Monday, December 19, 2011

Trinidade Petrel All The Way Across The Sky


Common Murres do live up to their name around these parts, but I still think they should be named something else. Wikipedia claims they are sometimes referred to as Thin-billed Murre, but I've never heard that.  Random fact of the day: people in Newfoundland love eating murres.

As promised, here are some more photos from my November pelagic trip out of Half Moon Bay. I think what I really need to do is get on an east coast pelagic, where there are so many potential life birds that I would likely be blinded by the end of a trip. I'm tearing up just thinking about it.

The way I envision my first east coast pelagic (likely a Brian Patteson boat, of course) would be something like what you see in the infamous Double Rainbow video (watch it if for some inexplicable reason you haven't seen it, and yes, he is on mushrooms). It would just be so...intense, you know? Great Shearwater would give me the shakes. Black-capped Petrels would bring me to tears. Band-rumped Storm-Petrels would make me scream for joy. A Trinidade Petrel would have me crapping my pants. I have no intention of eating mushrooms, however, I can totally see myself saying "Whoa. It's a Trinidade Petrel. Trinidade Petrel all the way. Whoa, that's so intense...whoa man.....WHOOOAAAAA! Oh my god oh my god! Woooooooo! Ohhhhhh, wowwwww!!! WOOOOOOO! Yeah! Oh my god, look at that! Trinidade Petrel all the way across the sky! Oh my god! Oh my god! What does this mean?"

Just something to think about. Have a cathartic week everybody.


Northern Fulmar. White morphs are pretty uncommon in California. They look so clean compared to their filthy gray cousins.


Surf Scoter. Not rare, but still rad.


Mew Gulls are celebrated amongst birders for their tenedency to not breed with other gull species, and being easy to identify. And they are, dare I say it, "cute".


A Pink-footed Shearwater has more moves than the average bird; they are perfectly at home flying like this (it's standing on its wing, not flying overhead).


Red-throated Loon. What to say about a basic-plumaged Red-throated Loon? They are....long. Yeah.


Rhinoceros Auklet with mini-horn. There's probably a market for their horns in China, which will eventually lead to their demise. WHY, CHINA?! WHY??????????


Brandt's Cormorant immature.


This was part of the big Ancient Murrelet flock we found. All my photos of said flock totally suck. Sigh.


Brown Pelican. Pretty good composition for a completely uncropped/unrotated photo, I reckon.



3 comments:

  1. East coast pelagics are epic. Patteson runs a class organization.

    If you ever do make it out Hatteras way, lemme know. I know people.

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  2. Oh man that rainbow video is ridic. I tried to come up with both a new name for Common Murre and a new description for that loon. Empty on both accounts, though I toyed briefly with Penguin Tot for the murre.

    That Rhino Auklet shot is crazy good.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks Nate, I'm glad to know people who know people.

    I'm thinking Poseidon's Guillemot instead of Common Murre.

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