My Trip To Frontenac State Park

This past Saturday was the Big Day of birding, as I mentioned in my previous post, and this provided the perfect excuse to get out of the house and go birding! I decided to kill two birds with one stone (figuratively speaking, of course), by participating in the Big Day and going to a place I’d been hoping to visit this spring – Frontenac State Park. It’s known as the Warbler Capital of Minnesota, and is the ideal place to hit during migration season, featuring prairie, forest, and shoreline habitat as well as a wildlife observation blind. A few family members and I drove several hours to spend the day there!

First, we hit the Prairie Loop Trail, which is 2.8 miles long (I’m not the best hiker, so we didn’t want to go for the 6-mile loop!). There weren’t many birds there, though I did see a Rose-breasted Grosbeak, some Brown-headed Cowbirds, a Turkey Vulture, a Gray Catbird, and lots of Tree Swallows.

The female Rose-breasted Grosbeak is beautiful, though she doesn’t have the bright red marking of the male.

About halfway along the trail, we came to the wildlife observation blind, which is on the shore of the Pheasant Valley Lakelet. There, we spotted a pair of Canada Geese with eight goslings, a napping Wood Duck, a Sandhill Crane, and two new species of sandpiper for my life list – Solitary Sandpiper and Greater Yellowlegs.

Canada Goose goslings going for a field trip!
Solitary Sandpiper – a new species for me.

I even saw a tree not far away with an adult and juvenile Bald Eagle perched in it, which was awesome:

This Bald Eagle’s juvenile plumage looks nothing like the adult’s!

Then we moved on, with a ‘fun little adventure’ to recover my notebook (with a list of all the birds I’d seen on the trip so far) when I realized I’d dropped it somewhere on the trail; and a blister in my shoe. It was worth it, though, when I saw my third new species of the day – a Field Sparrow, one of the few sparrow species I can readily identify. I’m terrible with sparrows!

I spied this Field Sparrow sporting his lovely pink bill.

Then we went on the 1.4 mile Sand Point Trail, which had no new species on it, and though we’d planned on doing one more trail before heading home, we were all so tired from the events of the day that we cut it a little short. I didn’t see any new warblers, like I’d expected, but it was well worth it anyway!

New Arrivals!

Here in my yard, it seems like spring is finally arriving! I’ve been seeing birds carrying nest material, new migrants almost every day… This is my favorite part of the year, when something’s going on in my own back yard every second.

Yellow-rumped Warblers are so photogenic!

I’ve been seeing Yellow-rumped Warblers, Common Terns, Brown-headed Cowbirds, Tree and Barn Swallows… I even saw a Palm Warbler the other day! And, of course, ducks, robins and blackbirds are still here, making it really seem like spring.

A pair of Mallard Ducks enjoying the water.

The Big Day (when birders all over the world try to submit as many checklists as possible to eBird within 24 hours) is coming up on May 9, and I’m looking forward to participating. I have special plans for it, as you’ll see! Unfortunately, any of the birding events I attended last year and was looking forwards to this year have been canceled due to the pandemic, so it looks like I’ll be for the most part stuck at home this migration season. This is where a big yard with lots of nesting habitat comes in handy – I won’t be denied my birding time, even now!

Beautiful spring migrants like this female Cape May Warbler are a wonderful surprise on a spring day.

For those of you who don’t have a large yard, nearby parks would be just as good, I really recommend that. Go ahead and submit an eBird checklist from your local park or hiking trail on the 9th (for extra points, submit some any day you go birdwatching)!

Visit eBird here: https://ebird.org/home