We lived in Seneca Falls from 1985-1995 and during at least part 
of that time, there was a pair of black swans on a pond that I think 
belonged to the Lotts - at any rate, near the intersection of 414 and 
County House Road.

      I watched one Snowy Owl at the Lott Farm from 12:45 to 2:15 pm 
Friday.  It flew 7 times during that period, using 5 different perches, 
twice landing on the highest part of the silo structure. At one point it 
sailed out from the silo top and flew for over two minutes, making a 
large loop over the field on the south side of Airport Road and coursing 
back and forth over it a few times from quite high up, before returning 
to the silo area.  It spent the longest time (over 30 minutes) on an 
electric pole at the north end of the fairgrounds area.  Several people 
have posted photos of this bird on eBird from Friday.  Mr. Lott said 
there were 3 owls on the farm Friday morning, including one 'in the back 
field' (he gestured to the far north) but the one I saw was flying 
around at that moment and I just followed its movements & didn't look 
for any others.

                     Alicia





On 1/7/2017 6:57 PM, Kevin J. McGowan wrote:
>
> I went to Seneca Falls today, as did a number of other birders, 
> looking for Snowy Owls and hoping for Gyrfalcon. So far as I know, no 
> one has refound the Gyrfalcon seen on Thursday.
>
> I managed to find only one Snowy Owl today. It was a sparsely-marked 
> individual with deep blackish markings and plenty of bars in the tail. 
> Adult female? It was perched on the highest possible perch to oversee 
> the area, on the top of a grain elevator complex west of Rt 414, near 
> the windmill, west of Lott Farm fairgrounds and well west of the airport.
>
>
> I heard that a Snowy was seen east of the Finger Lakes Regional 
> Airport runways at some point, but I didn't see it. Best birds I had 
> during several loops around the airport were a male Northern Harrier 
> on Thorpe Road, and at least one Lapland Longspur in a Horned Lark 
> flock I was told about on Hoster Rd south of Stahl Rd in a manure spread.
>
>
> There was open water along the southern end of Lower Lake Road SE of 
> Seneca Falls on Cayuga Lake, and there were lots of swan there. Most 
> were Tundra Swans, of course, but I was quite surprised to see a pair 
> of BLACK SWANS swimming off the ice edge at the far southern end of 
> the road. They're kind of unmistakable, being huge waterbirds with 
> long, gracefully curving necks, red bills, and all black body plumage. 
> But, seeing as how they are native to Australia, there is zero chance 
> they were wild vagrants. They're popular in captivity, and I don't 
> know of any established feral populations around. I looked for, but 
> did not see, their white wingtips (all swans have white wingtips; the 
> only non-domestic waterfowl that do, with one half of an exception), 
> so I can't say if they were free-flying or wing-clipped. Totally cool, 
> though. Their presence, along with the couple of thousand Tundra Swans 
> made me want to find Mute and Trumpeter swans too to get my very first 
> 4-swan day. I wasn't doing a great job of parsing the waterfowl, but 
> fortunately I talked to my son, Jay, and his birding group, and they 
> had in fact seen some Mute Swans and a single wing-tagged Trumpeter 
> along the road. With their tip, I found a pair of Mutes and the 
> wing-tagged juvenile Trumpeter to complete my four swan day. I don't 
> know when to ever expect that to happen again!
>
>
> Just for the record, I do keep track of the free-flying exotic birds I 
> see (including in the Basin, Bar-headed Goose, Egyptian Goose, 
> Red-crested Pochard, and Eurasian Goldfinch). Fortunately, so does 
> eBird! I won't count Black Swan on my year Basin list, but I do want 
> to know when and where I saw it. Some of these exotics actually get 
> established and become "countable" birds. I like to know where I first 
> saw things like Monk Parakeet (Yellow Springs, Ohio) and Eurasian 
> Collared-Dove (Marathon Key, Florida).
>
>
> Happy birding new year.
>
>
> Kevin
>
>
> Kevin McGowan
>
> Ithaca
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From:* bounce-121130380-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
> <bounce-121130380-3493...@list.cornell.edu> on behalf of Marty 
> Schlabach <m...@cornell.edu>
> *Sent:* Saturday, January 7, 2017 6:28 PM
> *To:* Laura Stenzler; CAYUGABIRDS-L
> *Subject:* RE:[cayugabirds-l] Snowy at Lott farm
> I forgot to mention that the reason we were in the area was to stop at 
> Hoover's kitchen cabinet shop, across the road from the airport.  In 
> conversation with the cabinetmaker, I asked if he had seen a snowy owl 
> in the area.  He looked sort of surprised, and then realized that's 
> why all the cars were driving slowly around the area.  He saw people 
> with binoculars, but he said he thought they were coyote hunters.  It 
> didn't seem right to him, since coyote hunters usually drive pickup 
> trucks with their dogs in the back, but most of the vehicles were 
> cars, SUVs or crossovers.  He'll now be on the lookout for a snowy.
>
> --Marty
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Marty Schlabach
> Sent: Friday, January 6, 2017 8:43 PM
> To: Laura Stenzler <l...@cornell.edu>; CAYUGABIRDS-L 
> <cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu>
> Subject: RE: Snowy at Lott farm
>
> We were there about 4:30pm today.  We didn't spend much time looking, 
> but didn't see a snowy at the airport, but did see one perched on top 
> of the grain bins at the Lott farm along rt 414.  We did see a male 
> northern harrier near the airport.
>
> --Marty (& Mary Jean)
> ===========================================
> Marty Schlabach m...@cornell.edu
> 8407 Powell Rd.                         home 607-532-3467
> Interlaken, NY 14847               cell 315-521-4315
> ===========================================
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: bounce-121128532-3494...@list.cornell.edu 
> [mailto:bounce-121128532-3494...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Laura 
> Stenzler
> Sent: Friday, January 6, 2017 1:08 PM
> To: CAYUGABIRDS-L <cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu>
> Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Snowy at Lott farm
>
> We saw one snowy owl at the Lott farm around noon today. Nothing at 
> the airport on Martin Rd and no Gyrfalcon. Alas.
>
> Laura
>
> Laura Stenzler
> l...@cornell.edu
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