A good friend of mine from way back in high school got married on Long Island this weekend (Congrats Aaron and Mel) and to get to the wedding and reception and to run some errands Friday night Daisy and I decided to rent a car.  The deal we got was so good we decided to keep the car for the whole weekend, and because Daisy had longstanding plans to spend time with some friends of hers, on Sunday I was left at loose ends and with access to an automobile.  Because I had not had a lifer since a Sandwich Tern in July I decided that getting a lifer would be my goal.  I had a couple birds from which to choose.  A Fork-tailed Flycatcher had been showing nicely on Cape Cod for several days but when I mapped out the drive I realized that it would be five hours each way which is way more time than I wanted to spend in the car.  The Roseate Spoonbill at the Brigantine Division of the Edward B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in New Jersey, which has been seen off and on for months sounded tempting.  It would be a lifer, it was only two-and-a-half hours away, and I had only birded Brigantine once before when I had just started birding and didn’t know what I was doing.  When the bird was reported on both Friday and Saturday my mind was made up and Sunday morning found me desperately trying to see a Roseate Spoonbill in fog so thick that I wanted to cry.

My first trip around the refuge’s eight-mile auto loop took me four hours and netted me exactly zero Roseate Spoonbills, though I did see a ton of other great birds.  Back at the refuge headquarters I looked through the sightings book and saw that someone had reported the spoonbill that very morning!  It was out there and I had somehow managed to miss it.  I had been planning on doing the loop again anyway in the three hours I had left but now I had hope, because the bird had been seen, and motivation, because there was no way I was going to drive two-and-a-half hours each way and not see an obvious bird that others managed to see.

A momentary pause might make sense here to explain what, exactly, a Roseate Spoonbill is and why I so wanted to see one.  First of all, the roseate part of the name is much more accurate for this bird than for, say, a Roseate Tern.  Though Pink Spoonbill might be a more apt moniker.  And pink birds are always cool!  The spoonbill part of the name is because the bird’s bill has a spoon-shape at the end which it uses to swish through the water and snag invertebrates and other goodies.  So we are talking about a pink bird with an awesome-looking bill that is as big as a medium-sized heron and, in this case, is hundreds of miles from where it should be!  And have I mentioned that I had never seen one?  And also that I had, apparently, managed to drive right past a three foot tall pink bird without noticing it?!?

Fortunately for me the sun had come out and a Northern Harrier was patrolling the marsh on my second time around the loop.  As the harrier flew past a small, marshy island it was putting up Great and Snowy Egrets.  All of that movement naturally caught my eye as I puttered along in the rental car searching desperately for the spoonbill.  Then a pink mass of feathers rose up from in front of the harrier’s path and dropped back down behind the island after the harrier passed.  Unless a flamingo had snuck into Brigantine without anyone noticing, which seemed highly unlikely, I had spotted the bird.  But now it was behind an island and out of view quite some distance away from me.  As I waited for the bird to show itself again I started having second thoughts.  Maybe what I thought was pink was actually the sun hitting the orange underside of the female harrier?  Maybe I had inhaled too much marsh gas and had hallucinated the pink bird?  Then, finally, out stepped my life Roseate Spoonbill!

I recognize that the pictures are a wee bit underwhelming but, trust me, the bird was much more impressive in person.  The picture’s quality has more to do with the range I was shooting from, as can be seen in the picture below.

I watched the Roseate Spoonbill for nearly an hour before I needed to get moving and I must say I enjoyed every second of it.  Lots of other birders were at Brigantine and hearing their exclamations when they stopped for a look was wonderful.  Everyone likes big, pink birds!  It was also cool to watch the Snowy Egrets follow the spoonbill, I think hoping to grab stuff that the spoonbill stirred up by swishing that cool bill through the water.  Sometimes the spoonbill took exception and charged an egret!

A very satisfying sighting it was and I highly recommend that you go and seek out a Roseate Spoonbill as soon as possible.  You won’t regret it, just like you won’t regret coming back to read a full report of everything else I saw during my tour of Brigantine, which should be up in a day or two…

Written by Corey
Corey is a New Yorker who lived most of his life in upstate New York but has lived in Queens since 2008. He's only been birding since 2005 but has garnered a respectable life list by birding whenever he wasn't working as a union representative or spending time with his family. He lives in Forest Hills with Daisy and Desmond Shearwater. His bird photographs have appeared on the Today Show, in Birding, Living Bird Magazine, Bird Watcher's Digest, and many other fine publications. He is also the author of the American Birding Association Field Guide to the Birds of New York.