It’s not easy selecting a birding spot at this time of year. The warblers haven’t arrived, nesting is over and it’s kind of a birding doldrums. I decided to try the Eastern shore again, and I started with sunrise at Sandy Point.
I went to Terrapin around 6:15, and it was unusually slow. I spent more time chatting with the ranger than taking pictures. As I was leaving, I met a friend in the parking lot, and we went to CBEC together. I met another friend there, and the three of us spent a couple of hours looking around.
The egrets and herons are still plentiful, and we found a Chipping Sparrow feeding a Cowbird it had raised. Not a great day, but interesting nonetheless.

Cornell: The Brown-headed Cowbird is a stocky blackbird with a fascinating approach to raising its young. Females forgo building nests and instead put all their energy into producing eggs, sometimes more than three dozen a summer. These they lay in the nests of other birds, abandoning their young to foster parents, usually at the expense of at least some of the host’s own chicks. Once confined to the open grasslands of middle North America, cowbirds have surged in numbers and range as humans built towns and cleared woods.”