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Posts Tagged ‘birding’

The first quarter of 2026 delivered an incredible start to my birding year. With 282 species already on the annual list, I sit well ahead of the pace needed to reach my goal of 375 birds for the year! This early success stems largely from a productive February spent navigating the varied landscapes of Argentina and the stark beauty of Antarctica.

Southern Hemisphere Highlights

The trip south added significant depth to my life list. Near Costanera Sur (in Buenos Aires), I checked off the Rufescent Tiger Heron and watched a flock of Nanday Parakeets flash through the trees.

Moving into the rugged terrain of Argentina, witnessing an Andean Condor on the face of a mountain is a core memory of the trip.

As cool as that was, seeing four different owls (Austral Pygmy Owl, Ferruginous Pygmy Owl, Burrowing Owl, and Great Horned Owl) was the highlight of the Argentina leg of the trip!

The Antarctic leg of the journey offered a different kind of intensity. Spotting the Antarctic Shag and the opportunistic Brown Skua against a backdrop of ice provided a stark contrast to the vibrant birdlife in the north. These sightings pushed my life list to its current total of 1,382. Of course, I can’t forget the Penguins either! Chinstrap, Gentoo, and Megallanic were all in attendance …

The Local Hunt: The Usual Suspects

Back in Kelowna, my focus shifts to specific local targets. The early spring birds (like the Say’s Phoebe) and my usual flock of White-crowned Sparrows will add to the list.

The Road to 375

With 93 species left to find to hit my 2026 target, my upcoming road trip through Washington, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Texas, Colorado, Utah and Oregon looks promising. These regions offer vastly different habitats and the potential to close that gap quickly. I am also dedicating time this month to auditing my photo archives from Belize—I suspect a few unlogged sightings are hiding in those files.

The chase continues.

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I’ve got a jumpstart for my Blog. I know that my one consistency has been inconsistency — I’m going to see if I can change this. While I enjoy the freedom of general reflection, focusing on specific pillars creates a more meaningful narrative for the year. Moving forward, I am organizing Stumblingpiper.org around four distinct categories that capture my current projects and experiences.

The 2026 Road Trip Series

This series follows my upcoming travels through Texas and Colorado. I plan to document the landscapes, the birds I spot along the way, and the unique moments that only happen when you’re on the move. The category tag will be “2026 Road Trip”

2026 Life Challenges

I have a set of Life Challenges I’ve written and then I write Annual Goals around these challenges. Accountability drives progress, so I will use this space to log my monthly updates on my annual goals. Here’s an example for now: Currently, my birding life list stands at 1,382 species, and I aim to cross the 1,400 mark by the end of the year. On the annual front, I’ve already spotted 282 species toward my goal of 375. Beyond the numbers, since I’ve procrastinated on sorting some of my bird photos from past years, I may find some of those “new birds” as I sort through my photo archives from Belize. Stay tuned on this one: tag is “2026 Life Challenges”

Mind-wandering

This remains the home for deeper reflections and personal philosophy. It is a place for the questions and ideas that surface during quiet moments and long walks … probably not, but it sounds good. I will use it for some “Old Man Shouts at Clouds” posts, too. tag is “Mind-Wandering”

The Creative Process

I want to pull back the curtain on my multimedia work. This pillar features behind-the-scenes looks at my music production for The Planets album and my monthly painting and sketching sessions. This one’s tag: “Creative Processes”

These pillars provide the structure I need to document this year effectively. I look forward to sharing the journey as these stories unfold.

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Hello! Recognizing that I would be staying local this year I decided to try and have a BC Birding Big Year! I set my goal at 190 birds for the province. Since there are ~260 breeding birds that can be seen in BC without having to spend too much money for weird locations, I thought 190 was doable. Also, since I live in the Okanagan Valley (Kelowna), there is a great opportunity to see ~200 birds here … again, if the conditions and timing are right.

The year started off very well, and through the end of July, I’m up to 129 birds. I think I can hit my goal if three things happen: 1) I can make a trip to the Lower Mainland (near Vancouver), 2) I make a trip to Eastern BC (in the Kootenays), and 3) I collect a few more Alpine birds overall.

Here are five of my favorite birds so far this year … The first is this Nashville Warbler.

Nashville Warbler

This is a first time bird for me — we were hiking on the High Rim Trail near Lake Country, BC … we heard several of them calling and were finally able to see it well enough to snap a few pictures. Lovely.

Red-eyed Vireo

This was another new bird for me. We were camping near Mabel Lake earlier this summer and had stopped at a small recreation area — Shuswap Falls Recreation Site. There were quite a variety of birds here — this was one of a pair … lovely.

Golden-crowned Kinglet

I was happy to see this little fellow — also near the High Rim Trail. He was in full mating display and it was easy to see his crest. I was happy he sat still for the minute or so I needed to focus. lol.

Veery

This was also a new bird for me — a Veery. Very similar in call and appearance as a Thrush. Beautiful vocalization — photographed along McCulloch Road leaving Kelowna. I found it funny that it was standing on one leg.

Northern Waterthrush

The final bird was another new one for me! The Northern Waterthrush. I almost confused it with a juvenile Robin, but that yellow color was too vibrant to ignore. A beautiful bird and very curious. We saw this near Browne Lake to the east of Kelowna.

Such a wonderful variety of birds … I’ve been very fortunate to add around 5 new birds to my “life list” pushing my total numbers up to 1,105. We’ll see how it goes the rest of the year!

Enjoy,

Stumblingpiper

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