Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Pilgrim's Progress - Flee to the Cleve

After a disappointing (again, only by Magee Marsh standards) Saturday, we rolled out to clearer skies on Sunday. Clear skies and 27 mph southerly winds. Dude.

When life gives you lemons, you scrounge up some sugar, squeeze hard, make a beverage, and you're good. But what about when life gives you lemons AND then 27mph sustained winds blow the sugar into your eyes AND also the lemon juice got in your eyes AND also it's still windy!?!? You gotta make like this Cooper's and chill. And I am not a chill person. I don't even like chili. 

We gave our morning to the Magee boardwalk again without anything new to show for it, and after another, even less productive swing through Metzger, decided to head east. We were both flying out of Cleveland the following morning, and figured the birding couldn't get any worse, and maybe we would get away from the Eerie weather a little bit. 

While boldly refueling at Chipotle, we picked out an en-route spot called Sheldon Marsh State Nature Preserve. This was the 5th State Park we checked out in 24 hours. Truly, kudos to OH for the well-maintained preserves. They have great accessibility, are clean, seem to be well-attended...just really excellent preservation ethos all around. East NC could take a few (hundred) notes.


The woodland trails were squishy and semi-flooded (alas, no Timberdoodles) and did not yield much, but they eventually spilled onto the paved trail through the marsh, all the way to the freshwater shoreline that hosts Common Tern and Piping Plover for breeding (at least, it might). It was a veritable swampy Eden, where the expected Egrets and Herons gamboled in the water lilies while Wood Ducks cruised the slime. 


There were also some threatened (but not threatening) Blanding's Turtles about, sporting their signature yellow throat and domed shells. These guys live 80+ years but take 15-20 years to reach sexual maturity. Basically they have human life cycles but more interesting necks (and ribs). The scraggy shrub along the marshes also hosted some accommodating Palm Warblers, which we had seen only fleetingly at Metzger Marsh.


Through the marshlands and the Erie 'inner bank', there is a rock jetty cutting out past a utility shed. Here was had some semi-pelagic flavor, or at any rate a nice reminder we were near a large body of water. Sorry you got such a blanding name, Common Tern. Red-breasted Merganser dodged a bullet there!


Sheldon kicked up several new species for the trip. And even if a non-lifer, non-FOY Palm Warbler is not much of a prize for OH in May, can't take anything from Sheldon Marsh. Check it out if you're in the area. Look up while exiting the outhouse (just make sure you are zipped first) and you'll see the resident park ranger:


After Sheldon Marsh we completed the commute to Cleveland and checked into our airport-adjacent hotel. It was 6:15pm or so, leaving a little under 2 hours of daylight. Our luck (or skill) had not yet matched our ambition, and we figured birding until sundown would be the best way to end the weekend. Like a chicken's stomach (full of grit and bile and probably corn) we sallied forth to the nearest hotspot, simply called Tyler Field. The field itself is just as odd sort of auxiliary soccer/frisbee green off of the greenbelt, but a pedestrian trail (Valley Parkway Trail) behind it cuts through nice mixed woodlot along the Rocky River. With fading light, we birded here all of an hour and fifteen minutes and honestly...kinda wish we'd just spent the weekend here!


We had great looks at a solicitous Barred Owl, saw Black-and-White, Palm, Yellow, and Yellow-rumped Warbler (matching all but the Nashville Warbler and Waterthrush from the trip), and clocked both Oriole species for the area. The sumptuous Baltimore Oriole was heard before it was seen. Although it also wasn't too much work to see it.

 

Icterids are a superlative family. The Blackbird genus boasts handsome, crisp plumage and widespread territorial success, harbingers of spring and freshly tilled fields and dairy farm sewage ponds. Meadowlarks are the very spirit of the Grasslands with their coloration, and their beautiful songs earned them not one, but two State Bird designations. But Orioles are still the best. Their tropical, flaming plumage sets fire to the canopies. Their long, mournful, warbling songs echo long after actual warblers are out of breath. It is a great injustice that they represent fewer State Birds and sports team than Mockingbirds or Cardinals.
Kinda crazy Baltimore and Bullock's Orioles were lumped for like 20 years. Lord Baltimore stands alone. 


We were returning to the car, sated with birds and ready for real food, when we clocked another interesting call. Like the familiar song of the American Robin, but sweeter, richer...as though a Robin became a professional instead of just an enthusiastic drunk at karaoke... 
But there was no way right??? It was 7:54pm and I had made peace with missing this bird on the trip.


It was. Unbelievable. Last bird of the day, last bird of the trip, a Cutthroat, at the death. This was the spark bird for me, the one 21 years ago that caught my eye and stole my breath and left that indelible mark on the soul. 21 years ago, while walking in the woods with family in upstate NY, this bird melted my face and left my forever unable to walk in the woods (or grasslands, or marshes, or parking lots) the same way again. I had not seen Rose-breasted Grosbeak since. Here it was again, the denouement of our Ohioan foray, resplendent even in the dying light. 


Honestly at 1/80 shutter speed in the dying light I'm surprised I got anything at all. There is much to appreciate in the striking pattern on this heavy-metal finch. In addition to the bold and contrasting colors, I admire the subtle asymmetry of the bleeding breast, down the middle but blotting out here and there stochastically, a reminder of the fundamental uniqueness of each piece that makes up the whole. How often do we see plumage coloration with undefined boundaries?


So often, experience falls short of expectations. There are many things I will do differently chasing migrants in May, many mistakes I made. But we also saw some great stuff, and the weekend was a treasure all the same. Time spent out looking is never time poorly spent; there's always something good among the flowers.