Re: [nysbirds-l] Bald Eagles at Croton-on-Hudson 1/27

2015-01-27 Thread Ryan J. Bass
Weighing in from Putnam County, I take the Metro North Hudson Line train
from Garrison to Grand Central Terminal. As of this past Friday (01/23),
there was a lot of ice between Garrison and Peekskill. That stretch is very
productive: there were approximately (8) Bald Eagles, mostly adult birds,
but I did not record specifics. This past Sunday (01/25), driving through
the Annsville Traffic Circle in Peekskill, there were (5) Bald Eagles. I
personally noted that the numbers began increasing the 3rd week of
December. Looking forward to tomorrow's commute! I'm anticipating the #'s
to be up as the developing ice pushes them south.

Cheers,
Ryan
Garrison, NY
www.bassbirding.com


On Tue, Jan 27, 2015 at 1:09 PM, Matthew Rymkiewicz 
wrote:

> On Sunday morning, in 45 minutes at the Norrie Point Environmental Center
> in Staatsburg (N of Poughkeepsie, S of Rhinebeck), I saw 8 bald eagles - 6
> imm, 2 adult. They were loosely grouped not very far north of Esopus
> Island, maintaining their location by flapping north now and then as the
> ice flowed south.
>
> Matthew Rymkiewicz
> Milan/NYC
>
> --
> From: trachtenb...@amsllp.com
> To: trhindre...@gmail.com
> CC: nysbirds-L@cornell.edu
> Subject: Re: [nysbirds-l] Bald Eagles at Croton-on-Hudson 1/27
> Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 17:42:57 +
>
>
> I stopped by George's island Sunday 4 pm for first time this season (I
> spend all day there for Eagle Fest -- this year it's Saturday 2/7) and
> there were ten eagles perched. No ice at GI but there is river ice around
> the bend at Verplank pier, also at Charles Point and up to ansville circle
> (Peekskill). The ice should only increase and move further down river w
> expected week long cold front. This morning with the non snow event (at
> least on river side of northern Westchester) there were some eagles
>  scattered around croton point, a few tree sparrows, good numbers of
> goldfinch, and 8 horned lark; Blackrock park (just a bit off Rte. 129) had
> many gadwall and ring necked duck also 2 pied billed grebe.
>
>  L. Trachtenberg
> Ossining
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jan 27, 2015, at 12:16 PM, Thomas Rhindress 
> wrote:
>
>   I commute to NYC via the train that runs along the Hudson River from
> Croton-Harmon station. Today, the day of "the blizzard that wasn't", was
> the first day this winter I have seen more than a single bald eagle. Eight
> bald eagles, both immature and adult, perched in trees above phragmites on
> north shore of Croton Bay (southeast of Croton Point Park's capped
> landfill).
>
> Still no permanent river ice so will be curious of numbers increase. Did a
> run by George's Island (Montrose, NY) last week at the time they typically
> come into roost for the night and saw none. Are people north of Peekskill
> seeing greater numbers?
>
> Tom Rhindress
> Yorktown Heights, NY
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Bald Eagles at Croton-on-Hudson 1/27

2015-01-27 Thread Ryan J. Bass
Weighing in from Putnam County, I take the Metro North Hudson Line train
from Garrison to Grand Central Terminal. As of this past Friday (01/23),
there was a lot of ice between Garrison and Peekskill. That stretch is very
productive: there were approximately (8) Bald Eagles, mostly adult birds,
but I did not record specifics. This past Sunday (01/25), driving through
the Annsville Traffic Circle in Peekskill, there were (5) Bald Eagles. I
personally noted that the numbers began increasing the 3rd week of
December. Looking forward to tomorrow's commute! I'm anticipating the #'s
to be up as the developing ice pushes them south.

Cheers,
Ryan
Garrison, NY
www.bassbirding.com


On Tue, Jan 27, 2015 at 1:09 PM, Matthew Rymkiewicz mlr...@hotmail.com
wrote:

 On Sunday morning, in 45 minutes at the Norrie Point Environmental Center
 in Staatsburg (N of Poughkeepsie, S of Rhinebeck), I saw 8 bald eagles - 6
 imm, 2 adult. They were loosely grouped not very far north of Esopus
 Island, maintaining their location by flapping north now and then as the
 ice flowed south.

 Matthew Rymkiewicz
 Milan/NYC

 --
 From: trachtenb...@amsllp.com
 To: trhindre...@gmail.com
 CC: nysbirds-L@cornell.edu
 Subject: Re: [nysbirds-l] Bald Eagles at Croton-on-Hudson 1/27
 Date: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 17:42:57 +


 I stopped by George's island Sunday 4 pm for first time this season (I
 spend all day there for Eagle Fest -- this year it's Saturday 2/7) and
 there were ten eagles perched. No ice at GI but there is river ice around
 the bend at Verplank pier, also at Charles Point and up to ansville circle
 (Peekskill). The ice should only increase and move further down river w
 expected week long cold front. This morning with the non snow event (at
 least on river side of northern Westchester) there were some eagles
  scattered around croton point, a few tree sparrows, good numbers of
 goldfinch, and 8 horned lark; Blackrock park (just a bit off Rte. 129) had
 many gadwall and ring necked duck also 2 pied billed grebe.

  L. Trachtenberg
 Ossining

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jan 27, 2015, at 12:16 PM, Thomas Rhindress trhindre...@gmail.com
 wrote:

   I commute to NYC via the train that runs along the Hudson River from
 Croton-Harmon station. Today, the day of the blizzard that wasn't, was
 the first day this winter I have seen more than a single bald eagle. Eight
 bald eagles, both immature and adult, perched in trees above phragmites on
 north shore of Croton Bay (southeast of Croton Point Park's capped
 landfill).

 Still no permanent river ice so will be curious of numbers increase. Did a
 run by George's Island (Montrose, NY) last week at the time they typically
 come into roost for the night and saw none. Are people north of Peekskill
 seeing greater numbers?

 Tom Rhindress
 Yorktown Heights, NY
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[nysbirds-l] Manitou Marsh Report, Putnam County, NY

2014-10-10 Thread Ryan J. Bass
Echoing the reports ~50 miles south in NYC and LI, Putnam County, NY in the
Lower Hudson Valley was very "birdy" this morning. I walked approximately
2.5 miles in Manitou Marsh in Garrison, NY. In the very short stretch of
road from the Manitou MTA - Metro North Station to the Manitou Marsh gate,
there were approximately (3) dozen individual sparrow species and their
allies:

2 Lincoln's Sparrow
1 Field Sparrow
11 Song Sparrow
14 White-throated Sparrow
8 Swamp Sparrow
4 Dark-eyed Junco
Notable lack of Savannah Sparrow (0)

Yellow-rumped Warblers (14) were ubiquitous, but diversity was
non-existent, as somewhat expected given the mid-Oct date and location. The
only other warbler sp. was a Blackpoll.

Good numbers and diversity among woodpeckers: Pileated (1), Downy (5),
Red-bellied (4), Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (4), N. Flicker (1)...

A Blue-headed Vireo came in close, (surprisingly) singing in a halfhearted
manner... Other birds included a brilliant adult male Purple Finch and a
smattering of kinglets...

http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S20187090

Cheers,
Ryan
Garrison, NY
www.bassbirding.com
Twitter @BassBirder
Instagram #BassBirding

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[nysbirds-l] Manitou Marsh Report, Putnam County, NY

2014-10-10 Thread Ryan J. Bass
Echoing the reports ~50 miles south in NYC and LI, Putnam County, NY in the
Lower Hudson Valley was very birdy this morning. I walked approximately
2.5 miles in Manitou Marsh in Garrison, NY. In the very short stretch of
road from the Manitou MTA - Metro North Station to the Manitou Marsh gate,
there were approximately (3) dozen individual sparrow species and their
allies:

2 Lincoln's Sparrow
1 Field Sparrow
11 Song Sparrow
14 White-throated Sparrow
8 Swamp Sparrow
4 Dark-eyed Junco
Notable lack of Savannah Sparrow (0)

Yellow-rumped Warblers (14) were ubiquitous, but diversity was
non-existent, as somewhat expected given the mid-Oct date and location. The
only other warbler sp. was a Blackpoll.

Good numbers and diversity among woodpeckers: Pileated (1), Downy (5),
Red-bellied (4), Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (4), N. Flicker (1)...

A Blue-headed Vireo came in close, (surprisingly) singing in a halfhearted
manner... Other birds included a brilliant adult male Purple Finch and a
smattering of kinglets...

http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S20187090

Cheers,
Ryan
Garrison, NY
www.bassbirding.com
Twitter @BassBirder
Instagram #BassBirding

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[nysbirds-l] On Nighthawks & Cedar Beach CP Report

2013-09-03 Thread Ryan J. Bass
It is great to see so many strong migration reports on the Common
Nighthawk. Coincidence that it is the ABA Bird of the Year (BOY)?
Coincidence that the prior BOY was the Evening Grosbeak - elected right
before the largest winter finch irruption in decades? Unofficially, of
course, what are your thoughts?

http://www.bassbirding.com/2013/09/strong-common-nighthawk-migration-coincidence/

A report from Cedar Beach County Park in Southold, NY, including photos can
be found here:

http://www.bassbirding.com/2013/09/shorebirds-at-cedar-beach-county-park/

Highlights of yesterday's trip to Cedar Beach included Whimbrel,
White-rumped Sandpiper, Saltmarsh Sparrow, and Royal Tern.

Cheers,
Ryan
Brooklyn, NY
www.bassbirding.com

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[nysbirds-l] On Nighthawks Cedar Beach CP Report

2013-09-03 Thread Ryan J. Bass
It is great to see so many strong migration reports on the Common
Nighthawk. Coincidence that it is the ABA Bird of the Year (BOY)?
Coincidence that the prior BOY was the Evening Grosbeak - elected right
before the largest winter finch irruption in decades? Unofficially, of
course, what are your thoughts?

http://www.bassbirding.com/2013/09/strong-common-nighthawk-migration-coincidence/

A report from Cedar Beach County Park in Southold, NY, including photos can
be found here:

http://www.bassbirding.com/2013/09/shorebirds-at-cedar-beach-county-park/

Highlights of yesterday's trip to Cedar Beach included Whimbrel,
White-rumped Sandpiper, Saltmarsh Sparrow, and Royal Tern.

Cheers,
Ryan
Brooklyn, NY
www.bassbirding.com

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Re: [nysbirds-l] Prospect Park warblers

2013-08-12 Thread Ryan J. Bass
This afternoon, I searched for (4) hours in Prospect Park, but
unfortunately did not relocate the Golden-winged Warbler nor the Lawrence's
Warbler. Although I missed these (2) rarities, there were was still a few
quality birds around, but this early in migration, you really had to work
for them!

Highlights include:

A mixed warbler flock at the wood-chip path near Quaker Cemetery (corner of
West/Center Dr):

2 Black-and-white Warblers
1 Chestnut-sided Warbler (Juvenile Type)
2 Blue-winged Warblers
2 American Redstarts
1 Canada Warbler

Birding the Lullwater, I came across another 2 American Redstarts - these
birds appeared very agitated. They were establishing a pecking order to
bathe in a rain filled plastic plate! The "birdbath" was occupied by a
bathing Worm-eating Warbler which was chased off by an ever bossier Gray
Catbird. The Redstarts finally got their turn after the Catbird left! The
location was near the Terrace Bridge, a few feet from the water, down the
path from where the feeders are placed in the winter. Other Lullwater
highlights include Wood Duck, Spotted Sandpiper, and Yellow Warbler.

Finally, I found an Ovenbird on the path that parallels Wellhouse Dr.

In total (20) warblers representing (8) species.

Full checklist:

http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S14912256

Cheers,
Ryan
Brooklyn, NY
http://www.bassbirding.com





On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 12:46 PM, Rob Jett  wrote:

> While birding in Prospect Park this morning, Peter Colen and I had an
> interesting experience.
>
> We had walked up Lookout Hill to the Butterfly Meadow where there seemed
> to be a bit of activity on and within the assorted sunflowers, buddleia and
> other wildflowers. In the weeds below an oak tree at the East end of the
> meadow I spotted a gnatcatcher chasing a mostly yellow bird. It turned out
> to be a "Lawrence's" Warbler. We walked over to get a closer look, then
> spotted a Blue-winged Warbler in the oak tree above. The "Lawrence's"
> Warbler was subsequently chased across the meadow by one of many
> goldfinches in that area. A moment later the first blue-winged was joined
> by a second. I decided to circle around to the opposite side of the small
> meadow to track down the Lawrence's. As we walked the footpath on the North
> side of this opening on top of Lookout Hill I noticed a small bird feeding
> down low and just behind the meadow's surrounding fence. I think I may have
> made an audible noise when I focused in on a Golden-winged Warbler! I
> haven't seen a golden-winged in Prospect Park in many years. My last
> Lawrence's Warbler here was probably 15 years ago and, ironically, in this
> same location. This is the only time in my 20+ years of birding that I've
> seen Blue-winged Warbler, Golden-winged Warbler and their bastard
> offspring, Lawrence, together. I'm glad that there was someone else present
> to share this rare family portrait.
>
> Good birding,
>
> Rob
>
> http://citybirder.blogspot.com
> @thecitybirder
>
> **
>
> Prospect Park, Kings, US-NY
> Aug 12, 2013 9:00 AM - 11:30 AM
> Protocol: Traveling
> 3.0 mile(s)
> Comments: Most time was spent around the Butterfly Meadow, but also birded
> in The Ravine.
> 36 species (+1 other taxa)
>
> Mallard  X
> Red-tailed Hawk  1
> Rock Pigeon  X
> Mourning Dove  X
> Chimney Swift  X
> Red-bellied Woodpecker  X
> Northern Flicker  X
> Eastern Phoebe  1
> Great Crested Flycatcher  1
> Eastern Kingbird  X
> Warbling Vireo  1
> Red-eyed Vireo  1
> Blue Jay  X
> Barn Swallow  6
> Black-capped Chickadee  1
> Carolina Wren  X
> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  2
> American Robin  X
> Gray Catbird  X
> Northern Mockingbird  1
> European Starling  X
> Cedar Waxwing  X
>
> Ovenbird  1 In understory behind the Upper Pool.
> Northern Waterthrush  1
> Blue-winged Warbler  3 2 at Butterfly Meadow, 1 in Ravine behind Upper
> Pool.
> Golden-winged Warbler  1 Foraging among dense weeds and wildflowers at
> Buttefly Meadow.
> Lawrence's Warbler (hybrid)  1 Feeding at Butterfly Meadow,
> associating with mixed flock consisting of 2 BWWA, 1 GWWA, 1 BAWW, 2 INBU
> and several BAOR.
> Black-and-white Warbler  5
> American Redstart  4
> Yellow Warbler  1
>
> Northern Cardinal  X
> Indigo Bunting  2 Butterfly Meadow.
> Red-winged Blackbird  X
> Common Grackle  X
> Baltimore Oriole  6
> American Goldfinch  X
> House Sparrow  X
>
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[nysbirds-l] Cedar Beach County Park, Southold, NY

2013-05-13 Thread Ryan J. Bass
A break in Saturday's weather afforded my fiancé and I (2) hrs at Cedar
Beach County Park on the N. Fork of Long Island for birding.

Links to photos shortened with Tiny URL.

A pair of Oldsquaw came quite close to shore, perhaps by the windy
conditions and storm movements in the area. The date seemed a bit late as I
thought many had staged and migrated in large numbers several weeks ago:

http://tiny.cc/80w1ww

Common, Roseate, and Least Terns shared the beach:

http://tiny.cc/11w1ww

w/Sanderling, Peeps, and Piping Plovers that were fresh and crisp:

http://tiny.cc/j2w1ww

Finally, one of our personal favorites, the Osprey:

http://tiny.cc/j3w1ww

Cheers,
Ryan
Brooklyn, NY
http://www.flickr.com/photos/87290840@N02/

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[nysbirds-l] Cedar Beach County Park, Southold, NY

2013-05-13 Thread Ryan J. Bass
A break in Saturday's weather afforded my fiancé and I (2) hrs at Cedar
Beach County Park on the N. Fork of Long Island for birding.

Links to photos shortened with Tiny URL.

A pair of Oldsquaw came quite close to shore, perhaps by the windy
conditions and storm movements in the area. The date seemed a bit late as I
thought many had staged and migrated in large numbers several weeks ago:

http://tiny.cc/80w1ww

Common, Roseate, and Least Terns shared the beach:

http://tiny.cc/11w1ww

w/Sanderling, Peeps, and Piping Plovers that were fresh and crisp:

http://tiny.cc/j2w1ww

Finally, one of our personal favorites, the Osprey:

http://tiny.cc/j3w1ww

Cheers,
Ryan
Brooklyn, NY
http://www.flickr.com/photos/87290840@N02/

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[nysbirds-l] SAY'S PHOEBE, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, NY

2013-04-27 Thread Ryan J. Bass
Photos from this morning's discovery can be found here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/87290840@N02/sets/72157633349145479/

I've embedded the location in the photos. You have to zoom in (2) layers to
see it (just hover over the map). Seen just off of Wellhouse Dr at the edge
of the Peninsula.

Cheers,
Ryan

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