2016 Trip Report #1 (Pee Dee NWR)

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Song_Sparrow7

Song Sparrow
Pee Dee NWR
Jan. 2016

Pee Dee National Wildlife Refuge, near Wadesboro, NC, is one of my favorite “local” places to go birding. I can easily spend an entire day here. There is a wide range of habitats from freshwater ponds and marsh to farmland, pine forest and grassy areas.

My normal route usually circles the Wildlife Drive first, in particular to scope for Wood Ducks, and then to Arrowhead Pond via Clark Road to Big Oak Rd. Afterwards, I continue to the area around the silo and Gaddy Covered Bridge via Griffin, Gaddy and Beaver Pond Roads respectively. I usually circle back to do the wildlife drive one more time before leaving the area. I can do this route with various stops in about 3-5 hours depending on the weather and what I’m seeing.

In the back of my mind I knew that all of the Piedmont area was experiencing various amounts of flooding. Too bad I didn’t consider how that might affect my trip today. Many of the surrounding roads were blocked or signed off due to encroaching water or were just plain covered in water. This limited my normal route to just the wildlife drive, which I looped three times, twice in the morning and once in the early afternoon.

Red-Shouldered Hawk, juvenile Pee Dee NWR Jan. 2016

Red-Shouldered Hawk, juvenile
Pee Dee NWR
Jan. 2016

Today was unusual in that there were no ducks or herons present. NONE! More than one birder that I met commented on the lack of ducks. Pee Dee NWR is usually my go-to for finding Wood Ducks, although they are quite skittish and I have yet to get satisfactory (IMO) photo of them. Two gentlemen I met on the Wildlife Drive said they had seen a few early in the morning.

The highlight of the day was a juvenile Red-shouldered Hawk at the last part of the marsh on the Wildlife Drive. It was perched in a small tree just a mere 3-4 yards from the road. The photo opportunities were good despite the shade. Alas, a truck pulled up behind me and did not seem keen to wait. One of the downsides to this wildlife drive (as opposed to say, Bombay Hook NWR or Blackwater NWR) is that the drive is one-way and there are only 2 places along the marsh where you can pull over and let someone pass. During good weather I may have been able to pull to the shoulder enough for him to pass, but with the ground soft and wet, no way!

All in all, today was a lackluster day out but the weather was really nice. Very cold to begin with, but warmed up to a sunny 50 degrees. I normally see between 20-40 species on a good day,  today only 23 🙁 .

Trip List:

Eastern Phoebe Pee Dee NWR Jan. 2016

Eastern Phoebe
Pee Dee NWR
Jan. 2016

  1. Pied-billed Grebes 5
  2. Double-crested Cormorant 2 (flying over the marsh)
  3. Black Vulture 1
  4. Turkey Vulture 1
  5. Red-shouldered Hawk 1
  6. Red-headed Woodpecker
  7. Red-bellied Woodpecker 1
  8. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 2
  9. Northern Flicker 1
  10. Pileated Woodpecker 1 (heard only….one of the few birds I know by sound 100%)
  11. Eastern Phoebe
  12. American Crow
  13. Carolina Chickadee 1
  14. Tufted Titmouse 2
  15. Eastern Bluebird
  16. American Robin 10
  17. Brown Thrasher 1
  18. Pine Warbler 1 (seen near the bathrooms)
  19. Chipping Sparrow
  20. White-throated Sparrow 1
  21. Song Sparrow
  22. Eastern Towhee 1
  23. American Goldfinch

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The King of Camouflage!

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Pee Dee NWR Jan. 2016

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Pee Dee NWR
Jan. 2016