West Park Pond

Stopped. Watched. icon

American bittern (juvenile?) showed itself on the woods (south) side of the boardwalk around 9 p.m. Perhaps the same one I reported seeing on Aug. 3, before I knew what it was. At dusk on Aug. 4, a larger American bittern was stalking and catching fish and taking short flights over the pond.

The Internet Bird Collection has some good video here: [video]

» Want more items like this one? Visit the Stopped. Watched. page.

The following terms describe the content of this article. Click on a term to see all articles described with that term: ,

8 Comments

  1. August 8, 2013 at 6:05 am | permalink

    Thanks for these West Park wildlife notes. So good to know we are providing a little wetland habitat right here in the middle of Ann Arbor.

  2. By Dan Ezekiel
    August 8, 2013 at 8:47 am | permalink

    That’s amazing. A shy, reclusive bird that is rarely seen. In a lifetime of paying attention to birds, I have only seen a bittern three times. As Vivienne said, this is really a feather in the cap (lol) for the greening of West Park!

  3. By Dave Fanslow
    August 8, 2013 at 12:25 pm | permalink

    REALLY? Check out an immature Little Green Heron with the streaked neck and see what you think. Very common and would be likely to be seen in a micro-urban wetland space like West Park. Bitterns are the best hidden birds you’ll never see.

  4. By Susie
    August 8, 2013 at 4:25 pm | permalink

    Juvenile green heron was actually my first guess on Saturday, but most of the pictures I could find of juvenile green herons didn’t look like the bird I saw. This one is closer, though, so now I’m wondering.
    The bird I saw on Sunday seemed like a larger and more mature version of the one I saw Saturday and Wednesday, and its behavior fit the descriptions of American bittern behavior, hence my conclusion. I hope someone else will see them and be able to identify them for sure.
    (For what it’s worth, I’m familiar with adult green herons and have never seen one in West Park.)

  5. By Dave Fanslow
    August 12, 2013 at 7:36 am | permalink

    Well thats super cool to see Bitterns then! Like Dan, I’ve only seen them a few times and always in super remote reed marshes. Sometimes you get lucky!

  6. By John Floyd
    August 15, 2013 at 11:16 pm | permalink

    Get a picture next time!

    I saw a bittern years ago, on the Huron, while canoeing through town. I ID’d it by going to the U’s Natural History Museum, and looking at their water bird collection.

  7. By anna ercoli schnitzer
    August 18, 2013 at 8:51 am | permalink

    We were just at West Park and observed the bird in question. We raced home and checked Google Images. The matching photo was that of a Great Blue Heron (not a bittern). At any rate, we were very pleased to see the pond looking so good recently – with half a dozen ducks swimming, several dragon flies zooming around and that lovely heron standing regally at the shoreline.

  8. By Susie
    August 18, 2013 at 11:37 am | permalink

    Anna Ercoli Schnitzer, I saw the great blue heron at West Park last night. I see it so often that I don’t usually post about it, and it is not the bird described in this post as a bittern. (The bird in this post might conceivably have been a juvenile black-crowned night heron.) There’s a big difference.

    In any case, I’m glad others are enjoying the pond and its bird life!