Tag Archives: North Carolina Birding

North Carolina Recap

We’ve been home for a few weeks and just getting to the rest of the NC photos. It was a great trip — and this is our second visit to a nice cottage in Manteo that we really like.

The birding in the yard is wonderful — here’s a Carolina Wren singing to me early one morning.

There’s a nice mix of woodlands and ocean — here are some shots from our outings.

A House Finch serenading.
There were many Great-crested Flycatchers about.
Tree Swallow.
This Pileated Woodpecker on a dirt road seemed healthy and just looking for breakfast.
A Coastal Plain Cooter.

The Bodie Island Lighthouse attracts hundreds of visitors each day, but we passed on climbing the stairway to the top — though I’m a pilot, I fear heights. I hope your spring birding goes well.

A Wednesday Beach Walk

We are on an outing to North Carolina for some warmer weather and beach walking. It’s been quite windy but things have improved, as has the birding. We stay in Manteo and usually visit the national seashore daily.

Our backyard

Brown Pelicans surround a fishing boat

Here’s a young Herring Gull and then an older model.

Sanderlings are fun to watch.
A Black-bellied Plover joined the party.

And a Whimbrel watched from a distance.

Some NC Shorebirds

When you only get to the beach a few times a year, it’s always (for me) a challenge to sort out the shorebirds. Plovers, sandpipers, peeps, all moving all the time. This year we saw many Black-bellied Plovers in various phases of plumage.

Hanging with some Sanderlings

Easier for me are the bigger guys, like this Whimbrel and his Willet companion.

No one can mistake these Laughing Gulls when they hear and/or see them.

I’ll leave you with an image of a crab that we found while walking — it’s an Atlantic Ghost Crab. Thanks, iNaturalist

Count Them?

On our recent trip to North Carolina, we spent nearly every day at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. Mild weather, expansive beaches, and lots of sea birds – what’s not to like? Here’s the scene we saw the first morning there:

Double-crested Cormorants and Brown Pelicans

The next morning we came upon this gaggle of cormorants on the beach, slowly sliding into the water as we approached.

As a pilot, I have always loved to watch pelicans fly, either in formation, or riding the “ground effect” of the waves.

I’ll leave you with one of the pretty sand dunes, with its streaks of dark sand and topping of beach grass.