I had gone down to Stewart Park initially to look through the afternoon 
concentration of gulls, but when I arrived about 4:25 there was a parasailer 
and his dog on the ice at the east end, and I could see that there wasn't a 
single bird on the ice shelf. I almost didn't even get out of the car, but when 
I did I could hear exited wails from a group of GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS that 
were mobbing something at the edge of the ice. At first I thought it was a Bald 
Eagle, with white head and mottled body, but soon realized it was a SNOWY OWL!

I don't know if the owl was keeping all the other birds from the ice or if it 
was previous disturbance from the sailor and his dog -- I could see a large 
raft of gulls very far out in the lake, and could only make out the Great 
Black-backs in that raft.

The OWL was awesome though -- surprisingly the first that I know of at Stewart 
Park, and long overdue.  As Jay describes in the next post, we watched the owl 
fly across the lake to just north of East Shore Park, and when we zipped up 
there to tick it on our East Shore Park Hotspot list, we watched it fly back, 
low over the lake, to its original spot on the ice edge.

I hope it sticks around for more to see tomorrow.

KEN


Ken Rosenberg
Conservation Science Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
607-254-2412
607-342-4594 (cell)
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

On Jan 18, 2014, at 8:03 PM, Dave Nutter 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:

The SNOWY OWL was still present between 5:00 and 5:06pm when I scoped it from 
north of Treman Marina, but it was gone by 5:35pm when I returned from checking 
the lake. It was a dark, heavily barred bird, a conspicuous lump on the ice 
(and a prize Luddite List bird for me - Thanks, Ken!). Maybe the late hour was 
a factor, but I thought it was telling that I saw no other birds on the entire 
ice shelf. Maybe they recognized this rarity as a predator. I looked around in 
the dusk from 5:35 to 5:40pm but all I saw was a fox out on the ice floes which 
blocked the Inlet between Jetty Woods and the marina. The Inlet was free of ice 
elsewhere both upstream (south to at least the Octopus) and down (along the 
white lighthouse jetty), and the red lighthouse breakwater was an island, 
making it safe (from foxes, anyway) for the 2 DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS which 
sat preening near the north end.

--Dave Nutter

On Jan 18, 2014, at 04:47 PM, Jay McGowan 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


A SNOWY OWL is currently on the ice off mid Stewart Park, found by Ken 
Rosenberg.

Jay

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