After hearing that Jason Caddy and Tony Mitchell had seen 18+ Red-throated
Loons from the Beach House at the Park Point Recreation Area, four
observers (Mike Hendrickson, Jan & Larry Kraemer, and Peder Svingen)
surveyed the Lake Superior side of Park Point from four vantage points,
beginning at the Beach House and ending at the 12th Street public access,
between 1:36 PM and 4:50 PM this afternoon (5 May). Viewing conditions were
good with mostly overcast skies and light winds. We saw many loons in
flight and some were identifiable with binoculars alone, but a spotting
scope was necessary to identify those at longer distances. Virtually all of
the loons seen in flight were flying towards the Superior Entry and
Wisconsin Point, and we carefully avoided double counting any of those seen
on the water by tracking their movements during each count period. It
should be noted that dozens of Common Loons were also identified and many
more hundreds of birds were visible from each location that were too far
away to classify even at the genus level. Results of our 3+ hour survey are
as follows:
37 at Beach House
66 at Lafayette Square
50 at 22nd Street access
21 at 12th Street access
GRAND TOTAL of *174 Red-throated Loons*! The previous high counts for this
species in Minnesota were 117 at Duluth 3 May 2009 (Karl Bardon, *The
Loon* 81:175)
and 102 at Duluth 27 May 2010 (Peder Svingen, *The Loon* 82:163). All other
high counts for the state are ≤ 39 birds and all are from Duluth.

Terry Wiens spotted a flock of 11 White-winged Scoters near 12th Street
that were later seen near the Beach House. We saw several good-sized flocks
of Bufflehead on Lake Superior; none of us could recall ever seeing so many
Bufflehead during spring migration at Duluth. Several thousand diving ducks
(*Aythya* sp.), hundreds of goldeneyes, and hundreds and hundreds of
Red-necked and Horned Grebes can still be seen at Park Point. We speculated
that large numbers of diving ducks, loons, and grebes have been forced to
remain here since there is little open water on any of the large lakes
north of Duluth. Dabbling ducks are not similarly affected, since they can
find food along the edges of shallow lakes, sloughs, and flooded
agricultural fields.

There was also an impressive fallout of Hermit Thrushes, juncos, and
sparrows at Park Point, especially this morning before the fog dissipated.
Up to 10 species of sparrows were present with high numbers of American
Tree Sparrows and White-throated Sparrows. Mike and I counted 89 Swamp
Sparrows between the Rowing Club and the Recreation Area, which represents
the 2nd highest northbound count [100 were at Old Cedar Ave Bridge,
Hennepin County, 22 April 2012 (Bruce Fall), and 100 were at Duluth, 29
April 1970 (Marj Carr)]. Mike found (refound?) a Le Conte's Sparrow near
the SW corner of the ball fields at the Recreation Area, and the Northern
Mockingbird found by Dave Benson 29 April was still present between the
Rowing Club and Southworth Marsh.

-- 
Peder H. Svingen
Duluth, MN
[email protected]

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