
The Winter Waterfowl Tours are a new program here at the Outer Banks Center for Wildlife Education and they are focusing on the wintering waterfowl populations in Northeastern NC. I got to pick three sites to visit, one each in December, January and February, and we just had our first one on Saturday at Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge. We had a very good showing and our trip commenced at 8 am from the Pea Island visitor's center with a party of 9 in tow.
Right off the bat we scored numerous ducks and over 200 swans, it was all I could do to get my introduction out the ponds were so full of birds. Luckily, we had a surprise guest in Jeff Lewis who helped spot some really key species on the day. The group headed down to the main overlook at the south end of North Pond and we were not disappointed. Buffleheads, Red-breasted and Hooded Mergansers, Tundra Swans, Snow Geese, Mallards, Black Ducks, Scaup, a raft of Redheads 400 strong and countless Ruddies greeted us within the first 30 minutes. Not that it let up from there.
We were well blessed with a beautiful day in the high 50's with clear skies and virtually no wind, which made finding the Black Scoter's, Lesser Black Backed Gulls and Red Throated Loons on the ocean all the easier. To those of you who haven't signed up for one of our trips yet, please do, it is much more fun with plenty of eyes to help with the spotting.

The trip ended up at the south end of the Bonner Bridge across Oregon Inlet. There is a jetty there and I wanted to have a see for Purple Sandpiper, a little shorebird with an affinity for rocky shores and rougher waves. This makes it difficult to find on the southeast Atlantic Coast unless you know where to look. These little birds are extremely charasmatic, even though they mostly sleep, and they winter further north than other sandpipers. Still something of a migrational feat since they breed on
Baffin Island and Axel Heiberg Island near the artic circle. I happened to snap a few pictures of this one sleeping before I discovered that a friend was hanging out directly below. Beautiful little birds, especially that gold wash that seems to rim the outer edges of the scapular feathers.