rare but most sightings have been one-day wonders which I didn’t chase after.  And the only one I did go for was seen for just 2 days – I tried for it on day 3. 

Then on April 24, 2019 came a report of an Upland at the sod fields in Slocum, RI.  Although this bird was once again only seen for that one day, there was a report of another Upland on the 25th along Heaton Orchard Road in Richmond.  (Or I guess there was a chance that this was the same bird visiting the 2 sites 7 miles apart “as the Sandpiper flies”.)  I wasn’t thinking about chasing after this one since it too was likely to be a one-day wonder.  But then came reports that the bird was continuing the next day, and then the next.  Unfortunately, I was super busy at home with no time to try for one of the few truly chaseable Upland Sandpipers in RI in recent memory.

I finally had a window of opportunity to try for the Upland on May 2nd or 3rd.  I had planned a birding trip to eastern CT on the 2nd and RI on the 3rd with birding friend Blair Bernson of WA.  Blair was on a quest to see 50 species in each of the 50 states, and I was helping him out in CT and RI.  In theory I could swing by the sod farms either of those days, but wasn’t too optimistic that this bird would still be around by the time I could finally get to the area – 7 or 8 days after it was first reported.  However, amazingly, the sightings continued and the bird was apparently quite reliable.  So I crossed my fingers that I could successfully add a stop at the Heaton Orchard Road sod farms to my pre-planned CT/RI trip itinerary.

Our CT birding on the 2nd went exceptionally well – in fact better than expected.  We ended our day at Hammonasset Beach State Park where a planned brief stop turned into a 3-hour visit as we ran into a tremendous fallout of migrant passerines, giving us well over 100 species on the day.  But that cut into my time to try for the Upland.  I only had time for a brief stop there that evening, but would have much more time the next day.  Not wanting to take a chance on whether the bird would stay yet another day, I decided to head to Richmond for a brief stop on evening of the 2nd to give it a go.

Several posts mentioned that the bird was being seen in the fields east of telephone poles 43, 44, and 45 – can’t get much more specific than that.  So as I pulled onto Heaton Orchard Road from the north I started scanning the numbers on the poles, and pulled over between poles 44 and 45 to start my search.  A quick binocular scan to the east netted no birds at all.  I suddenly remembered how big the sod farms were – roughly a square mile of likely habitat.  A sinking feeling started to set in as I started to wonder whether I would actually be able to find this one bird in so many acres of habitat.  But then I remembered one post that the bird was frequenting the taller grass – which was actually in the closer fields.  I had been looking farther out which happened to be the shorter grass.  So I changed my focus to these nearer fields, and with the next scan I quickly found the target Upland Sandpiper no more than 100 feet from me.  I got this phonescoped photo of this most cooperative bird.


This bird continued to be seen in this same sod farm through May 4th – 10 consecutive days.  During most of this time the weather was cool, gray, often rainy, and rarely with any southerly winds.  Maybe that’s why it decided to make such a long stop in RI on its way to a breeding site somewhere to the north.

Upland Sandpiper was #333 for my RI list.  In my statebird map below the 31 dark-shaded states are those where I’ve seen this species; the cross-hatched states are those where Upland is regular though not yet on my statelists.