Yesterday at 6:30 pm I was able to hear and then see both Prothonotary 
warblers. I recorded video of one to have the singing. They are LOUD at close 
range.
This area is amazingly birdie.

Gary




On Jun 1, 2011, at 9:58 AM, "Matthew Medler" 
<m...@cornell.edu<mailto:m...@cornell.edu>> wrote:

There were two Prothonotary Warblers countersinging from opposite sides of 
Armitage Road at 4:30 pm on Monday afternoon (31 May 2011). These birds were 
just 10-20 yards west of the little gravel pull-off area on the west side of 
the one-lane green bridge. No sign of any Acadians at that time, but a singing 
Northern Waterthrush was a bit of a surprise. Not a surprise, but always nice 
to hear, were two Cerulean Warblers. Oh, and a distant Black-billed Cuckoo sang 
for about 30 seconds.

Matt Medler
Ithaca

________________________________
From: bob mcguire 
<bmcgu...@clarityconnect.com<mailto:bmcgu...@clarityconnect.com>>
To: cayugabirdlist <cayugabirds-L@cornell.edu<mailto:cayugabirds-L@cornell.edu>>
Sent: Wednesday, June 1, 2011 8:47 AM
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Prothontary - no

John Confer and I drove up to the north end of the lake yesterday
evening to look for some of the recently-sighted birds. From the tower
at Tschache Pool we scoped the vast mud flats and found - 3 BLACK-
BELLIED PLOVERS and two distant shorebirds that flew in and
disappeared behind logs and stumps. No other shorebirds. 3 Red-winged
Blackbirds. One of the plovers had a markedly darker cap, making it
worth a closer look. However the throat and belly were black while the
vent was white, and the bill was relatively short and stubby. So we
left it as Black-bellied Plover.

From there we drove out Armitage Road, parked just past the green
bridge, and spent about a half hour walking up and down the road to
the west. We heard several Yellow Warblers, 2 American Redstarts, also
Common Yellowthroats, Swamp Sparrows and, surprisingly, 3 ACADIAN
FLYCATCHERS. Two of them were on the north side, close to the road.
The third was on the south side. Unfortunately for us, no Prothonotary
Warblers. We left at sunset.

Bob McGuire



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