| Common Name | Razorbill |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Alca torda |
| Type of Report | Rare Species |
| Date of Observation | 10/23/2022 |
| Number Observed | 1 |
| Reporting Observer's Name | Liz Lackey |
| Mailing Address | 772 Brush Hill Stowe, VT 05672 United States Map It |
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| Date Completed | 11/03/2022 |
| Names & Emails of Other Contributing Observers | Clem Nilan (function(){var ml=".g4ie0t%oamlcv",mi="=6<;4:7251:93;0<8:",o="";for(var j=0,l=mi.length;j<l;j++){o+=ml.charAt(mi.charCodeAt(j)-48);}document.getElementById("wpmt-62436-174204").innerHTML = decodeURIComponent(o);}());*protected email* |
| Latitude of Observation (enter 0 if unable to provide) | 44.267673 |
| Longitude of Observation (enter 0 if unable to provide) | -73.305288 |
| Place Name | Thompson's Point |
| Township | Charlotte |
| County | Chittenden |
| Vermont eBird Checklist URL | ebird.org |
| Time of Day | 08:46 AM |
| Length of Time Observed | 45 sec |
| Maximum Estimated Distance from Bird (in feet) | .3mi |
| Minimum Estimated Distance from Bird (in feet) | .2mi |
| Noteworthy Weather Conditions | High overcast, sun at our backs so good lighting from our vantage point. |
| Optical Equipment Used for Observation | Kowa, Zeiss scopes 20-60 zoom power. |
| Observer’s Previous Acquaintance With This or Similar Species | We all had seen the same species last year, taking almost the exact same line, and under the same lighting conditions and distance to bird. Again it was flying down the middle of the lake, just above the water and at a good clip. Some of us had seen this species resting and feeding on the water down at the Chimney Point bridge last year as well. |
| I certify that any attachments included with this report were captured during this observation event. | |
| Description of Habitat | Our observation location, where we do regular lake watches, is at a private residence on a cliff above the lake with clear views north, west and south. Sun was at our backs so the lighting was good. This vantage point affords clear views of the narrowest expanse of Lake Champlain between NY and VT. |
| Behaviors Observed | Very rapid wing beats. Direct and fast flight with no undulations. Flying just above the surface of the water. Flying due south. |
| Verbal Narrative & Description of Observation | I saw the bird naked eye coming by directly to the west of our position. It showed up as a white ball glistening in the sun moving by quickly just above the surface of the water. When I got my binocs on it I could see it was a black and white alcid (no neck) and yelled to the others to get on this bird. I happened to be on the phone at the time, and when I finished juggling my binocs and getting my phone squared away, I could not find it in my scope. Luckily Clem and Paul had gotten right on it with their scopes, and followed and studied it until it disappeared to the south. I wrote down our joint observations right afterwards. These follow in the upcoming sections. |
| Relative Size & Shape | Small "duck" size (Common Goldeneye-ish). Blunt, small football with wings i.e. no neck and the back appeared hunched. Short head and tail projection ahead and behind wings. |
| Head | Front of head appeared stubby as the bill had depth and was blunt. Top of head was black extending to black bill. Throat was white with black line or “collar” coming down from nape to throat. White on throat extended up behind eye. |
| Feet & Bill | Bill was black |
| Upper Back | Black |
| Lower Back & Rump | Black |
| Wings | black on top, appeared whiteish underneath |
| Breast, Belly, Flanks, Under Tail Coverts | All white extending from throat (except for dark neck band) to beginning of tail |
| Tail | Short, black, came to a point |
| IMPORTANT: What similar species were eliminated when making the identification and how was this bird different? | This bird had too chunky of a body and short neck (i.e. lack of neck in profile) to be Bufflehead, Common Goldeneye or Long Tail. No white on the back of the head to be confused with Bufflehead. Flight was very linear and the bird was really moving. Similar black and white ducks also would have shown much slimmer bodies. This bird was a football. The bird had very clear demarcations between white and black areas (penguin like). C. Nilan really studied the head and bill in profile as it flew by to eliminate any confusion with the other Murre possibilities. |
| Other Notes & Comments | We could not determine if it was a non-breeding adult or 1st year bird. |
| This report was written from notes taken: | Immediately After |