When I moved to the NC mountains I set up an eBird NC Needs
Alert so that I could track and prioritize sightings that I might want to chase
after. I quickly realized that most of
the sightings that popped up on the alerts were from the NC coast. And because I’m so far west in the state, and
NC is such a “long” state east to west, most of those coastal sightings were 6
or more hours away. Needless to say,
most would require quite a considerable effort to chase after. So although I’ve continued to monitor the NC
Needs Alerts, I quickly write most of them off as being too far away to chase.
And that was exactly the case when the first Needs Alert
popped up for a Reddish Egret on June 15th.
At first I didn’t look at it too closely, just assuming it must be yet
another un-chaseable coastal bird. It
was in Mecklenburg County which wasn’t any of the local western NC counties I
was familiar with, so I just continued to assume that it must be somewhere
along the coast. But then after a few
more days of the Egret showing up on the Needs Alerts something clicked in my
mind – I remembered that Mecklenburg County is in the Charlotte area, within a
2-hour drive of home. That changed
everything. This one was definitely chaseable. But the bird was at a small regional park
called McAlpine Creek Park. During these
days of the pandemic I wondered if there would be too many people around to
allow for safe viewing. I decided better
safe than sorry and I’d just pass on this bird.
But then the Needs Alerts kept coming – practically haunting
me with each new post of this most reliable bird. With a bit of research I found out that not
only is Reddish Egret a rarity on the coast, but this was the first inland NC
record. I finally decided that I should
give it a try, and if I go in the early morning I figured I could avoid most of
the crowds. I reached out to my
Cleveland County birding friend Bill Hooker to see if he might want to meet me
at the park (he would only be an hour away).
Bill had planned to go, but was targeting that Saturday the 27th. I was however aiming for Wednesday the 25th,
hoping to avoid inevitable weekend crowds, though likely to run into rush hour
traffic. Not to mention that now that I
decided to chase after the Egret, I didn’t want to wait too much longer to go
after it – after all the 25th, would be the 11th day in a row for this rarity. I didn’t want to push my luck. Bill agreed to accommodate my schedule and
offered to meet me that morning at the park.
And better yet, he had a local birding contact in Greg Hays who could
likely help us find the bird. We came up
with a plan for Bill to meet Greg at the park early in the morning, and they
would hopefully have the Egret all scoped out and pinned down for me by the
time I got there a bit later.
On the morning of the 25th I was able to get out of the
house a bit earlier than expected. And
whether it was timing, or just less people on the road during the pandemic, it
turned out that the rush hour traffic never materialized. About halfway there I got a text from Bill
that he and Greg were on the bird – so I was hopeful. Just as I arrived at the parking lot Bill and
Greg came back to greet me. Within a
couple minutes they took me to the best viewing spot to see our target bird in
the beaver pond. And there was the
Reddish Egret, an immature dark phase bird, right in front of us. I got this nice phone-scoped shot as the bird
practically posed for us.
And here’s a distance shot of the bird without
magnification.
Reddish Egret was #302 for my NC statelist – my 7th state
for this species. Per my statebird map
below, I’ve seen this species in 5 southeast states in its regular range
(shaded in solid blue), and now NC and CA where it is a rarity (tan-shaded
states). I’ve yet to see it in MS and
GA in its regular range (the cross-hatched states).
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