This is a brilliant idea. Last fall there was a big songbird night kill at gas 
plant flares in New Brunswick (reported widely in the media, e.g., 
here<http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/7-500-songbirds-killed-at-canaport-gas-plant-in-saint-john-1.1857615>),
 on a night when anyone following this or related lists would’ve seen that it 
was a bad night to keep the lights on.

Just saying,
Andy Horn
Halifax (Canada)

On Sep 19, 2014, at 6:14 PM, Jim Tate 
<j...@tate-tate.us<mailto:j...@tate-tate.us>> wrote:

I have been trying to correlate flights as reported by NFC observations, and 
radar with our experience picking up window strikes in DC.  Last night's 
reported flight in the northeast resulted in only a couple of warblers this 
morning.  I wonder if any other Lights Out groups are getting different 
results?  We should be able to declare emergency nights when we expect big 
flights- if only we can correlate.          -TATE

Sent from my iPad

On Sep 19, 2014, at 2:13 PM, "Geoff Malosh" 
<pomar...@earthlink.net<mailto:pomar...@earthlink.net>> wrote:

I can attest to the enormous flight in southwestern Pennsylvania this morning. 
Still analyzing recordings but as a preview I am up to just shy of 900 
Swainson’s Thrush calls in the last 30 minutes before civil twilight, along 
with 51 Gray-cheeked, 15 Wood Thrush, and <10 Rose-breasted Grosbeak and 
Scarlet Tanager. Warblers calls in total are at about 90. Still analyzing with 
a long way to go, which will greatly up the totals of Swainson’s and 
Gray-cheeked judging by what I heard in real time. Later in the morning I had 
15 sp. of warbler at a local migration hotspot.

Last night was one of the most impressive flights I’ve heard here in suburban 
and often noise-infested Pittsburgh.

Geoff Malosh

Geoff Malosh | Editor, Pennsylvania Birds
450 Amherst Avenue | Moon Township, PA 15108-2654 | 412.735.3128
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From: 
bounce-117989080-58130...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:bounce-117989080-58130...@list.cornell.edu>
 [mailto:bounce-117989080-58130...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf OfRudolph Keller
Sent: Friday, September 19, 2014 3:33 PM
To: Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes; Andrew Albright; CAYUGABIRDS-L; NFC-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] [nfc-l] Thursday: Night Flight in Northeast

Apparently there was a very large flight involving thousands of mostly thrush 
calls over western PA last night and around dawn. I think it was much lighter 
over eastern PA, as seems often to be the case. At Hawk Mt. in SE PA, a NE wind 
of 5-8 mph was enough to rustle leaves and mask calls (only 20 or so heard 
around 6 am), but I rarely hear many calls on windy nights even if there are no 
trees to rustle. The calm night of 9/17 was much better at Hawk Mt., with over 
500 calls in 20 minutes starting at 6 am, most Swainson's & Wood Thrushes (also 
lots of Wood Thrushes calling in the woods after daylight), with 13 Gray-cheek 
calls thrown in. I also rarely hear warblers in the dawn descent period, even 
when I find good numbers of them in the area after daylight.
Rudy Keller
----- Original Message -----
From: Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes<mailto:c...@cornell.edu>
To: Andrew Albright<mailto:andrew.albri...@gmail.com> ; 
CAYUGABIRDS-L<mailto:cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu> ; 
NFC-L<mailto:nf...@list.cornell.edu>
Sent: Friday, September 19, 2014 11:12 AM
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] [nfc-l] Thursday: Night Flight in Northeast

Andrew, et. al.,

I haven’t gone through all of my recording data from last night, but I have 
certainly observed what you are mentioning: significant thrush vocalizations in 
the minutes immediately leading up to the start of civil twilight. Often, after 
midnight, there are very few warbler calls and equally few during the thrush 
descent. Herons and bitterns seem to be vocal in the first three or four hours 
of the night, and then wane after that. I’m not sure what the cause or purpose 
is for this decrease in vocal activity in warblers after midnight.

Last night, there were hundreds of Swainson’s Thrushes and Rose-breasted 
Grosbeaks calling, tens of Gray-cheeked Thrushes with a single potential 
Bicknell’s Thrush candidate, a good handful of Wood Thrushes and Veeries in the 
mix. No Hermit Thrushes. A couple of Scarlet Tanager candidates. At least one 
American Bittern, two probable Least Bitterns (I’d like to discuss this later 
on NFC-L) and several Green Herons. Two American Woodcocks flew by shortly 
after the start of civil twilight, one stopping the wing twittering long enough 
to utter some very soft and gentle buzzy squeaks that I’ve never heard before, 
then continuing with the wing twittering.

Also heard overnight were Ovenbirds, Black-throated Blue Warbler, 
Chestnut-sided Warblers, Savannah Sparrows, and many many unidentified 
interesting calls requiring much time I don’t have right now to compare and 
evaluate. Great Horned Owl and a local rooster were calling early this morning. 
A couple nights ago, I saw one of our Flying Squirrels feeding on the squirrel 
seed cakes out front, after returning home late from work.

Last night was one of the more notable nights this migration season.

Good night listening and birding!

Sincerely,
Chris T-H




On Sep 19, 2014, at 10:33 AM, Andrew Albright 
<andrew.albri...@gmail.com<mailto:andrew.albri...@gmail.com>> wrote:


Chris and Ken - thanks for the heads up.  In upstate NY do you get more thrush 
calls in the 1-2 hrs before day break?    We seem to down in the Mid-Atlantic 
(and fewer warblers).

Here's my ebird report from listening this morning (29 minutes starting at 
5:38). Is this the type of distribution you heard?

Anyone else have data from last night/this morning?

2

Veery


6

Gray-cheeked Thrush


46

Swainson's Thrush


11

Wood Thrush


2

thrush sp.


6

warbler sp.


2

Chipping Sparrow


1

Swamp Sparrow





On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 12:23 AM, Kenneth V. Rosenberg 
<k...@cornell.edu<mailto:k...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
Just had about 200 thrushes (mostly Swainsons but also many Gray-cheeked and 
Wood Thrush) over my house in Northeast Ithaca in a 45 min count - also 12 
Green Herons and an Am Bittern

Ken

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 18, 2014, at 9:41 PM, "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" 
<c...@cornell.edu<mailto:c...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
Just a heads-up about a potential push of birds into this area overnight 
tonight...

Begin forwarded message:


From: "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" 
<c...@cornell.edu<mailto:c...@cornell.edu>>
Subject: [nfc-l] Thursday: Night Flight in Northeast
Date: September 18, 2014 at 9:38:18 PM EDT
To: NFC-L <nf...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:nf...@list.cornell.edu>>
Reply-To: "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" 
<c...@cornell.edu<mailto:c...@cornell.edu>>

There is currently a fairly heavy liftoff going on in the Northeast and 
surrounding regions. The high pressure system situated North of Lake Ontario 
could make for a good push of birds down into the Northeast overnight tonight.

If you can, keep your ears skyward!

Sincerely,
Chris T-H

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