[nysbirds-l] Central Park birds

2023-05-07 Thread Andrew Block
5/7/23 - Central Park, Manhattan, NY
5 Canada Geese1 Wood Duck7 Mallards3 Double-crested Cormorants1 Black-crowned 
NIght-Heron2 Red-tailed Hawks1 VIRGINIA RAIL1 Solitary Sandpiper3 Herring 
Gulls8+ Mourning Dovesmany Rock Pigeons2 Yellow-bellied Cuckoos1 EURASIAN 
EAGLE-OWL5 Chimney Swifts4 Red-bellied Woodpeckers3 Downy Woodpeckers2 Northern 
Flickers1 Least Flycatcher2 Great Crested Flycatchers1 Yellow-throated Vireo4 
Blue-headed Vireos2 Warbling Vireos2 Red-eyed Vireosseveral Blue Jays1 House 
Wren3 Ruby-crowned Kingletsmany Veerys4 Gray-cheeked Thrushes2 Wood 
Thrushesmany American Robinsseveral Gray Catbirdsmany European Starlings1 
Nashville Warblerseveral Northern Parulas1 Yellow Warbler5 Chestnut-sided 
Warblers4 Magnolia Warblersseveral Black-throated Blue Warblers7+ Yellow-rumped 
Warblers6+ Black-throated Green Warblers1 Palm Warblermany Black-and-white 
Warblers2 American Redstarts1 Worm-eating Warblermany Ovenbirds7+ Northern 
Waterthrushes4 Common Yellowthroats1 HOODED WARBLER1 Canada Warblerseveral 
Scarlet Tanagers3 Swamp Sparrowsmany White-throated Sparrows5+ Northern 
Cardinals1 Rose-breasted Grosbeak4+ Red-winged Blackbirdsseveral Common 
Grackles3 Purple Finches4 American Goldfinchesmany House Sparrows
If anyone wants locations email me.
Andrew
Andrew BlockConsulting Naturalist
Yonkers, New York www.flickr.com/photos/conuropsis/albums
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[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC, Sun. May 7, 2023: Both Cuckoos, Golden-winged Warbler and 15 Other Wood Warbler Species

2023-05-07 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park NYC
Sunday May 7, 2023
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.

Highlights: Yellow-billed and Black-billed Cuckoos, 16 Wood Warbler Species 
including Golden-winged Warbler, 5 Vireo Species, Scarlet Tanager, 
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Great Crested Flycatcher, and a nice variety of 
Thrushes. 

Canada Goose - 6-10
Mute Swan - pair Reservoir
Mallard - 15-20
Mourning Dove - 10-20
Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 2 (2 Tupelo Field, 2 Maintenance Field)
Black-billed Cuckoo - 1 Belvedere Castle Overlook (Karen Evans)
Chimney Swift - 5-10
Spotted Sandpiper - 1 Lake (Ryan Serio)
Solitary Sandpiper - 2 Lake (Ryan Serio)
Herring Gull - 7-10
Double-crested Cormorant - 10
Red-tailed Hawk - 2 (Maintenance Field, Tanner's Spring)
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 4
Downy Woodpecker - 2 or 3
Northern Flicker - 4
Great Crested Flycatcher - 1 Oven
White-eyed Vireo - 1 heard Tanner's Spring
Yellow-throated Vireo - 3 or 4
Blue-headed Vireo - 5 or 6
Warbling Vireo - 2 or 3
Red-eyed Vireo - 3 or 4
Blue Jay - 5-10
Fish Crow - 1 calling flyover Ramble
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - 5-7
Carolina Wren - pair continues at Maintenance Field
Gray Catbird - 4-6
Veery - 1 on the Point
Gray-cheeked Thrush - 1 singing in the Ramble (Ryan Serio)
Swainson's Thrush - 1 on the Point (Ryan Serio)
Hermit Thrush - 2 Ramble
Wood Thrush - 1 singing east of Azalea Pond
American Robin - 15-20
Purple Finch - 2 females Ramble
White-throated Sparrow - 5-10
Eastern Towhee - 2 (male, female) Tanner's Spring
Baltimore Oriole - 6-8
Red-winged Blackbird - 4-6
Brown-headed Cowbird - 1 male Top of the Oven (Chez Armando)
Common Grackle - 15-20
Ovenbird - 15-20
Northern Waterthrush - 2 (Oven (Bill Heck), Upper Lobe)
Golden-winged Warbler - 1 male Summit Rock
Black-and-white Warbler - 8-10
Nashville Warbler - 2 Delacorte Theater, Tanner's Spring (both David Barrett)
Common Yellowthroat - 3 or 4
American Redstart - 2 or 3 males
Northern Parula - 5-7
Magnolia Warbler - 4 or 5
Bay-breasted Warbler - 1 southeast end of Turtle Pond (Jean Shum)
Yellow Warbler - 2 or 3
Chestnut-sided Warbler - 3 or 4
Black-throated Blue Warbler - 5-7 (2 females)
Yellow-rumped Warbler - 13-15
Prairie Warbler - 1 male southeast end of Turtle Pond
Black-throated Green Warbler - 6-8
Scarlet Tanager - 6-8 (1 female)
Northern Cardinal - 4-6
Rose-breasted Grosbeak - 3 (2 males, 1 female)

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Deb Allen








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[nysbirds-l] Red Crossbill - Quogue Wildlife Refuge

2023-05-07 Thread Eileen Schwinn
A male Red Crossbill was seen this AM at the end of the dam trail along the 
south end of the Quogue Wildlife Preserve.  The bird did not vocalize, but was 
feeding rather low in a pine tree along side of the trail.  It was observed for 
at least 5 minutes, and was last seen flying north, along the trail bordering 
Gabreski Air Base. Photos were take by other birders.
Eileen Schwinn and 
Others, Four Harbors Audubon Society.

Sent from my iPhone

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[nysbirds-l] N.Y. County, NYC - to May 6th: many many migrants [with 27+ Warbler spp. showing in Central Park, etc.]

2023-05-07 Thread Tom Fiore
New York County (in N.Y. City), including Manhattan - with Central Park - and 
Randall’s and Governors Island[s]
into Saturday, May 6:

The 2 (differently-plumaged individuals) Summer Tanagers both occuring at 
Morningside Park were seen on May 5th; the brightly-plumaged Red-headed 
Woodpecker has continued on in that park by now delighting many hundreds of 
observers over its’ stay there.  Scarlet Tanagers also have shown, with more 
and more of the latter on about every day of this month so far.

A Yellow-throated Warbler was well-described from the teardrop park sector of 
Battery Park City Park (just SW of the west end of Chambers St. in lower-west 
Manhattan, next to the Hudson River walkway of that park), on May 6th, which is 
of course a different individual to the singing bird of same species ongoing in 
the northern end of Central Park (which has by now been observed by 100++ 
birders on multiple days since first being discovered).

Common Nighthawk, photographed flying over the Ramble in late morning, Saturday 
May 6th.  By Friday, May 5th, both Black-billed and Yellow-billed Cuckoos were 
found in N.Y. County, including both of the cuckoo species seen in Central Park 
on that date.  The Virginia Rail at the n. end of that park has been present 
now for many days, and was continuously there, not leaving for any other 
area[s] and returning; by now, many many quiet, patient observers have had 
views.

An Eastern Meadowlark was a nice sighting for Governors Island on Sat., May 
6th. Common Terns have again been starting their return there.  A later-day 
sighting came on Saturday, 5/6 of at least 22 Glossy Ibis from Randall’s 
Island; a Monk Parakeet or two have been sighted & heard there in the past few 
days, and also a female-type or plumaged Blue Grosbeak.

A modest number of White-crowned Sparrows were ongoing in the county, including 
at least one in Central Park for Saturday.  White-throated Sparrows have 
diminished a bit in recent days, and much-diminished numbers are around the 
county as compared with for-example, two weeks prior there.

A good listening experience on the first-light to 7 am period of Sat., May 6th 
at the n.-w. sector of Central Park was that of 4 Catharus-type thrush species 
giving songs - all audible from one  point in that park for a while: 
Gray-cheeked, Wood, and Swainson’s Thrushes plus Veery. There have still been 
at least a few Hermit Thrushes about and, in some observers opinions, the 
possibilty is that some of the thrushes seen very recently with some gray on 
cheeks may have been Bicknell’s - although none of those seem to have been 
detected singing in N.Y. County yet this spring (while Gray-cheeked have been 
at times).  

It was good to find so many able to get on to the bright male Evening Grosbeak 
in Central Park to Friday, May 5th (and note that this was of course not the 
same bird seen by many a short while earlier this month in that same area; 
whereas at least 2, male and female-plumaged, had been around, possibly more 
than just the 2 of that species in the start of the species’ occurrence of 
these recent days). Purple Finches were ongoing for Manhattan and elsewhere in 
the county into May 6th, with multiples of the species in Central Park for that 
day. Also passing lately and continuing in no’s. have been American Goldfinches.

>From all observers for the date, a minimum of 27 Warbler species were seen for 
>Manhattan and all of those species also in Central Park, on Saturday, May 6th. 
>Many of same also were seen on Friday in Central and other parks, and a fair 
>number of the more-numerous species were seen on Randall’s and Governors 
>Island[s] as well. Below is a listing of all these warbler species, and for 
>some a note on abundance, applicable to N.Y. County. As many as 16 warbler 
>spp. were noted from Governors Island alone on Saturday, 5/6.

Ovenbird (near-common)
Worm-eating Warbler (multiple)
Louisiana Waterthrush
Northern Waterthrush (multiple)
Blue-winged Warbler (multiple)
Black-and-white Warbler (multiple)
Tennessee Warbler (multiple)
Nashville Warbler  (multiple)
Common Yellowthroat (multiple)
Hooded Warbler (multiple)
Cape May Warbler (multiple)
Northern Parula (multiple)
Magnolia Warbler (multiple)
Bay-breasted Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler (multiple)
Yellow Warbler (multiple)
Chestnut-sided Warbler (multiple)
Blackpoll Warbler (multiple)
Black-throated Blue Warbler (multiple)
Palm Warbler (multiple)
Pine Warbler
Myrtle/Yellow-rumped Warbler (common)
Yellow-throated Warbler  (multiple! - see above)
Prairie Warbler (multiple)
Black-throated Green Warbler (multiple)
Canada Warbler (multiple)
Wilson's Warbler

Thanks to the many many quiet and keen observers out and about at all hours, in 
so many locations, offering reports of the vast many bird sightings thru the 
GroupMe app and also via Ebird reporting and by word-of-mouth for some of the 
many sightings.

Good birding to all,

Tom Fiore
manhattan



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