Hi Brad,
How many egrets did you find there? I thought it was you but you did not 
recognize me so I thought it might have been someone else who was reading a 
book or something like that. Plus I was in a different car too. May  be you 
were reading an Edgar Allen Poe when I passed you :)

Meena



From: bounce-107988866-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
[mailto:bounce-107988866-3493...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Brad Walker
Sent: Monday, September 23, 2013 3:22 PM
To: Meena Madhav Haribal
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Montezuma today evening!

Hi all,

Sorry for the late reply. I was with Tim yesterday and we had all the birds 
Meena mentioned at East road, plus the continuing WHIMBREL very close to 
Towpath Road and a MERLIN chasing shorebirds around for a while. There was also 
a (most likely) MOURNING WARBLER with some NASHVILLE WARBLERS on Towpath. There 
wasn't anything really of note from elsewhere in the refuge that we visited.
We also found all of the Egrets Meena was missing in the small wetland across 
the street and down the road from the Audubon Center.
- Brad

On Sun, Sep 22, 2013 at 7:25 PM, Meena Madhav Haribal 
<m...@cornell.edu<mailto:m...@cornell.edu>> wrote:

Hi all,

As I had a transportation today, I decided to take a long drive to MNWR.

On the way I stopped at Myers nothing of interest to report. At Aurora, I saw 
an adult Bald Eagle, which soared for sometime parallel to my car.  Again at 
Mud Lock I saw two adult Bald Eagles sitting on a dead tree and a  few crows 
harassing them.

I took wildlife drive hoping for Soras  and the alike. At Visitor Center there 
were numerous Pectoral Sandpipers (20+), one White-rumped Sandpiper, and one 
Greater Yellowlegs. In the Seneca River spillway, just at the beginning of the 
drive there were two Lesser yellowlegs in lesser water and two Greater 
Yellowlegs in deeper water.

On the main pool lot of duck activity was evident. Lots of Pintails and 
American Widgeons were flying in the air. Tons of Green-winged teals were 
clustered around the vegetation. La Rues, New Shorebird area and Bennings were 
devoid of shorebirds, but Bennings had a few Shovlers along with other common 
species.



May's point Pool had lots of Ring-billed gulls and one Pied-billed Grebe.



At Knox Marsellus, there were lots of shorebirds most of them were concentrated 
here rather than near the Towpath.

I quickly picked out 7 HUDSONIAN GODWITS, lots of Pectoral Sandpipers and 
Golden Plovers (30+) and one Black-bellied Plover among them.  Shorebirds for 
no reasons were taking off in a group and land somewhere else. I think this was 
pre-long distance take off exercise. May be many of them might take off today. 
I wonder when they take off , at dusk? A cormorant had caught a fish and it was 
being harassed by a Ring-billed Gull for quite sometime. Later another 
Ring-billed Gull was chasing a Greater Yellowleg, with something in its beak 
for quite sometime.



Two American Pelicans were sleeping, one bill tucked inside its feather and the 
other with bill in the open.

I also saw a few Barn and lots of Tree Swallows over the water.  A small flock 
of Bobolink flew over the marsh. Otherwise it was comparatively quiet.



One thing of note was there were no Egrets anywhere in the refuge!



Also I had a rare sighting of Tim Lenz, who got out of the car with his scope 
and scanned the Knox-Marsellus quickly in about 5 minutes and left! He scanned 
the area where the Hudsonian Godwits were seen, so I presume he was not 
interested in other birds or he might have birded the area previously and came 
for a better look of some species!



Cheers

Meena


Meena Haribal
Ithaca NY 14850
http://haribal.org/
http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/

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