Author: KDL (Page 1 of 69)

5MR: 2025 Recap and 2026 Targets

Sooty Tern, for some reason on a Los Angeles beach in my 5MR

2025 Recap

It’s hard to believe that I’ve been doing 5MR birding for 8 years now. It’s similarly hard to believe that I’m in my 50s and have been birding for over a dozen years. In the Trumpocene, reality is hard to believe. 

2025 was another great year in my 5MR circle. Big picture, I ended up seeing 235 species of birds. That tied my 2024 record. I tried hard in December to top that, but I couldn’t make it happen. The tally included seven species I’d never seen before in my circle. 

  1. Lesser Black-backed Gull – This was one of two new birds that was on my 2025 target list. It was found in January by ace birder Andy Birch, who owed me one for finding a Sedge Wren in his 5MR a few years ago. Lesser Black-backed Gulls have been showing up in increasing, but small, numbers in LA in recent years. This bird ended up staying until at least March. Another one (or the same bird?) was back on the same Dockweiler Beach in July. It hung around until September. We’ll see if these become more regular.
  2. Least Flycatcher – In February, a birder found an empid at Kenneth Hahn park. These are notoriously difficult to ID. Luckily, this bird was vocal. The call clinched the ID as a Least Flycatcher. I was able to visit the next day and found the active and uncooperative bird.
  3. Red-crowned Amazon – From fall to early spring, a gaggle of parrots sometimes shows up in the mornings at the Village Green. You never know what you’ll see amongst the parrot flocks here in LA. Red-crowned Amazon is a species that, in my mind, is wrongly identified quite frequently on the west side. I’d never never confidently seen one until one day in March, when I did. It’s my 7th species of parrot/parakeet in my circle.
  4. Franklin’s Gull – Walter Lamb does great work protecting Ballona wetland habitat in my circle. As he does, he frequently finds good birds. In March, he found a Franklin’s Gull in April at a seasonal pond next to the freshwater marsh. I saw the black-headed little guy the next morning. It gave out a few calls, took flight, and flew off toward the beach, not to be seen in the area again.
  5. Sooty Tern – Before July, a Sooty Tern had never been seen in LA County. Unsurprising for a tropical seabird. The morning after one was seen in Orange County, Chris Dean smartly headed to Dockweiler Beach. Remarkably, she found the Sooty Tern amongst a big flock of Elegant and Royal Terns. I was looking through a flock of Caspian Terns on the salt pan, and quickly made my way to the beach for this improbable bird.
  6. Scarlet Tanager – God bless the unobsessed but observant. A sharp-eyed Culver City resident photographed an unusual tanager at Lindberg Park In November. The nerds identified it as a Scarlet Tanager, an eastern U.S. bird that’s only seen every other year in LA. Then again, there may be more of them, because this bird was hard to see buried in the ficus trees. And then, five days after it was found, there were two of them in the same park!
  7. Rose-breasted Grosbeak – This was the other species on my target list that I found in 2025. I was exploring patches of park I’d never birded before, trying to turn up something new in December. This hunt turned up nothing new until I found this bird. I was walking a sliver of park next to LAX along Imperial Highway. There, with a group of House Finches on electrical wire, was a Rose-breasted Grosbeak. And with that, I tied my yearly record with 235 and pushed my 5MR life list to 314/323.

Honorable Mention – One rainy day in November, Sara Boscoe found a Bay-breasted Warbler in front of the high school my oldest kid attended. This is a rare warbler for LA, and would’ve been a new bird for my 5MR. But, alas, it was about 960 feet outside of my circle. I could see the edge of my circle across the school’s parking lot. This close call would be bested in January 2026 when a Lucy’s Warbler was found by Chris Dean at the lake at SoFi Stadium. This bird was 740 feet outside my circle. As tempting as it may be to add these to my arbitrary circle list, I’m a 5MR purist. Close to my living couch, for sure, but not close enough.

2026 5MR Targets

I think I might widen my horizons in 2026 after 2 consecutive years of 5MR-focused birding. Variety is good for the soul. Still, I know myself. I’ll be spending most of my time birding my circle. Here are some species I want and hope to find. Some are holdovers from previous lists, others are new.

  1. Magnolia Warbler – There are still quite a few warblers I haven’t seen in my 5MR. I’m giving up on finding a waterthrush because the riparian habitat in my circle doesn’t have good flowing water. I will now be searching the trees for arguably the most stunning breeding-plumage warbler of them all.
  2. Painted Bunting – This was a target bird last year. I remain hopeful that I can find one of these, probably near the Ballona Freshwater Marsh. A return to the days of easier access to the backside of the marsh would help.
  3. Broad-winged Hawk – A holdover target that seems like an inevitability. For a few moments in October, I thought I had one in my sights, but it was a Red-shouldered Hawk.
  4. Gray Catbird – One of these showed up on UCLA’s campus this winter, not far from my circle, so I’m not crazy to have it as a target. 
  5. Chimney Swift – Like I said last year, this is about patience and ID skills, because they’re certainly amongst the Vaux Swifts migrating through my circle.
  6. Glaucous Gull – I added two gulls to my 5MR list in 2025, and a third new one (Laughing Gull) in the first week of 2026. I’m not done, as there are several more gulls that could wander into my circle. The biggest of them all would be a Glaucous Gull.
  7. Red-necked Stint – Now that I have a scope, I can get better looks at all the peeps in the salt pan and maybe pick out something delicious like a Red-necked Stint.
  8. Tricolored Heron – You can see these birds each year at Bolsa Chica in Orange County, but not since 1981 has a Tricolored Heron been seen in the Ballona wetlands. This is the year one of those birds get wanderlust and heads north.
  9. Red-throated Pipit – Last winter, I picked out a Siberian Pipit amongst the American Pipits. The next challenge is to find a Red-throated Pipit in the flock. Pipit numbers are low this winter, so this’ll have to be a fall 2026 find.
  10. Sandhill Crane – One of these big birds was seen in Ballona Creek back in 2015. That’s the only eBird sighting within 20 miles of my living room couch ever. We’ll make it my longshot target for the year.

Face-melting Magnolia Warbler, Bartlett Island, Maine

 

Redwoods and Rugged Coast

Everyone wants to see more Varied Thrush

Redwoods and Rugged Coast: Birding Sonoma County

California is a big place. Indeed, there are many different Californias. I live in a megacity, concrete and roads in every direction covering the chapparal habitat. Further inland takes you to real-deal deserts like Mojave, Death Valley, and Anza-Borrego. Head north and you find the fertile, air-polluted Central Valley, a vast flat expanse of agriculture as far as the eye can see. It sits between the coastal Santa Lucia Range to the west (Big Sur and Pinnacles) and the majestic Sierra Nevadas to the east (Yosemite, Sequoia, and Kings Canyon). And we haven’t even made it to San Francisco yet, with its massive bay and shorebird habitat.

Northern California is largely unknown to me. So I was excited for a Thanksgiving trip the family was making to Sonoma County, north-northwest of San Francisco. Our destination was an airbnb in a hamlet called Monte Rio. The setting was very Pacific-Northwest-ish, with dozens of shades of green. Towering coast redwoods (the world’s tallest trees!) grew on the property, and we could see the Russian River out the back window. 

Pacific Wren – a brown ping pong ball with a tail and a bill

We took a couple of hikes in the area. Our first was in Monte Rio Redwoods Regional Park. It was a short drive from our airbnb, and dogs were allowed. The hike was a little steeper than we wanted, the redwoods were underwhelming, and it was surprisingly sparse for birds. We did hear some Chestnut-backed Chickadees and eventually had a nice close encounter with a Pacific Wren. We had a much better hike at Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve north of Guerneville. I managed two tips there – an early morning walk with my Dad and then a family stroll in the afternoon. Again, the birds weren’t numerous. But we did manage nice looks at Varied Thrush, and heard a pair of Pileated Woodpeckers and saw them flying away from us. The forest, the trees, the moss, and the clover were the real highlight. 

Coastal Redwoods are so tall they can’t be photographed in a single frame

Scanning the Rugged Coast

Our airbnb was also just 20 minutes from the rugged northern California Pacific coast, so we made it over there a couple of times as well. It wasn’t Big Sur amazing, but it was wildly different from my LA County beaches. I brought my scope along, in the hopes of picking out a lifer Marbled Murrelet. But it wasn’t meant to be. The morning temperatures in the high 40s and wind gave it a real winter feel. The best spot we visited was a place called Sunset boulders near Goat Rock. It’s got a couple of rock outcroppings that are nice spots for climbing (my youngest kid did his first outdoor bouldering). There are some smooth spots where  mammoths apparently rubbed up against the rocks some 15,000 years ago.

Sunset boulders bottom left, Mammoth Rock midground left, Pacific Ocean on the right

There were grebes (red-necked and western), cormorants (pelagic), surf scoters and loons (red-throated and common) out in the water, and Black Oystercatchers on the rocks in the surf. A harrier and White-tailed Kite were flying over the plain. We stayed until sunset (not pictured), which was picturesque.  It was a beautiful complement to the redwood forest hike from earlier in the day. A Great Horned Owl perched in electrical wires on the drive back capped off a great visit.

 

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