Anyways, like I said, a lot of people missed this bird. One person that I know missed it by a mere couple of seconds just because they didn't run as fast as the person that was right in front of them and DID see the bird. This same person also missed the summer '95 bird that was singing sporadically in the patch of willows on the north spit of Humboldt Bay that is now dubbed the "Wormhole Patch" since that bird occurred there. The WEWA has become the biggest nemesis bird for this long-time Humboldt birder. A LOT of other people spent many hours looking fruitlessly for this WEWA leaving tired and frustrated. I had birded the park at least 10 other times and completed at 2 3 hour surveys of the park and hadn't heard peep from this bird. I thought the bird was gone, though it really seemed like a perfect spot for a WEWA to winter with all the bundles of dead leaf clusters in the well developed understory in many areas of the park. I thought it was gone....
Fast forward to today, 11 January 2013. I had a meeting earlier in the morning to talk to HSU professor, Mark Colwell, about using eBird in his Ornithology class. After the meeting I decided to go do a brief survey of Shay Park since I hadn't made it there yet in the New Year to start my eBird patch list for the year. I was also hoping to run into a CASSIN'S VIREO that I had found on 31 December so I could add it to my 2013 year list.
Around 1050 i was beginning to work a chickadee flock at the southeast corner of the park when I heard a distinct "zeet, zeet...zeet." It took me a second to think about it and then I heard it again and it clicked: WORM-EATING WARBLER!!! Seconds later I had the bird in full view, completely unobscured. The bird then flew across the pond and out of sight. I pulled my phone out and saw that it was DEAD! i ran back to my car and plugged it in and started making calls. I first called Gary Bloomfield as he tried really hard for the bird back in October and missed it. I then called Tony Kurz who I knew needed it as a lifer. Birdbox next. Keith Slauson. Who else? Who else?.....
Gary and Tony were the first to arrive and soon after both were present I heard the bird calling again. It took a bit of time but soon enough we all had amazing views of the bird, sometimes in full view in nice lighting. It was really great to be able to get at least 2 people on it that hadn't had the opportunity to see it the last time around. Tony got some decent photos of the bird which was quite the feat in itself! Greg Chapman, who missed the bird last time around, arrived soon after the bird had moved on and then Daryl Coldren and Meghan Still also arrived. All of them got to see the bird after I had left! What a relief!
I hope in the coming days others that missed it in 2012 will be able to rectify that in 2013! Today was incomparably the best experience I had with the bird and I think it might be a bit easier now that some of the vegetation has gotten a bit sparser from the winter season. Here's a couple of photos from Tony Kurz today: