[nysbirds-l] Pelham Bay Park, Bronx - Sat. June 29, 2019: Orchard Oriole, Willow Flycatcher, Amer. Black Duck

2019-06-29 Thread Deborah Allen
Pelham Bay Park, Bronx (Southern Zone)
Saturday June 29, 2019
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.

Highlights: Orchard Oriole, Willow Flycatcher, American Black Duck, Osprey, 
Turkey Vulture, Hairy Woodpecker, Yellow Warbler, Common Yellowthroat. Thanks 
to Jo and Adam Fasciolo for spotting many of today's birds.

Mallard - female with 3 ducklings
American Black Duck - female with 7 juveniles
Mourning Dove - 4
Chimney Swift - 2 to 4
Herring Gull - flyover
Double-crested Cormorant - 1
Turkey Vulture - 2 flyovers (seen together)
Osprey - 4 flyovers (seen together)
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 1
Hairy Woodpecker - 2 females on same perch
Northern Flicker - 2
Eastern Kingbird - 1 or 2
Willow Flycatcher - 1
Warbling Vireo - 4 (2 pairs)
Blue Jay - 1
Tree Swallow - 6
Barn Swallow - 10
Carolina Wren - at least 3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - male
American Robin - adults & juveniles
Gray Catbird - 2 adults
Northern Mockingbird - adult & juvenile together
Cedar Waxwing - 3 or 4 pairs
House Finch - female or hatch-year
American Goldfinch - 4
Chipping Sparrow - 2 
Song Sparrow - 2
Orchard Oriole - 10 (3 adult males, 2 first-summer males, 2 females, 3 
juveniles)
Baltimore Oriole - 8 including 2 adult males
Red-winged Blackbird - 15 including 3 juveniles (1 fed by female)
Common Grackle - 3
Common Yellowthroat - 4 males
Yellow Warbler - 8 to 12 (no fledglings yet)


Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter @BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC


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[nysbirds-l] Pelham Bay Park, Bronx - Sat. June 29, 2019: Orchard Oriole, Willow Flycatcher, Amer. Black Duck

2019-06-29 Thread Deborah Allen
Pelham Bay Park, Bronx (Southern Zone)
Saturday June 29, 2019
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.

Highlights: Orchard Oriole, Willow Flycatcher, American Black Duck, Osprey, 
Turkey Vulture, Hairy Woodpecker, Yellow Warbler, Common Yellowthroat. Thanks 
to Jo and Adam Fasciolo for spotting many of today's birds.

Mallard - female with 3 ducklings
American Black Duck - female with 7 juveniles
Mourning Dove - 4
Chimney Swift - 2 to 4
Herring Gull - flyover
Double-crested Cormorant - 1
Turkey Vulture - 2 flyovers (seen together)
Osprey - 4 flyovers (seen together)
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 1
Hairy Woodpecker - 2 females on same perch
Northern Flicker - 2
Eastern Kingbird - 1 or 2
Willow Flycatcher - 1
Warbling Vireo - 4 (2 pairs)
Blue Jay - 1
Tree Swallow - 6
Barn Swallow - 10
Carolina Wren - at least 3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - male
American Robin - adults & juveniles
Gray Catbird - 2 adults
Northern Mockingbird - adult & juvenile together
Cedar Waxwing - 3 or 4 pairs
House Finch - female or hatch-year
American Goldfinch - 4
Chipping Sparrow - 2 
Song Sparrow - 2
Orchard Oriole - 10 (3 adult males, 2 first-summer males, 2 females, 3 
juveniles)
Baltimore Oriole - 8 including 2 adult males
Red-winged Blackbird - 15 including 3 juveniles (1 fed by female)
Common Grackle - 3
Common Yellowthroat - 4 males
Yellow Warbler - 8 to 12 (no fledglings yet)


Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter @BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC


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Re: [nysbirds-l] Does the Hermit Thrush still breed on Long Island???

2019-06-29 Thread Shaibal Mitra
Starting out very late this morning, Pat and I decided to heed our own advice 
(and the recent good examples of Eileen, Tom, and Steve) and check out the 
forest breeders at Hunters Garden in Eastport, Suffolk County. Despite such 
handicaps as a 9:36 start, a blazing sun, and 81-85 F temperatures, we were 
very pleased to find Hermit Thrushes in the usual places. With a lot of effort, 
we found 7 birds: four widely spaced males singing, near one of which a second 
bird was heard chucking, presumably his mate; and, at another site, two birds 
calling (one chucking and one mewing), far enough away from all four of the 
singing males that they probably constituted a distinct pair, or a parent with 
a fledgling. I mentioned yesterday that my historical data concerning breeders 
at this site involved eight records of 1-2 birds, the latest being in 2011. So 
I asked Pat, "When do you think was the last time we birded here?" In her 
inimitable way she deadpanned, "Uh, how about 2011?" And though neither of us 
felt that this could be, that's what eBird says, and so it must be true.

So this note is in regard to the purposeful birdwatching thread, as well as the 
forest bird apocalypse one. Pat and I are among a pretty small group of 
continuously active birders who, prior to eBird, routinely recorded time, 
duration, distance, and counts for all species. But like everybody, we focused 
more attention on what we were interested in at the time than on what we would 
be interested in 15 years later. We knew where the Hermit Thrushes were, so why 
make the extra effort to find all of them every time? I'm glad now we took the 
pains to record them as often as we did back then.

This morning, we were generally very favorably impressed with the diversity and 
numbers of birds. We did not detect Yellow-throated Vireo, Wood Thrush, 
Black-and-white Warbler, or American Redstart, but Mike Scheibel and company 
found a Brown Creeper (another scarce and local breeder on LI), and things 
generally felt pretty "normal" to us relative to the expectations we developed 
when we birded this site quite regularly.

There are definitely two Acadian Flycatchers there, apparently a pair, as there 
was in 2007:

https://www.nybirds.org/KBsearch/y2007v57n4/y2007v57n4p298-299lindsay.pdf#

Shai Mitra
Bay Shore
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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Does the Hermit Thrush still breed on Long Island???

2019-06-29 Thread Shaibal Mitra
Starting out very late this morning, Pat and I decided to heed our own advice 
(and the recent good examples of Eileen, Tom, and Steve) and check out the 
forest breeders at Hunters Garden in Eastport, Suffolk County. Despite such 
handicaps as a 9:36 start, a blazing sun, and 81-85 F temperatures, we were 
very pleased to find Hermit Thrushes in the usual places. With a lot of effort, 
we found 7 birds: four widely spaced males singing, near one of which a second 
bird was heard chucking, presumably his mate; and, at another site, two birds 
calling (one chucking and one mewing), far enough away from all four of the 
singing males that they probably constituted a distinct pair, or a parent with 
a fledgling. I mentioned yesterday that my historical data concerning breeders 
at this site involved eight records of 1-2 birds, the latest being in 2011. So 
I asked Pat, "When do you think was the last time we birded here?" In her 
inimitable way she deadpanned, "Uh, how about 2011?" And though neither of us 
felt that this could be, that's what eBird says, and so it must be true.

So this note is in regard to the purposeful birdwatching thread, as well as the 
forest bird apocalypse one. Pat and I are among a pretty small group of 
continuously active birders who, prior to eBird, routinely recorded time, 
duration, distance, and counts for all species. But like everybody, we focused 
more attention on what we were interested in at the time than on what we would 
be interested in 15 years later. We knew where the Hermit Thrushes were, so why 
make the extra effort to find all of them every time? I'm glad now we took the 
pains to record them as often as we did back then.

This morning, we were generally very favorably impressed with the diversity and 
numbers of birds. We did not detect Yellow-throated Vireo, Wood Thrush, 
Black-and-white Warbler, or American Redstart, but Mike Scheibel and company 
found a Brown Creeper (another scarce and local breeder on LI), and things 
generally felt pretty "normal" to us relative to the expectations we developed 
when we birded this site quite regularly.

There are definitely two Acadian Flycatchers there, apparently a pair, as there 
was in 2007:

https://www.nybirds.org/KBsearch/y2007v57n4/y2007v57n4p298-299lindsay.pdf#

Shai Mitra
Bay Shore
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[nysbirds-l] Robert Moses SP (Suffolk) sea watch

2019-06-29 Thread John Gluth
A 75 minute (7:15-8:30) sea watch at Robert Moses State Park (from the dune 
crossing closest to the golf course) produced a nice showing of 46 Wilson’s 
Storm Petrels moving e-w, some fairly close to shore. Also seen was a single 
Parasitic Jaeger that harassed a Least Tern into giving up its catch, which the 
jaeger appeared to retrieve from the water. It then flew back back to the west. 
No shearwaters were seen.

John Gluth, sent from my iPhone

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[nysbirds-l] Robert Moses SP (Suffolk) sea watch

2019-06-29 Thread John Gluth
A 75 minute (7:15-8:30) sea watch at Robert Moses State Park (from the dune 
crossing closest to the golf course) produced a nice showing of 46 Wilson’s 
Storm Petrels moving e-w, some fairly close to shore. Also seen was a single 
Parasitic Jaeger that harassed a Least Tern into giving up its catch, which the 
jaeger appeared to retrieve from the water. It then flew back back to the west. 
No shearwaters were seen.

John Gluth, sent from my iPhone

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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