Rock Wren at Miracle Beach Provincial Park

Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus
Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus

Yesterday morning I took my son Alden out for a walk at Miracle Beach Provincial Park to enjoy the crisp fresh air and the changing colours of the fall. I spent some time birdwatching as best as one can with a two year old in tow. It was a good time of year for photographing the fall leaves.

Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus
Rock Wren at Miracle Beach Provincial Park

It was on our way back to my mother-in-law’s house that I saw a bird that I knew was unusual for the park. At the edge of the parking lot was a small grayish wren with buffy flanks. It was feeding around the cement parking medians at the far end of the parking lot. As it perched the bird gave a distinctive bob. The wren was a rock wren (Salpinctes obsoletus), a new record for Miracle Beach!

Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus
Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus

Occasional Vancouver Island Visitor

The occasional rock wren does seem to turn up in the winter in various places on Vancouver Island. However, when they do they are a little off course. In British Columbia, you’ll typically find them in the southern interior of the province. They range from the Coast Mountains east to the Rockies during the summer breeding period. Efauna BC has excellent information about the ecology and distribution of the rock wren.

Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus

Recognizing that this was an unusual sighting I took a couple of photographs before returning home. My mother-in-law Betty Brooks and my wife Jocie grabbed their binoculars and headed out to take a look while I called the local birding group. Fortunately the wren stuck around and everyone got a good look at it. As of late yesterday (Monday) it was still in the same spot.

Rock Wren | Salpinctes obsoletus

Birders wishing to locate the bird can try the right hand parking lot at Miracle Beach Provincial Park. On Monday, October 12th, the rock wren was at the far right hand corner of the lot (ocean side) near a large rotting log at the edge of the forest. It frequently ventured out onto the parking medians and worked along their bases looking for insects.