[nysbirds-l] Jones Beach - Vesper Sparrow

2016-10-26 Thread Michael Zito
Spotted a vesper sparrow past the police station after the "thank you" sign. 
South side of the middle median.  Hermit thrush was nearby the bird.
Mike Z.

Sent from my iPhone
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 10/25

2016-10-26 Thread Andrew Baksh
Like Michael, I also read Tom's report with interest. Over several seasons, I 
have observed the W-E phenomenon taking place on Coastal Queens and reported as 
such.

Last year in particular, this occurrence took place on several occasions with 
massive amounts of Scoters moving W-E and later on a somewhat reversal taking 
place, all observed along Riis Park to Breezy Point Tip.

I agree that the more we share these types of observations across sites the 
more we will learn or at least become more confused on the flights and what 
triggers changes in the flight movement.

"I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of 
others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence." ~ Frederick 
Douglass

風 Swift as the wind
林 Quiet as the forest
火 Conquer like the fire
山 Steady as the mountain
Sun Tzu  The Art of War

> (\__/)
> (= '.'=)
> (") _ (") 
> Sent from somewhere in the field using my mobile device! 

Andrew Baksh
www.birdingdude.blogspot.com

> On Oct 26, 2016, at 10:40 AM, Michael McBrien  wrote:
> 
> I find Tom's notes of flight direction to be pretty intriguing. It's always 
> fascinating to take part in observing these morning flights, but it can be 
> even more interesting to see how the flight direction varies over different 
> sites. 
> 
> This reverse S-to-N flight is obviously most famous along the west shore of 
> Cape May, but seems to be regular in smaller locales also - like Tom noted in 
> CP.  On my patches in Bristol County, Rhode Island, I watch flights going S 
> to N on any morning of suitable winds ...presumably due to birds reversing up 
> the peninsula instead of making the jump across the bay.
> 
> From the records of many diligent observers, the fall flights along the south 
> facing shores of the LI barrier beaches and the Great South Bay are 
> consistently E to W. Yesterday, I watched a flight on the south shore of Cape 
> Cod, along a similar east-west running coast in Hyannisport, and was fairly 
> shocked to see consistent movement W to E over the course of an hour of 
> watching. 
> 
> These flights never cease to amaze me in their dynamic nature and in how they 
> vary based on location.  It seems their direction is a function of more 
> variables than may meet the eye (geography, weather, shorelines, etc) and I'm 
> sure a lot can be learned from comparing them over various locations.
> 
> 
> Mike McBrien
> East Patchogue, NY & Bristol, RI
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> On Oct 26, 2016, at 8:01 AM, Thomas Fiore  wrote:
>> 
>> Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
>> Tuesday, 25 October, 2016 -
>> 
>> and it may be happening all over again this day (a good migration, that 
>> is)...
>> 
>> A bit of a surprise -for the date- was a Spotted Sandpiper moving around the 
>> Meer, in the park's north end, early on Tuesday; seen mostIy at the western 
>> section and moving about thanks to the usual off-leash dogs and other 
>> human-induced activity, at that hour.
>> 
>> 2 first-year-&-female Prairie Warblers were photo-documented by Linda 
>> LaBella on Monday, 10/24, in the north end of the park, this is a 'late-ish' 
>> date for Central where the species does not occur too often this late, in 
>> contrast to some locations where perhaps more-attractive habitat can find 
>> them (rarely) much later; an excellent late-October find in Central.
>> 
>> The one Red-headed Woodpecker I found on Tues. was the young bird at the 
>> east edge of Sheep Meadow, which did give a short, soft call as I passed by 
>> in late morning;  I was not in the Ramble a great time, & another Red-headed 
>> could well continue there (in addition to the possibility that others are 
>> lurking in any various part of the park, awaiting discovery).  In addition 
>> at the east side of Sheep Meadow, were 50-60+ Black-capped Chickadees very 
>> busily foraging in the trees, part of a fresh new flight of them on the day; 
>> several hundred more chickadees, presumed all the expected species, were in 
>> nearly every other part of the park, with obvious movement by them in the 
>> first hour or two of the day; Myrtle Warblers were also on the move, again, 
>> with a fairly strong flight (though nothing in numbers compared with other, 
>> prior days of this month) of many, many hundreds, these were seen from the 
>> Great Hill quite early and they, along with a mix of other migrants, were 
>> moving in scattered directions, and some at varying elevations above ground, 
>> a "complex" morning flight, with some migrants meeting up with ones having 
>> made the big turn that some do as they 'meet up' with (get very near to) the 
>> very tall buildings just south of the park's southern perimeter (and of 
>> course to some extent at the SW & SE sides of the park as well; this 
>> phenomenon readily observed by those keenly watching for it and positioned 
>> within 

Re: [nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 10/25

2016-10-26 Thread Michael McBrien
I find Tom's notes of flight direction to be pretty intriguing. It's always 
fascinating to take part in observing these morning flights, but it can be even 
more interesting to see how the flight direction varies over different sites. 

This reverse S-to-N flight is obviously most famous along the west shore of 
Cape May, but seems to be regular in smaller locales also - like Tom noted in 
CP.  On my patches in Bristol County, Rhode Island, I watch flights going S to 
N on any morning of suitable winds ...presumably due to birds reversing up the 
peninsula instead of making the jump across the bay.

>From the records of many diligent observers, the fall flights along the south 
>facing shores of the LI barrier beaches and the Great South Bay are 
>consistently E to W. Yesterday, I watched a flight on the south shore of Cape 
>Cod, along a similar east-west running coast in Hyannisport, and was fairly 
>shocked to see consistent movement W to E over the course of an hour of 
>watching. 

These flights never cease to amaze me in their dynamic nature and in how they 
vary based on location.  It seems their direction is a function of more 
variables than may meet the eye (geography, weather, shorelines, etc) and I'm 
sure a lot can be learned from comparing them over various locations.


Mike McBrien
East Patchogue, NY & Bristol, RI




> On Oct 26, 2016, at 8:01 AM, Thomas Fiore  wrote:
> 
> Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
> Tuesday, 25 October, 2016 -
> 
> and it may be happening all over again this day (a good migration, that is)...
> 
> A bit of a surprise -for the date- was a Spotted Sandpiper moving around the 
> Meer, in the park's north end, early on Tuesday; seen mostIy at the western 
> section and moving about thanks to the usual off-leash dogs and other 
> human-induced activity, at that hour.
> 
> 2 first-year-&-female Prairie Warblers were photo-documented by Linda LaBella 
> on Monday, 10/24, in the north end of the park, this is a 'late-ish' date for 
> Central where the species does not occur too often this late, in contrast to 
> some locations where perhaps more-attractive habitat can find them (rarely) 
> much later; an excellent late-October find in Central.
> 
> The one Red-headed Woodpecker I found on Tues. was the young bird at the east 
> edge of Sheep Meadow, which did give a short, soft call as I passed by in 
> late morning;  I was not in the Ramble a great time, & another Red-headed 
> could well continue there (in addition to the possibility that others are 
> lurking in any various part of the park, awaiting discovery).  In addition at 
> the east side of Sheep Meadow, were 50-60+ Black-capped Chickadees very 
> busily foraging in the trees, part of a fresh new flight of them on the day; 
> several hundred more chickadees, presumed all the expected species, were in 
> nearly every other part of the park, with obvious movement by them in the 
> first hour or two of the day; Myrtle Warblers were also on the move, again, 
> with a fairly strong flight (though nothing in numbers compared with other, 
> prior days of this month) of many, many hundreds, these were seen from the 
> Great Hill quite early and they, along with a mix of other migrants, were 
> moving in scattered directions, and some at varying elevations above ground, 
> a "complex" morning flight, with some migrants meeting up with ones having 
> made the big turn that some do as they 'meet up' with (get very near to) the 
> very tall buildings just south of the park's southern perimeter (and of 
> course to some extent at the SW & SE sides of the park as well; this 
> phenomenon readily observed by those keenly watching for it and positioned 
> within about 50-500 yards of the park's southern edge, in a good vantage with 
> views of much of the buildings and especially the mid-stories of them - the 
> phenomenon may be seen with a lot of early morning/diurnal flight, and it may 
> appear that a majority of thusly-affected birds will make a "U" turn, and 
> then fly strongly away, north or generally northerly, with an impression that 
> many, even most seem to go on for quite some distance, perhaps even to & 
> beyond the northern end of the park - however this is not the only & perhaps 
> not the greatest factor in "reverse" or "wrong-way" movement seen in this 
> park & one must understand the complexities involved in the nearness of 2 
> major waterways, the East & Hudson river estuaries laid parallel with the 
> "north-south" length of this park, & much more generally with the importance 
> of open waters in the vicinity, the western Long Island Sound & the shores - 
> and adjacent ridges - of southern New England running directly into eastern 
> Westchester County & then Bronx County, for some of how birds may be moving, 
> those which did not make a crossing of Long Island Sound to fly along or 
> closer to the 4 NY counties of Long Island itself (Suffolk, Nassau, Queens, 
> and Kings 

[nysbirds-l] Dickcissel - Chandler Estate in Mt Sinai

2016-10-26 Thread Rich Perkins / TAM
There is a Dickcissel at Chandler Estate in Mt Sinai.  The bird is actually
to the left (west) of the Mt Sinai Congressional Church (opposite side of
cemetery) in a newly cleared area beyond the red barn / share garden.

 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/123534288@N08/?

 

 

-Aidan

 

 


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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[nysbirds-l] NYS eBird Hotspots: New/Renamed Shared Locations (26-Oct-2016)

2016-10-26 Thread Ben Cacace
Thanks to @Team_eBird for their dedication keeping eBird.org running
smoothly and for the group of New York State hotspot moderators for working
on shared location suggestions.

New and renamed shared locations (hotspots) have been updated for the 62
county wiki pages. You can find a summary of the changes here with
clickable links where a dedicated hotspot page exists:

http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/NewHotspots
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/RenamedHotspots

*Home page:*
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York

*Clickable map:*
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York#ClickableMap

*Alphabetical list of counties:*
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York#Alphabetical

Enjoy!
-- 
Ben Cacace
Manhattan, NYC
Wiki for NYS eBird Hotspots

Facebook Discussion for NYS eBird Hotspots


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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 10/25

2016-10-26 Thread Thomas Fiore
Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
Tuesday, 25 October, 2016 -

and it may be happening all over again this day (a good migration,  
that is)...

A bit of a surprise -for the date- was a Spotted Sandpiper moving  
around the Meer, in the park's north end, early on Tuesday; seen  
mostIy at the western section and moving about thanks to the usual off- 
leash dogs and other human-induced activity, at that hour.

2 first-year-&-female Prairie Warblers were photo-documented by Linda  
LaBella on Monday, 10/24, in the north end of the park, this is a  
'late-ish' date for Central where the species does not occur too often  
this late, in contrast to some locations where perhaps more-attractive  
habitat can find them (rarely) much later; an excellent late-October  
find in Central.

The one Red-headed Woodpecker I found on Tues. was the young bird at  
the east edge of Sheep Meadow, which did give a short, soft call as I  
passed by in late morning;  I was not in the Ramble a great time, &  
another Red-headed could well continue there (in addition to the  
possibility that others are lurking in any various part of the park,  
awaiting discovery).  In addition at the east side of Sheep Meadow,  
were 50-60+ Black-capped Chickadees very busily foraging in the trees,  
part of a fresh new flight of them on the day; several hundred more  
chickadees, presumed all the expected species, were in nearly every  
other part of the park, with obvious movement by them in the first  
hour or two of the day; Myrtle Warblers were also on the move, again,  
with a fairly strong flight (though nothing in numbers compared with  
other, prior days of this month) of many, many hundreds, these were  
seen from the Great Hill quite early and they, along with a mix of  
other migrants, were moving in scattered directions, and some at  
varying elevations above ground, a "complex" morning flight, with some  
migrants meeting up with ones having made the big turn that some do as  
they 'meet up' with (get very near to) the very tall buildings just  
south of the park's southern perimeter (and of course to some extent  
at the SW & SE sides of the park as well; this phenomenon readily  
observed by those keenly watching for it and positioned within about  
50-500 yards of the park's southern edge, in a good vantage with views  
of much of the buildings and especially the mid-stories of them - the  
phenomenon may be seen with a lot of early morning/diurnal flight, and  
it may appear that a majority of thusly-affected birds will make a "U"  
turn, and then fly strongly away, north or generally northerly, with  
an impression that many, even most seem to go on for quite some  
distance, perhaps even to & beyond the northern end of the park -  
however this is not the only & perhaps not the greatest factor in  
"reverse" or "wrong-way" movement seen in this park & one must  
understand the complexities involved in the nearness of 2 major  
waterways, the East & Hudson river estuaries laid parallel with the  
"north-south" length of this park, & much more generally with the  
importance of open waters in the vicinity, the western Long Island  
Sound & the shores - and adjacent ridges - of southern New England  
running directly into eastern Westchester County & then Bronx County,  
for some of how birds may be moving, those which did not make a  
crossing of Long Island Sound to fly along or closer to the 4 NY  
counties of Long Island itself (Suffolk, Nassau, Queens, and Kings  
Counties, the latter best known as Brooklyn); in fall migration it  
seems rather unlikely that many migrants make it into or over  
Manhattan, having made the hop to or near to Long Island - except  
that, from the north shore, running across & into northern Queens Co.,  
this comes quite near to Manhattan and might bring a good many birds  
to the latter - an interesting but hard-to-prove/disprove aspect that,  
on NE & some E winds, in "fall" migration, Central Park & Manhattan  
may see quite good arrival of migrants after good overnight flights,  
some of those being rival to flights found after nights of N or NW or  
W winds; however again the patterns of migrant movements can be  
complex with the divergence of species 'trying' to attain a variety of  
habitat (most obvious in, say waders - shorebirds to most N.American  
birder - wanting mud-flat, bay & sea ducks wanting those areas, and so  
on, with some "land-birds" being more averse to getting pushed to  
shore & especially to barrier-beach locations (thus the special  
interest when, let's say, Brown Creeper or Hairy Woodpecker is found  
at the outer barrier beach sites, examples (perhaps not even the best  
examples) of species averse to being pushed to the outer edges of  
land, except in somewhat exceptional situations of migration movement.

The entire sparrow tribe were on the move again, with fresh & slightly  
late movement of Eastern Towhee in numbers (both sexes), and greater  
numbers of 

[nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 10/25

2016-10-26 Thread Thomas Fiore
Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
Tuesday, 25 October, 2016 -

and it may be happening all over again this day (a good migration,  
that is)...

A bit of a surprise -for the date- was a Spotted Sandpiper moving  
around the Meer, in the park's north end, early on Tuesday; seen  
mostIy at the western section and moving about thanks to the usual off- 
leash dogs and other human-induced activity, at that hour.

2 first-year-&-female Prairie Warblers were photo-documented by Linda  
LaBella on Monday, 10/24, in the north end of the park, this is a  
'late-ish' date for Central where the species does not occur too often  
this late, in contrast to some locations where perhaps more-attractive  
habitat can find them (rarely) much later; an excellent late-October  
find in Central.

The one Red-headed Woodpecker I found on Tues. was the young bird at  
the east edge of Sheep Meadow, which did give a short, soft call as I  
passed by in late morning;  I was not in the Ramble a great time, &  
another Red-headed could well continue there (in addition to the  
possibility that others are lurking in any various part of the park,  
awaiting discovery).  In addition at the east side of Sheep Meadow,  
were 50-60+ Black-capped Chickadees very busily foraging in the trees,  
part of a fresh new flight of them on the day; several hundred more  
chickadees, presumed all the expected species, were in nearly every  
other part of the park, with obvious movement by them in the first  
hour or two of the day; Myrtle Warblers were also on the move, again,  
with a fairly strong flight (though nothing in numbers compared with  
other, prior days of this month) of many, many hundreds, these were  
seen from the Great Hill quite early and they, along with a mix of  
other migrants, were moving in scattered directions, and some at  
varying elevations above ground, a "complex" morning flight, with some  
migrants meeting up with ones having made the big turn that some do as  
they 'meet up' with (get very near to) the very tall buildings just  
south of the park's southern perimeter (and of course to some extent  
at the SW & SE sides of the park as well; this phenomenon readily  
observed by those keenly watching for it and positioned within about  
50-500 yards of the park's southern edge, in a good vantage with views  
of much of the buildings and especially the mid-stories of them - the  
phenomenon may be seen with a lot of early morning/diurnal flight, and  
it may appear that a majority of thusly-affected birds will make a "U"  
turn, and then fly strongly away, north or generally northerly, with  
an impression that many, even most seem to go on for quite some  
distance, perhaps even to & beyond the northern end of the park -  
however this is not the only & perhaps not the greatest factor in  
"reverse" or "wrong-way" movement seen in this park & one must  
understand the complexities involved in the nearness of 2 major  
waterways, the East & Hudson river estuaries laid parallel with the  
"north-south" length of this park, & much more generally with the  
importance of open waters in the vicinity, the western Long Island  
Sound & the shores - and adjacent ridges - of southern New England  
running directly into eastern Westchester County & then Bronx County,  
for some of how birds may be moving, those which did not make a  
crossing of Long Island Sound to fly along or closer to the 4 NY  
counties of Long Island itself (Suffolk, Nassau, Queens, and Kings  
Counties, the latter best known as Brooklyn); in fall migration it  
seems rather unlikely that many migrants make it into or over  
Manhattan, having made the hop to or near to Long Island - except  
that, from the north shore, running across & into northern Queens Co.,  
this comes quite near to Manhattan and might bring a good many birds  
to the latter - an interesting but hard-to-prove/disprove aspect that,  
on NE & some E winds, in "fall" migration, Central Park & Manhattan  
may see quite good arrival of migrants after good overnight flights,  
some of those being rival to flights found after nights of N or NW or  
W winds; however again the patterns of migrant movements can be  
complex with the divergence of species 'trying' to attain a variety of  
habitat (most obvious in, say waders - shorebirds to most N.American  
birder - wanting mud-flat, bay & sea ducks wanting those areas, and so  
on, with some "land-birds" being more averse to getting pushed to  
shore & especially to barrier-beach locations (thus the special  
interest when, let's say, Brown Creeper or Hairy Woodpecker is found  
at the outer barrier beach sites, examples (perhaps not even the best  
examples) of species averse to being pushed to the outer edges of  
land, except in somewhat exceptional situations of migration movement.

The entire sparrow tribe were on the move again, with fresh & slightly  
late movement of Eastern Towhee in numbers (both sexes), and greater  
numbers of 

Re: [nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 10/25

2016-10-26 Thread Michael McBrien
I find Tom's notes of flight direction to be pretty intriguing. It's always 
fascinating to take part in observing these morning flights, but it can be even 
more interesting to see how the flight direction varies over different sites. 

This reverse S-to-N flight is obviously most famous along the west shore of 
Cape May, but seems to be regular in smaller locales also - like Tom noted in 
CP.  On my patches in Bristol County, Rhode Island, I watch flights going S to 
N on any morning of suitable winds ...presumably due to birds reversing up the 
peninsula instead of making the jump across the bay.

>From the records of many diligent observers, the fall flights along the south 
>facing shores of the LI barrier beaches and the Great South Bay are 
>consistently E to W. Yesterday, I watched a flight on the south shore of Cape 
>Cod, along a similar east-west running coast in Hyannisport, and was fairly 
>shocked to see consistent movement W to E over the course of an hour of 
>watching. 

These flights never cease to amaze me in their dynamic nature and in how they 
vary based on location.  It seems their direction is a function of more 
variables than may meet the eye (geography, weather, shorelines, etc) and I'm 
sure a lot can be learned from comparing them over various locations.


Mike McBrien
East Patchogue, NY & Bristol, RI




> On Oct 26, 2016, at 8:01 AM, Thomas Fiore  wrote:
> 
> Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
> Tuesday, 25 October, 2016 -
> 
> and it may be happening all over again this day (a good migration, that is)...
> 
> A bit of a surprise -for the date- was a Spotted Sandpiper moving around the 
> Meer, in the park's north end, early on Tuesday; seen mostIy at the western 
> section and moving about thanks to the usual off-leash dogs and other 
> human-induced activity, at that hour.
> 
> 2 first-year-&-female Prairie Warblers were photo-documented by Linda LaBella 
> on Monday, 10/24, in the north end of the park, this is a 'late-ish' date for 
> Central where the species does not occur too often this late, in contrast to 
> some locations where perhaps more-attractive habitat can find them (rarely) 
> much later; an excellent late-October find in Central.
> 
> The one Red-headed Woodpecker I found on Tues. was the young bird at the east 
> edge of Sheep Meadow, which did give a short, soft call as I passed by in 
> late morning;  I was not in the Ramble a great time, & another Red-headed 
> could well continue there (in addition to the possibility that others are 
> lurking in any various part of the park, awaiting discovery).  In addition at 
> the east side of Sheep Meadow, were 50-60+ Black-capped Chickadees very 
> busily foraging in the trees, part of a fresh new flight of them on the day; 
> several hundred more chickadees, presumed all the expected species, were in 
> nearly every other part of the park, with obvious movement by them in the 
> first hour or two of the day; Myrtle Warblers were also on the move, again, 
> with a fairly strong flight (though nothing in numbers compared with other, 
> prior days of this month) of many, many hundreds, these were seen from the 
> Great Hill quite early and they, along with a mix of other migrants, were 
> moving in scattered directions, and some at varying elevations above ground, 
> a "complex" morning flight, with some migrants meeting up with ones having 
> made the big turn that some do as they 'meet up' with (get very near to) the 
> very tall buildings just south of the park's southern perimeter (and of 
> course to some extent at the SW & SE sides of the park as well; this 
> phenomenon readily observed by those keenly watching for it and positioned 
> within about 50-500 yards of the park's southern edge, in a good vantage with 
> views of much of the buildings and especially the mid-stories of them - the 
> phenomenon may be seen with a lot of early morning/diurnal flight, and it may 
> appear that a majority of thusly-affected birds will make a "U" turn, and 
> then fly strongly away, north or generally northerly, with an impression that 
> many, even most seem to go on for quite some distance, perhaps even to & 
> beyond the northern end of the park - however this is not the only & perhaps 
> not the greatest factor in "reverse" or "wrong-way" movement seen in this 
> park & one must understand the complexities involved in the nearness of 2 
> major waterways, the East & Hudson river estuaries laid parallel with the 
> "north-south" length of this park, & much more generally with the importance 
> of open waters in the vicinity, the western Long Island Sound & the shores - 
> and adjacent ridges - of southern New England running directly into eastern 
> Westchester County & then Bronx County, for some of how birds may be moving, 
> those which did not make a crossing of Long Island Sound to fly along or 
> closer to the 4 NY counties of Long Island itself (Suffolk, Nassau, Queens, 
> and Kings Counties, the latter best 

[nysbirds-l] Jones Beach - Vesper Sparrow

2016-10-26 Thread Michael Zito
Spotted a vesper sparrow past the police station after the "thank you" sign. 
South side of the middle median.  Hermit thrush was nearby the bird.
Mike Z.

Sent from my iPhone
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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 10/25

2016-10-26 Thread Andrew Baksh
Like Michael, I also read Tom's report with interest. Over several seasons, I 
have observed the W-E phenomenon taking place on Coastal Queens and reported as 
such.

Last year in particular, this occurrence took place on several occasions with 
massive amounts of Scoters moving W-E and later on a somewhat reversal taking 
place, all observed along Riis Park to Breezy Point Tip.

I agree that the more we share these types of observations across sites the 
more we will learn or at least become more confused on the flights and what 
triggers changes in the flight movement.

"I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of 
others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence." ~ Frederick 
Douglass

風 Swift as the wind
林 Quiet as the forest
火 Conquer like the fire
山 Steady as the mountain
Sun Tzu  The Art of War

> (\__/)
> (= '.'=)
> (") _ (") 
> Sent from somewhere in the field using my mobile device! 

Andrew Baksh
www.birdingdude.blogspot.com

> On Oct 26, 2016, at 10:40 AM, Michael McBrien  wrote:
> 
> I find Tom's notes of flight direction to be pretty intriguing. It's always 
> fascinating to take part in observing these morning flights, but it can be 
> even more interesting to see how the flight direction varies over different 
> sites. 
> 
> This reverse S-to-N flight is obviously most famous along the west shore of 
> Cape May, but seems to be regular in smaller locales also - like Tom noted in 
> CP.  On my patches in Bristol County, Rhode Island, I watch flights going S 
> to N on any morning of suitable winds ...presumably due to birds reversing up 
> the peninsula instead of making the jump across the bay.
> 
> From the records of many diligent observers, the fall flights along the south 
> facing shores of the LI barrier beaches and the Great South Bay are 
> consistently E to W. Yesterday, I watched a flight on the south shore of Cape 
> Cod, along a similar east-west running coast in Hyannisport, and was fairly 
> shocked to see consistent movement W to E over the course of an hour of 
> watching. 
> 
> These flights never cease to amaze me in their dynamic nature and in how they 
> vary based on location.  It seems their direction is a function of more 
> variables than may meet the eye (geography, weather, shorelines, etc) and I'm 
> sure a lot can be learned from comparing them over various locations.
> 
> 
> Mike McBrien
> East Patchogue, NY & Bristol, RI
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> On Oct 26, 2016, at 8:01 AM, Thomas Fiore  wrote:
>> 
>> Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
>> Tuesday, 25 October, 2016 -
>> 
>> and it may be happening all over again this day (a good migration, that 
>> is)...
>> 
>> A bit of a surprise -for the date- was a Spotted Sandpiper moving around the 
>> Meer, in the park's north end, early on Tuesday; seen mostIy at the western 
>> section and moving about thanks to the usual off-leash dogs and other 
>> human-induced activity, at that hour.
>> 
>> 2 first-year-&-female Prairie Warblers were photo-documented by Linda 
>> LaBella on Monday, 10/24, in the north end of the park, this is a 'late-ish' 
>> date for Central where the species does not occur too often this late, in 
>> contrast to some locations where perhaps more-attractive habitat can find 
>> them (rarely) much later; an excellent late-October find in Central.
>> 
>> The one Red-headed Woodpecker I found on Tues. was the young bird at the 
>> east edge of Sheep Meadow, which did give a short, soft call as I passed by 
>> in late morning;  I was not in the Ramble a great time, & another Red-headed 
>> could well continue there (in addition to the possibility that others are 
>> lurking in any various part of the park, awaiting discovery).  In addition 
>> at the east side of Sheep Meadow, were 50-60+ Black-capped Chickadees very 
>> busily foraging in the trees, part of a fresh new flight of them on the day; 
>> several hundred more chickadees, presumed all the expected species, were in 
>> nearly every other part of the park, with obvious movement by them in the 
>> first hour or two of the day; Myrtle Warblers were also on the move, again, 
>> with a fairly strong flight (though nothing in numbers compared with other, 
>> prior days of this month) of many, many hundreds, these were seen from the 
>> Great Hill quite early and they, along with a mix of other migrants, were 
>> moving in scattered directions, and some at varying elevations above ground, 
>> a "complex" morning flight, with some migrants meeting up with ones having 
>> made the big turn that some do as they 'meet up' with (get very near to) the 
>> very tall buildings just south of the park's southern perimeter (and of 
>> course to some extent at the SW & SE sides of the park as well; this 
>> phenomenon readily observed by those keenly watching for it and positioned 
>> within about 50-500 yards of the park's southern 

[nysbirds-l] Dickcissel - Chandler Estate in Mt Sinai

2016-10-26 Thread Rich Perkins / TAM
There is a Dickcissel at Chandler Estate in Mt Sinai.  The bird is actually
to the left (west) of the Mt Sinai Congressional Church (opposite side of
cemetery) in a newly cleared area beyond the red barn / share garden.

 

https://www.flickr.com/photos/123534288@N08/?

 

 

-Aidan

 

 


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[nysbirds-l] NYS eBird Hotspots: New/Renamed Shared Locations (26-Oct-2016)

2016-10-26 Thread Ben Cacace
Thanks to @Team_eBird for their dedication keeping eBird.org running
smoothly and for the group of New York State hotspot moderators for working
on shared location suggestions.

New and renamed shared locations (hotspots) have been updated for the 62
county wiki pages. You can find a summary of the changes here with
clickable links where a dedicated hotspot page exists:

http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/NewHotspots
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/RenamedHotspots

*Home page:*
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York

*Clickable map:*
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York#ClickableMap

*Alphabetical list of counties:*
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York#Alphabetical

Enjoy!
-- 
Ben Cacace
Manhattan, NYC
Wiki for NYS eBird Hotspots

Facebook Discussion for NYS eBird Hotspots


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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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