Showing posts with label common nighthawk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label common nighthawk. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Common Nighthawk

For the past few years, I've noticed a lack of Common Nighthawks (Chordeiles minor) around Estevan - ever since the huge, old, brick Estevan Collegiate Institute building was torn down.  I'm pretty sure these birds nested on the flat parts of the roof.  [They are also ground nesters - clearings in trees near water.  Well, we do have a lot of water around here this season....and now a lot of mosquitos!] 


Lately, though, there is at least one, hopefully two, nighthawks often cruising the sky over my place in the evenings, issuing their familiar nasal 'peent' (others may choose to translate the call otherwise, 'peent' is the way it sounds to me)


A week or so ago, I found a group of 17 nighthawks out near Mainprize Park (west of Estevan some 50-60 kms).  That particular windy afternoon, all except one were sleeping - or trying to sleep - on the rails of a corral. 

It was good to see such a good number of these insect-eating birds.  There's a lot of current concern about the rapid decline in numbers of the Barn Swallow.  Out here in the prairies, we still have a lot of Barn Swallows, but I would say the Common Nighthawk decline is not insignificant. 


Click on pix for larger & clearer, if you want.  It was pretty windy that day with feathers flying up and such; everything looks a bit blurry to me. 

For more information and an audio clip of 'peent', go to All About Birds:
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Nighthawk/id
and Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Nighthawk

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

At Rafferty Today

Went out to Rafferty Dam this afternoon.  Lots of Franklin's Gulls flying and on the water.


Franklin's Gulls on water at Rafferty Dam

Flooded hay fields
  

A Say's Phoebe

  
Huge flocks of blackbirds, mostly Brewer's with a few Yellow-headeds


A resting Common Nighthawk  (my first of the year for this area)


Other birds:

Two young male Ring-necked Pheasants
Young Common Loon
Western Grebes, mostly young ones
Great Blue Heron
Double-creasted Cormorant, drying its wings
Ring-billed Gulls
American Coots - lots of these around
Red-tailed Hawks
Merlin