[cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin

2023-10-24 Thread browncreeper9
Greetings!

 

The Limpkin continued today mainly along the north shore of the Chemung
River south of Pirozzolo Park in West Elmira and east of the boat launch at
the east end of the woods.

 

-- Bill Ostrander


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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin, a true story of late October

2023-10-23 Thread Asher Hockett
While the Sandhill Cranes begin to return here in Albuquerque, Kevin
McGowan's Meta post of hillside Tompkins County scenery and Dave's lyrical
story of the limpkin a bit to the south have done a nice job of massaging
my upstate roots which saw me afield there for so many wonderful years.

Thanks fellas!

Asher

On Mon, Oct 23, 2023, 10:00 AM Dave Nutter  wrote:

> Clouds poured overhead, propelled by a relentless northwest wind. Ann and I 
> wandered
> the abandoned land below the levee alongside the Chemung River. We thought
> we were prepared for this quest, yet our equipment was now heavy and
> awkward, and the chill air sapped our heat. One of my boots seemed to be
> leaking.
>
> Somewhere very near here, Elmira Limpkin had been reported again. The
> first time, over a week ago, she was said to be walking a forest trail, and
> that’s certainly what the photos appeared to show. But the observer had
> been confused, seeing something so improbable and beyond her experience.
> The next day over a dozen searchers scoured the area. They came up with
> nothing. This morning Elmira Limpkin had been standing on a shingle beach.
> I saw this new photograph. Could it be true? We had to see for ourselves.
>
> All around, trees creaked and moaned. Dead leaves carpeted the mud. Our
> vision was blocked repeatedly by thickets of invasive Japanese Knotweed.
> Ann and I did not even know Jeremy was here, but suddenly he was signaling
> us to the edge of the floodplain. Adam had passed us earlier on a footpath,
> and he emerged from the forest along with Michael, to join us. Jeremy
> gestured at a curtain of head-high weeds. Beyond, at the far side of a
> clearing, a huge, strange bird gazed at us from the shadows. It stood on
> tall, dark, thick, stork-like legs. Its long bill was dull brown with
> yellowish tones around the mouth. The beak curved, but lacked the slender
> tapering grace of the bill of an ibis. This was a heavier weapon that hung
> down over the bird’s long folded neck. Its face was dusty gray with
> feathers that turned to stubby spikes on the back of its head. The rest of
> its plumage would have been dark chocolate but for the white flecks on its
> neck which became arrows down its breast then daggers on its wing coverts.
> We stared. This tropical creature did not belong here in Upstate New York.
> Long ago I had seen such a mollusk-eating bird and heard its wild screams
> in the darkness of a baldcypress swamp in Florida.
>
> As we tried to take pictures, the bird began walking... slowly...
> silently...  toward us... becoming even harder to see. Now we knew it was
> only a few feet away, but it was hard to tell just how close. Our cameras
> quit working, showing only shadows and blurry forms. We dared not move.
> What was it doing? We wondered and whispered. Minutes seem to pass before
> we saw that the bird had turned aside. It kept a brown eye on us while
> strolling behind tree trunks and among rotten logs, heading toward the
> river. As it crossed the final opening I could see its lengthy webless toes
> with every step.
>
> Then it stopped and stood alongside the final patch of Knotweed atop the
> riverbank. We had been following at distance but we stopped, too. We
> finally got some sharp - and we hoped indisputable - photographs.
>
> Jeremy hurried away first, needing to get some sleep before working a
> hospital shift. Adam joined Ann & me as we climbed the levee toward the
> normal world, but Michael went back into the woods, wondering why his
> friend Phil never came out.
>
> From the top of the levee Adam turned toward the dead end of a street
> where he left his car, while Ann & I hiked to the end of the levee. Noisy
> kids on a playground ignored us, but a guy at a fire station stared at our
> telescopes and binoculars and cameras. Maybe he knew what it’s like beyond
> the levee by the river.
>
> - - Dave Nutter
>
> On Oct 23, 2023, at 7:09 AM, Robin Cisne  wrote:
>
> Wasn't she the villain in an early 20th c. novel?
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, Oct 22, 2023 at 10:18 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
>
>> On 12 October Barb Borelli found and photographed a Limpkin along the
>> Chemung River in Elmira and reported it to eBird. This morning (22 October)
>> Martin Cain refound & photographed it, also along the edge of the river.
>> This afternoon Ann Mitchell & I went to look for it, and we were close by,
>> as were Adam Farid & Mike Gullo, when Jeremy Collison discovered the
>> Limpkin a hundred yards from the river standing and resting in the
>> dead-leaf-strewn floodplain forest immediately southeast of Pirozzolo Park
>> in an area which seemed to be associated with a culvert below the corner of
>> the levee. The bird was standing almost under the Japanese Knotweed which
>> covered the embankment above. We were surprised when it walked toward us,
>> coming within a few yards behind a narrow screen of knotweed, then it
>> turned and strolled toward the river, sometimes out in the open, and rested
>> again 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin, a true story of late October

2023-10-23 Thread Donna Lee Scott
Super novelette, Dave!!
Thanks.

Donna Scott
Kendal at Ithaca-377
Sent from my iPhone

On Oct 23, 2023, at 12:00 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:


Clouds poured overhead, propelled by a relentless northwest wind. Ann and I 
wandered the abandoned land below the levee alongside the Chemung River. We 
thought we were prepared for this quest, yet our equipment was now heavy and 
awkward, and the chill air sapped our heat. One of my boots seemed to be 
leaking.

Somewhere very near here, Elmira Limpkin had been reported again. The first 
time, over a week ago, she was said to be walking a forest trail, and that’s 
certainly what the photos appeared to show. But the observer had been confused, 
seeing something so improbable and beyond her experience. The next day over a 
dozen searchers scoured the area. They came up with nothing. This morning 
Elmira Limpkin had been standing on a shingle beach. I saw this new photograph. 
Could it be true? We had to see for ourselves.

All around, trees creaked and moaned. Dead leaves carpeted the mud. Our vision 
was blocked repeatedly by thickets of invasive Japanese Knotweed. Ann and I did 
not even know Jeremy was here, but suddenly he was signaling us to the edge of 
the floodplain. Adam had passed us earlier on a footpath, and he emerged from 
the forest along with Michael, to join us. Jeremy gestured at a curtain of 
head-high weeds. Beyond, at the far side of a clearing, a huge, strange bird 
gazed at us from the shadows. It stood on tall, dark, thick, stork-like legs. 
Its long bill was dull brown with yellowish tones around the mouth. The beak 
curved, but lacked the slender tapering grace of the bill of an ibis. This was 
a heavier weapon that hung down over the bird’s long folded neck. Its face was 
dusty gray with feathers that turned to stubby spikes on the back of its head. 
The rest of its plumage would have been dark chocolate but for the white flecks 
on its neck which became arrows down its breast then daggers on its wing 
coverts. We stared. This tropical creature did not belong here in Upstate New 
York. Long ago I had seen such a mollusk-eating bird and heard its wild screams 
in the darkness of a baldcypress swamp in Florida.

As we tried to take pictures, the bird began walking... slowly... silently...  
toward us... becoming even harder to see. Now we knew it was only a few feet 
away, but it was hard to tell just how close. Our cameras quit working, showing 
only shadows and blurry forms. We dared not move. What was it doing? We 
wondered and whispered. Minutes seem to pass before we saw that the bird had 
turned aside. It kept a brown eye on us while strolling behind tree trunks and 
among rotten logs, heading toward the river. As it crossed the final opening I 
could see its lengthy webless toes with every step.

Then it stopped and stood alongside the final patch of Knotweed atop the 
riverbank. We had been following at distance but we stopped, too. We finally 
got some sharp - and we hoped indisputable - photographs.

Jeremy hurried away first, needing to get some sleep before working a hospital 
shift. Adam joined Ann & me as we climbed the levee toward the normal world, 
but Michael went back into the woods, wondering why his friend Phil never came 
out.

From the top of the levee Adam turned toward the dead end of a street where he 
left his car, while Ann & I hiked to the end of the levee. Noisy kids on a 
playground ignored us, but a guy at a fire station stared at our telescopes and 
binoculars and cameras. Maybe he knew what it’s like beyond the levee by the 
river.

- - Dave Nutter

On Oct 23, 2023, at 7:09 AM, Robin Cisne 
mailto:rfci...@gmail.com>> wrote:

Wasn't she the villain in an early 20th c. novel?




On Sun, Oct 22, 2023 at 10:18 PM Dave Nutter 
mailto:nutter.d...@me.com>> wrote:
On 12 October Barb Borelli found and photographed a Limpkin along the Chemung 
River in Elmira and reported it to eBird. This morning (22 October) Martin Cain 
refound & photographed it, also along the edge of the river. This afternoon Ann 
Mitchell & I went to look for it, and we were close by, as were Adam Farid & 
Mike Gullo, when Jeremy Collison discovered the Limpkin a hundred yards from 
the river standing and resting in the dead-leaf-strewn floodplain forest 
immediately southeast of Pirozzolo Park in an area which seemed to be 
associated with a culvert below the corner of the levee. The bird was standing 
almost under the Japanese Knotweed which covered the embankment above. We were 
surprised when it walked toward us, coming within a few yards behind a narrow 
screen of knotweed, then it turned and strolled toward the river, sometimes out 
in the open, and rested again at the top of the riverbank for several minutes, 
remaining there when we left at 4pm. During the 40 minutes we watched it, it 
was silent and neither flew nor fed but seemed relaxed & healthy. Later 
observers saw it catching worms in the leaf litter. If you seek this bird, 
don’t 

[cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin, a true story of late October

2023-10-23 Thread Dave Nutter
Clouds poured overhead, propelled by a relentless northwest wind. Ann and I 
wandered the abandoned land below the levee alongside the Chemung River. We 
thought we were prepared for this quest, yet our equipment was now heavy and 
awkward, and the chill air sapped our heat. One of my boots seemed to be 
leaking. 

Somewhere very near here, Elmira Limpkin had been reported again. The first 
time, over a week ago, she was said to be walking a forest trail, and that’s 
certainly what the photos appeared to show. But the observer had been confused, 
seeing something so improbable and beyond her experience. The next day over a 
dozen searchers scoured the area. They came up with nothing. This morning 
Elmira Limpkin had been standing on a shingle beach. I saw this new photograph. 
Could it be true? We had to see for ourselves. 

All around, trees creaked and moaned. Dead leaves carpeted the mud. Our vision 
was blocked repeatedly by thickets of invasive Japanese Knotweed. Ann and I did 
not even know Jeremy was here, but suddenly he was signaling us to the edge of 
the floodplain. Adam had passed us earlier on a footpath, and he emerged from 
the forest along with Michael, to join us. Jeremy gestured at a curtain of 
head-high weeds. Beyond, at the far side of a clearing, a huge, strange bird 
gazed at us from the shadows. It stood on tall, dark, thick, stork-like legs. 
Its long bill was dull brown with yellowish tones around the mouth. The beak 
curved, but lacked the slender tapering grace of the bill of an ibis. This was 
a heavier weapon that hung down over the bird’s long folded neck. Its face was 
dusty gray with feathers that turned to stubby spikes on the back of its head. 
The rest of its plumage would have been dark chocolate but for the white flecks 
on its neck which became arrows down its breast then daggers on its wing 
coverts. We stared. This tropical creature did not belong here in Upstate New 
York. Long ago I had seen such a mollusk-eating bird and heard its wild screams 
in the darkness of a baldcypress swamp in Florida. 

As we tried to take pictures, the bird began walking... slowly... silently...  
toward us... becoming even harder to see. Now we knew it was only a few feet 
away, but it was hard to tell just how close. Our cameras quit working, showing 
only shadows and blurry forms. We dared not move. What was it doing? We 
wondered and whispered. Minutes seem to pass before we saw that the bird had 
turned aside. It kept a brown eye on us while strolling behind tree trunks and 
among rotten logs, heading toward the river. As it crossed the final opening I 
could see its lengthy webless toes with every step. 

Then it stopped and stood alongside the final patch of Knotweed atop the 
riverbank. We had been following at distance but we stopped, too. We finally 
got some sharp - and we hoped indisputable - photographs. 

Jeremy hurried away first, needing to get some sleep before working a hospital 
shift. Adam joined Ann & me as we climbed the levee toward the normal world, 
but Michael went back into the woods, wondering why his friend Phil never came 
out. 

>From the top of the levee Adam turned toward the dead end of a street where he 
>left his car, while Ann & I hiked to the end of the levee. Noisy kids on a 
>playground ignored us, but a guy at a fire station stared at our telescopes 
>and binoculars and cameras. Maybe he knew what it’s like beyond the levee by 
>the river. 

- - Dave Nutter

> On Oct 23, 2023, at 7:09 AM, Robin Cisne  wrote:
> 
> Wasn't she the villain in an early 20th c. novel?
> 
>
> 
> 
>> On Sun, Oct 22, 2023 at 10:18 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
>> On 12 October Barb Borelli found and photographed a Limpkin along the 
>> Chemung River in Elmira and reported it to eBird. This morning (22 October) 
>> Martin Cain refound & photographed it, also along the edge of the river. 
>> This afternoon Ann Mitchell & I went to look for it, and we were close by, 
>> as were Adam Farid & Mike Gullo, when Jeremy Collison discovered the Limpkin 
>> a hundred yards from the river standing and resting in the dead-leaf-strewn 
>> floodplain forest immediately southeast of Pirozzolo Park in an area which 
>> seemed to be associated with a culvert below the corner of the levee. The 
>> bird was standing almost under the Japanese Knotweed which covered the 
>> embankment above. We were surprised when it walked toward us, coming within 
>> a few yards behind a narrow screen of knotweed, then it turned and strolled 
>> toward the river, sometimes out in the open, and rested again at the top of 
>> the riverbank for several minutes, remaining there when we left at 4pm. 
>> During the 40 minutes we watched it, it was silent and neither flew nor fed 
>> but seemed relaxed & healthy. Later observers saw it catching worms in the 
>> leaf litter. If you seek this bird, don’t just look at the edge of the 
>> river, look in the woods, too. Pirozzolo Park is near the West Elmira fire 
>> 

RE: [cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin

2023-10-23 Thread Jane Frances Bunker
Ha. If she wasn’t she certainly should have been.

From: bounce-127840826-90604...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Robin Cisne
Sent: Monday, October 23, 2023 7:10 AM
To: Dave Nutter 
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin

Wasn't she the villain in an early 20th c. novel?




On Sun, Oct 22, 2023 at 10:18 PM Dave Nutter 
mailto:nutter.d...@me.com>> wrote:
On 12 October Barb Borelli found and photographed a Limpkin along the Chemung 
River in Elmira and reported it to eBird. This morning (22 October) Martin Cain 
refound & photographed it, also along the edge of the river. This afternoon Ann 
Mitchell & I went to look for it, and we were close by, as were Adam Farid & 
Mike Gullo, when Jeremy Collison discovered the Limpkin a hundred yards from 
the river standing and resting in the dead-leaf-strewn floodplain forest 
immediately southeast of Pirozzolo Park in an area which seemed to be 
associated with a culvert below the corner of the levee. The bird was standing 
almost under the Japanese Knotweed which covered the embankment above. We were 
surprised when it walked toward us, coming within a few yards behind a narrow 
screen of knotweed, then it turned and strolled toward the river, sometimes out 
in the open, and rested again at the top of the riverbank for several minutes, 
remaining there when we left at 4pm. During the 40 minutes we watched it, it 
was silent and neither flew nor fed but seemed relaxed & healthy. Later 
observers saw it catching worms in the leaf litter. If you seek this bird, 
don’t just look at the edge of the river, look in the woods, too. Pirozzolo 
Park is near the West Elmira fire station on Water Street.
This is the second NYS record for this species. The first record was just last 
autumn along the Niagara River. That bird was captured just before the deadly 
blizzard hit Buffalo, and I believe it was released in South Carolina.

- - Dave Nutter
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin

2023-10-23 Thread Robin Cisne
Wasn't she the villain in an early 20th c. novel?




On Sun, Oct 22, 2023 at 10:18 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:

> On 12 October Barb Borelli found and photographed a Limpkin along the
> Chemung River in Elmira and reported it to eBird. This morning (22 October)
> Martin Cain refound & photographed it, also along the edge of the river.
> This afternoon Ann Mitchell & I went to look for it, and we were close by,
> as were Adam Farid & Mike Gullo, when Jeremy Collison discovered the
> Limpkin a hundred yards from the river standing and resting in the
> dead-leaf-strewn floodplain forest immediately southeast of Pirozzolo Park
> in an area which seemed to be associated with a culvert below the corner of
> the levee. The bird was standing almost under the Japanese Knotweed which
> covered the embankment above. We were surprised when it walked toward us,
> coming within a few yards behind a narrow screen of knotweed, then it
> turned and strolled toward the river, sometimes out in the open, and rested
> again at the top of the riverbank for several minutes, remaining there when
> we left at 4pm. During the 40 minutes we watched it, it was silent and
> neither flew nor fed but seemed relaxed & healthy. Later observers saw it
> catching worms in the leaf litter. If you seek this bird, don’t just look
> at the edge of the river, look in the woods, too. Pirozzolo Park is near
> the West Elmira fire station on Water Street.
> This is the second NYS record for this species. The first record was just
> last autumn along the Niagara River. That bird was captured just before the
> deadly blizzard hit Buffalo, and I believe it was released in South
> Carolina.
>
> - - Dave Nutter
> --
> *Cayugabirds-L List Info:*
> Welcome and Basics 
> Rules and Information 
> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> 
> *Archives:*
> The Mail Archive
> 
> Surfbirds 
> BirdingOnThe.Net 
> *Please submit your observations to eBird
> !*
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>

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[cayugabirds-l] Elmira Limpkin

2023-10-22 Thread Dave Nutter
On 12 October Barb Borelli found and photographed a Limpkin along the Chemung 
River in Elmira and reported it to eBird. This morning (22 October) Martin Cain 
refound & photographed it, also along the edge of the river. This afternoon Ann 
Mitchell & I went to look for it, and we were close by, as were Adam Farid & 
Mike Gullo, when Jeremy Collison discovered the Limpkin a hundred yards from 
the river standing and resting in the dead-leaf-strewn floodplain forest 
immediately southeast of Pirozzolo Park in an area which seemed to be 
associated with a culvert below the corner of the levee. The bird was standing 
almost under the Japanese Knotweed which covered the embankment above. We were 
surprised when it walked toward us, coming within a few yards behind a narrow 
screen of knotweed, then it turned and strolled toward the river, sometimes out 
in the open, and rested again at the top of the riverbank for several minutes, 
remaining there when we left at 4pm. During the 40 minutes we watched it, it 
was silent and neither flew nor fed but seemed relaxed & healthy. Later 
observers saw it catching worms in the leaf litter. If you seek this bird, 
don’t just look at the edge of the river, look in the woods, too. Pirozzolo 
Park is near the West Elmira fire station on Water Street. 
This is the second NYS record for this species. The first record was just last 
autumn along the Niagara River. That bird was captured just before the deadly 
blizzard hit Buffalo, and I believe it was released in South Carolina. 

- - Dave Nutter
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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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