Re: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

2022-03-15 Thread Dave Nutter
Thanks for the tips about Macaulay, searching by contributors and accessing 
photos which have not been confirmed. 
Turns out the URL was masked on my screen, it just said “ebird.org”, but I see 
how to reveal it fully, and in future I will use that, if my memory is up to 
the task. Learning all the time... maybe.

- - Dave Nutter

> On Mar 15, 2022, at 9:08 PM, Jay McGowan  wrote:
> 
> Right, the most elegant way would be to provide the full URL when referencing 
> a checklist in a post, so no searching or copying-and-pasting needed. So:
> https://ebird.org/atlasny/checklist/S104578240
> Or the Macaulay Library search by county and species (with Show Unconfirmed 
> checked to include unreviewed media):
> https://search.macaulaylibrary.org/catalog?taxonCode=tunbeg1=Grid=Seneca,%20New%20York,%20United%20States%20(US)=US-NY-099=all=T=Tundra%20Bean-Goose%20-%20Anser%20serrirostris
> 
>> On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 9:04 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
>> Sorry to not have provided more information about how to see Joe Wing’s 
>> photos.
>> 
>> I used the info Gary gave me, that Joe had nice photos from the Mucklands, 
>> then looked it up on eBird rare bird alerts for Wayne County since it’s less 
>> than 7 days old. Since Joe’s sighting has been confirmed, you can also use 
>> the eBird “explore” page to get the species map for Tundra Bean-Goose, zoom 
>> in to see the recent red pins, click on the upper pin for Wayne County in 
>> the Mucklands, then click the date beside Joe’s name. It’s checklist 
>> S104578240. Maybe there’s a more elegant way, but those are the ways I found 
>> it.
>> 
>> - - Dave Nutter
>> 
>>> On Mar 15, 2022, at 8:48 PM, Jay McGowan  wrote:
>>> 
>>> A suggestion—if you reference an eBird checklist, especially as having nice 
>>> photos, provide the URL. Kind of a tease otherwise!
>>> 
>>> On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 8:47 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
 Joe Wing also included some excellent photos in his eBird report from the 
 Wayne County part of the Mucklands on 10 March - very sharp, detailed, 
 well-lit, and only slightly obstructed. A joy to see. Thanks, Gary 
 Kohlenberg, for pointing this out, I’d somehow overlooked them.
 
 - - Dave Nutter
 
> On Mar 15, 2022, at 6:39 AM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
> 
> Thank-you to *everybody* for your patience, persistence, & communication 
> regarding finding, refinding, and documenting this super-rare European 
> bird, the Tundra Bean-Goose. As I said before, this is only the second 
> NYS record, while the first record was only last March, and probably the 
> same bird, also on northbound migration in the eastern part of the state. 
> There are a lot of birders with cameras, but photography has been very 
> challenging, and few reports even include unique photos, let alone 
> detailed, focused, or complete views of the bird. I think Sandy Podulka 
> has finally submitted some photos to eBird which give us all - and 
> history - a satisfying view. If anyone else has photos or video which 
> even document some single field mark or behavior well for this bird, 
> please do not hesitate to add them to your eBird reports. 
> 
> - - Dave Nutter
> 
> Begin forwarded message:
> 
>> From: ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu
>> Date: March 15, 2022 at 1:35:33 AM EDT
>> To: nutter.d...@mac.com
>> Subject: [eBird Alert] Seneca County Rare Bird Alert 
>> 
>> *** Species Summary:
>> 
>> - Tundra Bean-Goose (1 report)
>> 
>> -
>> Thank you for subscribing to the  Seneca County Rare Bird Alert. 
>>  The report below shows observations of rare birds in Seneca County.  
>> View or unsubscribe to this alert at 
>> https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN35526
>> NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated.
>> 
>> eBird encourages our users to bird safely, responsibly, and mindfully. 
>> Please follow the recommendations of your local health authorities and 
>> respect any active travel restrictions in your area. For more 
>> information visit: https://ebird.org/news/please-bird-mindfully
>> 
>> Tundra Bean-Goose (Anser serrirostris) (1)
>> - Reported Mar 14, 2022 16:16 by Sandy Podulka
>> - Savannah Mucklands (Seneca Co.), Seneca, New York
>> - Map: 
>> http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8=p=13=43.0208882,-76.7310748=43.0208882,-76.7310748
>> - Checklist: https://ebird.org/checklist/S104855238
>> - Media: 6 Photos
>> - Comments: "Continuing, originally found on Seneca Lake, then seen 
>> here, and then re-found by Tim Lenz today. Thanks to Scott Peterson for 
>> patiently showing me and others the bird."
>> 
>> ***
>> 
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to eBird's Seneca 
>> County Rare Bird Alert
>> 
>> Manage your eBird alert subscriptions:
>> 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

2022-03-15 Thread Jay McGowan
Right, the most elegant way would be to provide the full URL when
referencing a checklist in a post, so no searching or copying-and-pasting
needed. So:
https://ebird.org/atlasny/checklist/S104578240
Or the Macaulay Library search by county and species (with Show Unconfirmed
checked to include unreviewed media):
https://search.macaulaylibrary.org/catalog?taxonCode=tunbeg1=Grid=Seneca,%20New%20York,%20United%20States%20(US)=US-NY-099=all=T=Tundra%20Bean-Goose%20-%20Anser%20serrirostris

On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 9:04 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:

> Sorry to not have provided more information about how to see Joe Wing’s
> photos.
>
> I used the info Gary gave me, that Joe had nice photos from the Mucklands,
> then looked it up on eBird rare bird alerts for Wayne County since it’s
> less than 7 days old. Since Joe’s sighting has been confirmed, you can also
> use the eBird “explore” page to get the species map for Tundra Bean-Goose,
> zoom in to see the recent red pins, click on the upper pin for Wayne County
> in the Mucklands, then click the date beside Joe’s name. It’s checklist
> S104578240. Maybe there’s a more elegant way, but those are the ways I
> found it.
>
> - - Dave Nutter
>
> On Mar 15, 2022, at 8:48 PM, Jay McGowan  wrote:
>
> A suggestion—if you reference an eBird checklist, especially as having
> nice photos, provide the URL. Kind of a tease otherwise!
>
> On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 8:47 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
>
>> Joe Wing also included some excellent photos in his eBird report from the
>> Wayne County part of the Mucklands on 10 March - very sharp, detailed,
>> well-lit, and only slightly obstructed. A joy to see. Thanks, Gary
>> Kohlenberg, for pointing this out, I’d somehow overlooked them.
>>
>> - - Dave Nutter
>>
>> On Mar 15, 2022, at 6:39 AM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
>>
>> Thank-you to *everybody* for your patience, persistence, & communication
>> regarding finding, refinding, and documenting this super-rare European
>> bird, the Tundra Bean-Goose. As I said before, this is only the second NYS
>> record, while the first record was only last March, and probably the same
>> bird, also on northbound migration in the eastern part of the state. There
>> are a lot of birders with cameras, but photography has been very
>> challenging, and few reports even include unique photos, let alone
>> detailed, focused, or complete views of the bird. I think Sandy Podulka has
>> finally submitted some photos to eBird which give us all - and history - a
>> satisfying view. If anyone else has photos or video which even document
>> some single field mark or behavior well for this bird, please do not
>> hesitate to add them to your eBird reports.
>>
>> - - Dave Nutter
>>
>> Begin forwarded message:
>>
>> *From:* ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu
>> *Date:* March 15, 2022 at 1:35:33 AM EDT
>> *To:* nutter.d...@mac.com
>> *Subject:* *[eBird Alert] Seneca County Rare Bird Alert *
>>
>> *** Species Summary:
>>
>> - Tundra Bean-Goose (1 report)
>>
>> -
>> Thank you for subscribing to the  Seneca County Rare Bird Alert.
>> The report below shows observations of rare birds in Seneca County.  View
>> or unsubscribe to this alert at
>> https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN35526
>> NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated.
>>
>> eBird encourages our users to bird safely, responsibly, and mindfully.
>> Please follow the recommendations of your local health authorities and
>> respect any active travel restrictions in your area. For more information
>> visit: https://ebird.org/news/please-bird-mindfully
>>
>> Tundra Bean-Goose (Anser serrirostris) (1)
>> - Reported Mar 14, 2022 16:16 by Sandy Podulka
>> - Savannah Mucklands (Seneca Co.), Seneca, New York
>> - Map:
>> http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8=p=13=43.0208882,-76.7310748=43.0208882,-76.7310748
>> - Checklist: https://ebird.org/checklist/S104855238
>> - Media: 6 Photos
>> - Comments: "Continuing, originally found on Seneca Lake, then seen here,
>> and then re-found by Tim Lenz today. Thanks to Scott Peterson for patiently
>> showing me and others the bird."
>>
>> ***
>>
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to eBird's Seneca
>> County Rare Bird Alert
>>
>> Manage your eBird alert subscriptions:
>> https://ebird.org/alerts
>>
>> eBird Alerts provide recent reports of regionally or seasonally rare
>> species (Rarities Alerts) or species you have not yet observed (Needs
>> Alerts) in your region of interest; both Accepted and Unreviewed
>> observations are included. Some reports may be from private property or
>> inaccessible to the general public. It is the responsibility of every
>> eBirder to be aware of and respectful of access restrictions. For more
>> information, see our Terms of Use:
>> https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/terms-of-use/
>>
>> --
>> *Cayugabirds-L List Info:*
>> Welcome and Basics 
>> Rules and Information 

RE: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

2022-03-15 Thread Kevin J. McGowan
Or, you can just go to https://ebird.org/atlasny/checklist/S104578240. Not hard

Kevin

From: bounce-126407893-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Dave Nutter
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2022 9:04 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

Sorry to not have provided more information about how to see Joe Wing’s photos.

I used the info Gary gave me, that Joe had nice photos from the Mucklands, then 
looked it up on eBird rare bird alerts for Wayne County since it’s less than 7 
days old. Since Joe’s sighting has been confirmed, you can also use the eBird 
“explore” page to get the species map for Tundra Bean-Goose, zoom in to see the 
recent red pins, click on the upper pin for Wayne County in the Mucklands, then 
click the date beside Joe’s name. It’s checklist S104578240. Maybe there’s a 
more elegant way, but those are the ways I found it.
- - Dave Nutter

On Mar 15, 2022, at 8:48 PM, Jay McGowan 
mailto:jw...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
A suggestion—if you reference an eBird checklist, especially as having nice 
photos, provide the URL. Kind of a tease otherwise!

On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 8:47 PM Dave Nutter 
mailto:nutter.d...@mac.com>> wrote:
Joe Wing also included some excellent photos in his eBird report from the Wayne 
County part of the Mucklands on 10 March - very sharp, detailed, well-lit, and 
only slightly obstructed. A joy to see. Thanks, Gary Kohlenberg, for pointing 
this out, I’d somehow overlooked them.
- - Dave Nutter

On Mar 15, 2022, at 6:39 AM, Dave Nutter 
mailto:nutter.d...@mac.com>> wrote:
Thank-you to *everybody* for your patience, persistence, & communication 
regarding finding, refinding, and documenting this super-rare European bird, 
the Tundra Bean-Goose. As I said before, this is only the second NYS record, 
while the first record was only last March, and probably the same bird, also on 
northbound migration in the eastern part of the state. There are a lot of 
birders with cameras, but photography has been very challenging, and few 
reports even include unique photos, let alone detailed, focused, or complete 
views of the bird. I think Sandy Podulka has finally submitted some photos to 
eBird which give us all - and history - a satisfying view. If anyone else has 
photos or video which even document some single field mark or behavior well for 
this bird, please do not hesitate to add them to your eBird reports.
- - Dave Nutter

Begin forwarded message:
From: ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu<mailto:ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu>
Date: March 15, 2022 at 1:35:33 AM EDT
To: nutter.d...@mac.com<mailto:nutter.d...@mac.com>
Subject: [eBird Alert] Seneca County Rare Bird Alert 
*** Species Summary:

- Tundra Bean-Goose (1 report)

-
Thank you for subscribing to the  Seneca County Rare Bird Alert.  The 
report below shows observations of rare birds in Seneca County.  View or 
unsubscribe to this alert at https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN35526
NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated.

eBird encourages our users to bird safely, responsibly, and mindfully. Please 
follow the recommendations of your local health authorities and respect any 
active travel restrictions in your area. For more information visit: 
https://ebird.org/news/please-bird-mindfully

Tundra Bean-Goose (Anser serrirostris) (1)
- Reported Mar 14, 2022 16:16 by Sandy Podulka
- Savannah Mucklands (Seneca Co.), Seneca, New York
- Map: 
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8=p=13=43.0208882,-76.7310748=43.0208882,-76.7310748
- Checklist: https://ebird.org/checklist/S104855238
- Media: 6 Photos
- Comments: "Continuing, originally found on Seneca Lake, then seen here, and 
then re-found by Tim Lenz today. Thanks to Scott Peterson for patiently showing 
me and others the bird."

***

You received this message because you are subscribed to eBird's Seneca County 
Rare Bird Alert

Manage your eBird alert subscriptions:
https://ebird.org/alerts

eBird Alerts provide recent reports of regionally or seasonally rare species 
(Rarities Alerts) or species you have not yet observed (Needs Alerts) in your 
region of interest; both Accepted and Unreviewed observations are included. 
Some reports may be from private property or inaccessible to the general 
public. It is the responsibility of every eBirder to be aware of and respectful 
of access restrictions. For more information, see our Terms of Use: 
https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/terms-of-use/
--
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

2022-03-15 Thread Jill Holtzman Leichter
If you go into Macaulay Library, you can search by “contributor” with a pull 
down menu in the search bar. Then you can enter the species name and see all 
his photos of the bird.
Jill

Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef>

From: bounce-126407893-87248...@list.cornell.edu 
 on behalf of Dave Nutter 

Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2022 9:04:14 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

Sorry to not have provided more information about how to see Joe Wing’s photos.

I used the info Gary gave me, that Joe had nice photos from the Mucklands, then 
looked it up on eBird rare bird alerts for Wayne County since it’s less than 7 
days old. Since Joe’s sighting has been confirmed, you can also use the eBird 
“explore” page to get the species map for Tundra Bean-Goose, zoom in to see the 
recent red pins, click on the upper pin for Wayne County in the Mucklands, then 
click the date beside Joe’s name. It’s checklist S104578240. Maybe there’s a 
more elegant way, but those are the ways I found it.

- - Dave Nutter

On Mar 15, 2022, at 8:48 PM, Jay McGowan 
mailto:jw...@cornell.edu>> wrote:

A suggestion—if you reference an eBird checklist, especially as having nice 
photos, provide the URL. Kind of a tease otherwise!

On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 8:47 PM Dave Nutter 
mailto:nutter.d...@mac.com>> wrote:
Joe Wing also included some excellent photos in his eBird report from the Wayne 
County part of the Mucklands on 10 March - very sharp, detailed, well-lit, and 
only slightly obstructed. A joy to see. Thanks, Gary Kohlenberg, for pointing 
this out, I’d somehow overlooked them.

- - Dave Nutter

On Mar 15, 2022, at 6:39 AM, Dave Nutter 
mailto:nutter.d...@mac.com>> wrote:

Thank-you to *everybody* for your patience, persistence, & communication 
regarding finding, refinding, and documenting this super-rare European bird, 
the Tundra Bean-Goose. As I said before, this is only the second NYS record, 
while the first record was only last March, and probably the same bird, also on 
northbound migration in the eastern part of the state. There are a lot of 
birders with cameras, but photography has been very challenging, and few 
reports even include unique photos, let alone detailed, focused, or complete 
views of the bird. I think Sandy Podulka has finally submitted some photos to 
eBird which give us all - and history - a satisfying view. If anyone else has 
photos or video which even document some single field mark or behavior well for 
this bird, please do not hesitate to add them to your eBird reports.

- - Dave Nutter

Begin forwarded message:

From: ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu<mailto:ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu>
Date: March 15, 2022 at 1:35:33 AM EDT
To: nutter.d...@mac.com<mailto:nutter.d...@mac.com>
Subject: [eBird Alert] Seneca County Rare Bird Alert 

*** Species Summary:

- Tundra Bean-Goose (1 report)

-
Thank you for subscribing to the  Seneca County Rare Bird Alert.  The 
report below shows observations of rare birds in Seneca County.  View or 
unsubscribe to this alert at https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN35526
NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated.

eBird encourages our users to bird safely, responsibly, and mindfully. Please 
follow the recommendations of your local health authorities and respect any 
active travel restrictions in your area. For more information visit: 
https://ebird.org/news/please-bird-mindfully

Tundra Bean-Goose (Anser serrirostris) (1)
- Reported Mar 14, 2022 16:16 by Sandy Podulka
- Savannah Mucklands (Seneca Co.), Seneca, New York
- Map: 
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8=p=13=43.0208882,-76.7310748=43.0208882,-76.7310748
- Checklist: https://ebird.org/checklist/S104855238
- Media: 6 Photos
- Comments: "Continuing, originally found on Seneca Lake, then seen here, and 
then re-found by Tim Lenz today. Thanks to Scott Peterson for patiently showing 
me and others the bird."

***

You received this message because you are subscribed to eBird's Seneca County 
Rare Bird Alert

Manage your eBird alert subscriptions:
https://ebird.org/alerts

eBird Alerts provide recent reports of regionally or seasonally rare species 
(Rarities Alerts) or species you have not yet observed (Needs Alerts) in your 
region of interest; both Accepted and Unreviewed observations are included. 
Some reports may be from private property or inaccessible to the general 
public. It is the responsibility of every eBirder to be aware of and respectful 
of access restrictions. For more information, see our Terms of Use: 
https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/terms-of-use/
--
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

2022-03-15 Thread Dave Nutter
Sorry to not have provided more information about how to see Joe Wing’s photos.

I used the info Gary gave me, that Joe had nice photos from the Mucklands, then 
looked it up on eBird rare bird alerts for Wayne County since it’s less than 7 
days old. Since Joe’s sighting has been confirmed, you can also use the eBird 
“explore” page to get the species map for Tundra Bean-Goose, zoom in to see the 
recent red pins, click on the upper pin for Wayne County in the Mucklands, then 
click the date beside Joe’s name. It’s checklist S104578240. Maybe there’s a 
more elegant way, but those are the ways I found it.

- - Dave Nutter

> On Mar 15, 2022, at 8:48 PM, Jay McGowan  wrote:
> 
> A suggestion—if you reference an eBird checklist, especially as having nice 
> photos, provide the URL. Kind of a tease otherwise!
> 
> On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 8:47 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
>> Joe Wing also included some excellent photos in his eBird report from the 
>> Wayne County part of the Mucklands on 10 March - very sharp, detailed, 
>> well-lit, and only slightly obstructed. A joy to see. Thanks, Gary 
>> Kohlenberg, for pointing this out, I’d somehow overlooked them.
>> 
>> - - Dave Nutter
>> 
>>> On Mar 15, 2022, at 6:39 AM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
>>> 
>>> Thank-you to *everybody* for your patience, persistence, & communication 
>>> regarding finding, refinding, and documenting this super-rare European 
>>> bird, the Tundra Bean-Goose. As I said before, this is only the second NYS 
>>> record, while the first record was only last March, and probably the same 
>>> bird, also on northbound migration in the eastern part of the state. There 
>>> are a lot of birders with cameras, but photography has been very 
>>> challenging, and few reports even include unique photos, let alone 
>>> detailed, focused, or complete views of the bird. I think Sandy Podulka has 
>>> finally submitted some photos to eBird which give us all - and history - a 
>>> satisfying view. If anyone else has photos or video which even document 
>>> some single field mark or behavior well for this bird, please do not 
>>> hesitate to add them to your eBird reports. 
>>> 
>>> - - Dave Nutter
>>> 
>>> Begin forwarded message:
>>> 
 From: ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu
 Date: March 15, 2022 at 1:35:33 AM EDT
 To: nutter.d...@mac.com
 Subject: [eBird Alert] Seneca County Rare Bird Alert 
 
 *** Species Summary:
 
 - Tundra Bean-Goose (1 report)
 
 -
 Thank you for subscribing to the  Seneca County Rare Bird Alert.  
 The report below shows observations of rare birds in Seneca County.  View 
 or unsubscribe to this alert at https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN35526
 NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated.
 
 eBird encourages our users to bird safely, responsibly, and mindfully. 
 Please follow the recommendations of your local health authorities and 
 respect any active travel restrictions in your area. For more information 
 visit: https://ebird.org/news/please-bird-mindfully
 
 Tundra Bean-Goose (Anser serrirostris) (1)
 - Reported Mar 14, 2022 16:16 by Sandy Podulka
 - Savannah Mucklands (Seneca Co.), Seneca, New York
 - Map: 
 http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8=p=13=43.0208882,-76.7310748=43.0208882,-76.7310748
 - Checklist: https://ebird.org/checklist/S104855238
 - Media: 6 Photos
 - Comments: "Continuing, originally found on Seneca Lake, then seen here, 
 and then re-found by Tim Lenz today. Thanks to Scott Peterson for 
 patiently showing me and others the bird."
 
 ***
 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to eBird's Seneca 
 County Rare Bird Alert
 
 Manage your eBird alert subscriptions:
 https://ebird.org/alerts
 
 eBird Alerts provide recent reports of regionally or seasonally rare 
 species (Rarities Alerts) or species you have not yet observed (Needs 
 Alerts) in your region of interest; both Accepted and Unreviewed 
 observations are included. Some reports may be from private property or 
 inaccessible to the general public. It is the responsibility of every 
 eBirder to be aware of and respectful of access restrictions. For more 
 information, see our Terms of Use: 
 https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/terms-of-use/
>> --
>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
>> Welcome and Basics
>> Rules and Information
>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>> Archives:
>> The Mail Archive
>> Surfbirds
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> 
> -- 
> Jay McGowan
> Macaulay Library
> Cornell Lab of Ornithology
> jw...@cornell.edu

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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Tundra Bean-Goose photos

2022-03-15 Thread Dave Nutter
Joe Wing also included some excellent photos in his eBird report from the Wayne 
County part of the Mucklands on 10 March - very sharp, detailed, well-lit, and 
only slightly obstructed. A joy to see. Thanks, Gary Kohlenberg, for pointing 
this out, I’d somehow overlooked them.

- - Dave Nutter

> On Mar 15, 2022, at 6:39 AM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
> 
> Thank-you to *everybody* for your patience, persistence, & communication 
> regarding finding, refinding, and documenting this super-rare European bird, 
> the Tundra Bean-Goose. As I said before, this is only the second NYS record, 
> while the first record was only last March, and probably the same bird, also 
> on northbound migration in the eastern part of the state. There are a lot of 
> birders with cameras, but photography has been very challenging, and few 
> reports even include unique photos, let alone detailed, focused, or complete 
> views of the bird. I think Sandy Podulka has finally submitted some photos to 
> eBird which give us all - and history - a satisfying view. If anyone else has 
> photos or video which even document some single field mark or behavior well 
> for this bird, please do not hesitate to add them to your eBird reports. 
> 
> - - Dave Nutter
> 
> Begin forwarded message:
> 
>> From: ebird-al...@birds.cornell.edu
>> Date: March 15, 2022 at 1:35:33 AM EDT
>> To: nutter.d...@mac.com
>> Subject: [eBird Alert] Seneca County Rare Bird Alert 
>> 
>> *** Species Summary:
>> 
>> - Tundra Bean-Goose (1 report)
>> 
>> -
>> Thank you for subscribing to the  Seneca County Rare Bird Alert.  
>> The report below shows observations of rare birds in Seneca County.  View or 
>> unsubscribe to this alert at https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN35526
>> NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated.
>> 
>> eBird encourages our users to bird safely, responsibly, and mindfully. 
>> Please follow the recommendations of your local health authorities and 
>> respect any active travel restrictions in your area. For more information 
>> visit: https://ebird.org/news/please-bird-mindfully
>> 
>> Tundra Bean-Goose (Anser serrirostris) (1)
>> - Reported Mar 14, 2022 16:16 by Sandy Podulka
>> - Savannah Mucklands (Seneca Co.), Seneca, New York
>> - Map: 
>> http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8=p=13=43.0208882,-76.7310748=43.0208882,-76.7310748
>> - Checklist: https://ebird.org/checklist/S104855238
>> - Media: 6 Photos
>> - Comments: "Continuing, originally found on Seneca Lake, then seen here, 
>> and then re-found by Tim Lenz today. Thanks to Scott Peterson for patiently 
>> showing me and others the bird."
>> 
>> ***
>> 
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