Re: [cayugabirds-l] Long-eared Short-eared Owls

2014-12-23 Thread Chris R. Pelkie
Ann asked about this site: (Onondaga Parks system, so $4 entry fee, I think per 
car)

Beaver Lake Nature Center
Beaver Lake County Park
8477 East Mud Lake Road
Baldwinsville, NY 13027
On Dec 23, 2014, at 07:20 , Ann Mitchell 
annmitchel...@gmail.commailto:annmitchel...@gmail.com wrote:

Where is baldwisville nature ctr? Thanks. Ann

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 22, 2014, at 4:47 PM, Chris R. Pelkie 
chris.pel...@cornell.edumailto:chris.pel...@cornell.edu wrote:

I think we (Ann’s group) were pleasantly surprised the SEOWs were so active in 
mid-afternoon on Sat. However, it was a leaden sky so maybe they thought dusk 
had arrived earlier. At Long Pt (which we skipped that day), they seem to wait 
until pre-dusk before magically appearing; there is still half an hour or so of 
light to see and photograph them in. I assume other observers will chime in 
with their anecdotes.

I trekked up to Baldwinsville Nature Ctr today and batted out on the LEOW as 
did the 30 or so other birders who were there in the morning. Maybe it will 
reappear today at dusk as apparently it did yesterday. I chatted with one of 
the folks who got photos of it yesterday in dim light, sitting high on a tree. 
I was not expecting to see it in that position this AM (and didn’t) and intense 
scanning of the dense evergreens/hemlocks did not make it appear on its day 
roost either. Sigh. He said this was the first ever LEOW at that site, so it 
was big news in the area.

However, the same photog (Everett) told me the Saw-whet was a regular and liked 
to hang out at the beginning of Bog Trail Loop, so I waited for a good half 
hour there hoping for a stray movement from the Long-ear. Just as my feet were 
getting cold, 2 then 3 titmice starting freaking out, then joined by 2 
chickadees, 2 WB nuthatches and a Downy, all shrieking in a single small tree. 
Classic owl mob, so I trundled down the path and after some searching found the 
NORTHERN SAW-WHET OWL with a mouseful (sic) of Deer Mouse. He didn’t give a 
hoot (ick) about me standing 15’ away and shooting madly but also did not give 
me a real good full-body look, occluded by one branch or another no matter how 
I contorted myself. I couldn’t get closer because the icy trail is on a raised 
walk over a semi-frozen bog. But I’m happy my little birdy friends ran him down 
cause he would have been invisible otherwise.

Batted out completely on Bob’s Salt Rd Snowy and any others that might have 
been on Indian Fields Rd as I took that on the way back.

ChrisP


On Dec 22, 2014, at 11:25 , Glenn Wilson 
wil...@stny.rr.commailto:wil...@stny.rr.com wrote:

Are these seen basically during dawn and dusk or are they also seen during the 
day? Thanks all.

Glenn Wilson
Endicott, NY
www.WilsonsWarbler.comhttp://www.wilsonswarbler.com/

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Long-eared Short-eared Owls

2014-12-23 Thread whitings
Hi,
It is in Baldwinsville. The trail is not too far, but want you to know it can 
be ice covered so you might want those ice trackers for your boots. Hate to 
have someone fall. I haven't been this year, but I know from other times. Good 
luck!

Diana Whiting

Sent from my iPhone

 On Dec 23, 2014, at 10:09 AM, Chris R. Pelkie chris.pel...@cornell.edu 
 wrote:
 
 Ann asked about this site: (Onondaga Parks system, so $4 entry fee, I think 
 per car)
 
 Beaver Lake Nature Center
 Beaver Lake County Park
 8477 East Mud Lake Road
 Baldwinsville, NY 13027
 On Dec 23, 2014, at 07:20 , Ann Mitchell annmitchel...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Where is baldwisville nature ctr? Thanks. Ann
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Dec 22, 2014, at 4:47 PM, Chris R. Pelkie chris.pel...@cornell.edu 
 wrote:
 
 I think we (Ann’s group) were pleasantly surprised the SEOWs were so active 
 in mid-afternoon on Sat. However, it was a leaden sky so maybe they thought 
 dusk had arrived earlier. At Long Pt (which we skipped that day), they seem 
 to wait until pre-dusk before magically appearing; there is still half an 
 hour or so of light to see and photograph them in. I assume other observers 
 will chime in with their anecdotes.
 
 I trekked up to Baldwinsville Nature Ctr today and batted out on the LEOW 
 as did the 30 or so other birders who were there in the morning. Maybe it 
 will reappear today at dusk as apparently it did yesterday. I chatted with 
 one of the folks who got photos of it yesterday in dim light, sitting high 
 on a tree. I was not expecting to see it in that position this AM (and 
 didn’t) and intense scanning of the dense evergreens/hemlocks did not make 
 it appear on its day roost either. Sigh. He said this was the first ever 
 LEOW at that site, so it was big news in the area.
 
 However, the same photog (Everett) told me the Saw-whet was a regular and 
 liked to hang out at the beginning of Bog Trail Loop, so I waited for a 
 good half hour there hoping for a stray movement from the Long-ear. Just as 
 my feet were getting cold, 2 then 3 titmice starting freaking out, then 
 joined by 2 chickadees, 2 WB nuthatches and a Downy, all shrieking in a 
 single small tree. Classic owl mob, so I trundled down the path and after 
 some searching found the NORTHERN SAW-WHET OWL with a mouseful (sic) of 
 Deer Mouse. He didn’t give a hoot (ick) about me standing 15’ away and 
 shooting madly but also did not give me a real good full-body look, 
 occluded by one branch or another no matter how I contorted myself. I 
 couldn’t get closer because the icy trail is on a raised walk over a 
 semi-frozen bog. But I’m happy my little birdy friends ran him down cause 
 he would have been invisible otherwise.
 
 Batted out completely on Bob’s Salt Rd Snowy and any others that might have 
 been on Indian Fields Rd as I took that on the way back.
 
 ChrisP
 
 
 On Dec 22, 2014, at 11:25 , Glenn Wilson wil...@stny.rr.com wrote:
 
 Are these seen basically during dawn and dusk or are they also seen during 
 the day? Thanks all. 
 
 Glenn Wilson
 Endicott, NY
 www.WilsonsWarbler.com
 
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[cayugabirds-l] Long-eared Short-eared Owls

2014-12-22 Thread Glenn Wilson
Are these seen basically during dawn and dusk or are they also seen during the 
day? Thanks all. 

Glenn Wilson
Endicott, NY
www.WilsonsWarbler.com


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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Long-eared Short-eared Owls

2014-12-22 Thread Chris R. Pelkie
I think we (Ann’s group) were pleasantly surprised the SEOWs were so active in 
mid-afternoon on Sat. However, it was a leaden sky so maybe they thought dusk 
had arrived earlier. At Long Pt (which we skipped that day), they seem to wait 
until pre-dusk before magically appearing; there is still half an hour or so of 
light to see and photograph them in. I assume other observers will chime in 
with their anecdotes.

I trekked up to Baldwinsville Nature Ctr today and batted out on the LEOW as 
did the 30 or so other birders who were there in the morning. Maybe it will 
reappear today at dusk as apparently it did yesterday. I chatted with one of 
the folks who got photos of it yesterday in dim light, sitting high on a tree. 
I was not expecting to see it in that position this AM (and didn’t) and intense 
scanning of the dense evergreens/hemlocks did not make it appear on its day 
roost either. Sigh. He said this was the first ever LEOW at that site, so it 
was big news in the area.

However, the same photog (Everett) told me the Saw-whet was a regular and liked 
to hang out at the beginning of Bog Trail Loop, so I waited for a good half 
hour there hoping for a stray movement from the Long-ear. Just as my feet were 
getting cold, 2 then 3 titmice starting freaking out, then joined by 2 
chickadees, 2 WB nuthatches and a Downy, all shrieking in a single small tree. 
Classic owl mob, so I trundled down the path and after some searching found the 
NORTHERN SAW-WHET OWL with a mouseful (sic) of Deer Mouse. He didn’t give a 
hoot (ick) about me standing 15’ away and shooting madly but also did not give 
me a real good full-body look, occluded by one branch or another no matter how 
I contorted myself. I couldn’t get closer because the icy trail is on a raised 
walk over a semi-frozen bog. But I’m happy my little birdy friends ran him down 
cause he would have been invisible otherwise.

Batted out completely on Bob’s Salt Rd Snowy and any others that might have 
been on Indian Fields Rd as I took that on the way back.

ChrisP


On Dec 22, 2014, at 11:25 , Glenn Wilson 
wil...@stny.rr.commailto:wil...@stny.rr.com wrote:

Are these seen basically during dawn and dusk or are they also seen during the 
day? Thanks all.

Glenn Wilson
Endicott, NY
www.WilsonsWarbler.comhttp://www.wilsonswarbler.com/

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