Birdchick

Not your typical birder!

Fall Birding At Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary

Posted by Birdchick on October - 13 - 2009

Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary

Saturday I had to go put in a ranger appearance at an event at Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary for an open house they were holding.  It’s a great little park that still needs some work, but as more people hang out there, cool things will be found.  This park has such interesting features–a closed up cave that is of spiritual significance for Native Americans, caves that used to store beer for the North Star Brewery built in the 1850s (the brewery was later bought by Jacob Schmidt). In the late 1880s the area was used as an industrial area and rail yard.  It was turned into a park in 2005 and yes, it needs some work–buckthorn and garlic mustard city and the old railroad yard has left all kinds of nasty things in the soil, but a dedicated group of volunteers has been working hard to turn it around and over the years, this will be a bright gem in the Twin Cities park system.

Male kestrel.

Here’s a young male kestrel who was on patrol for food in the area.  He was mobbed by a few goldfinches but he mobbed a Cooper’s hawk when it flew through–no one is going to partake of his food source!  I spent most of my time with local birder and excellent bird guide for St Paul Audubon, Julian Sellers.  I noticed he had photos of an orchard oriole out and I remembered that this past spring when I was Bruce Vento, we heard an orchard oriole singing on territory.  Julian said that he and his wife saw the male this summer feeding three young!  That’s a great bird for an urban area and for this new park.

Tree

At first, we didn’t see too much in the way of birds, which surprised me since Carpenter Nature Center was so full of migrants on the move the day before.  But between the nearby highway and active railroad tracks, hearing chip notes is a challenge.  I walked over towards the tracks and found this grassy area to be CHOCK full of birds.

Eastern Bluebird

Mostly eastern bluebirds–they were all over and scattered about.  Not sure if they were after grasses or lethargic grasshoppers hidden amidst the grass and low to the ground.

Chipping Sparrow and House Finches

House finches and sparrows were mixed in with the bluebirds.  Above are a couple of female sparrows and a chipping sparrow.  You may be saying to yourself, “Hey, that chipping sparrow doesn’t look like the ones I see at my feeder in the summer.” But they change color and kind of look like clay-colored sparrows in the fall.  There were also white-throated sparrows, Lincoln’s sparrows and fox sparrows mixed in.

Goldfinches Chowing Down

The real fun were all the goldfinches.  And boy do they hide well in their brownish plumage!  I would walk down a path completely unaware and then a big flock would explode out of the grasses around me.  But soon enough, one finch would return to the food source and others would follow.

Upside down finch

I think these are common sunflower heads, but I’m not sure.  Whatever they were–the goldfinches were digging it.  If you didn’t know they were there, they totally blended in despite their furious feasting.

Goldfinch feeding

It’s a great little park and again, I think we’re going to see some great birds there the more people check it out.

6 Responses so far.

  1. Kitanne says:

    Hah! I just got confused about a winter chipping sparrow at the feeder a few hours ago. They look totally different in the winter plus the one at the feeder was all puffed up and very rotund looking.

  2. Peter says:

    Based on the surrounding grasses, I’d guess the goldfinches are chowing down on a member of family Silphium, which includes sunflowers, that are a native prairie plant. Your first shot, for example, seems to show a great amount of Little Bluestem grass, which turns bright red after the first frost. So those could be Rosinweed, Compassplant, or even Prairie Dock.

  3. Susan says:

    Grr! I’m pretty new to birding and I find identifying sparrows a mighty challenge. Naturally the one sparrow I feel confident about would look totally different in winter. Haha.

  4. I hadn’t heard of this park before. We’ll have to check it out. I’m always looking for new locations to use in my series.

  5. Birdchick says:

    Peter–thanks for the tips about the vegetation. I know volunteers have been working hard to get rid of some nasty exotics and trying to add some native vegetation, bluestem would be there. Feel free to add in plant id comments, I’m woefully uneducated when it comes to plants and always appreciate learning from commenters.

    birdermurdermomma

    Bruce Vento has a lot of possibility as a great birding spot and good photography potential. I would hit it during migration until we get a better handle on what exactly is breeding there.

  6. dguzman says:

    Wow, I didn’t know that about the chipping sparrows–thanks for the info!

  • RSS
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Search Site