Dave Nutter described the David Cup area. Has anyone developed a digital
map with boundaries as described below? Is the map in the CBC guide to the
basin accurate? There is a map on the Cayuga Bird Club website, but seems
to contradict some of the comments below. For example the Owasco Outlet
comment. Advice would be appreciated.
tk

5. David Cup birds must be in the Cayuga Lake Basin as defined by the
1926(?) botany textbook by Wiegand & Eames. The map used to be on the
Cayuga Bird Club website, and we should be able to find a copy on the web
somewhere, or get one to you. This basin includes the land which drains
into Cayuga Lake, which makes the south and middle parts of the basin
pretty easy to determine. More confusingly, it also includes lands to the
north which drain into the Erie Canal, Clyde River, and Seneca River rather
than draining north directly toward Lake Ontario. The east and west
boundaries of the northern basin are marked on that map, but are a bit
arbitrary, and surprisingly broad, supposedly to include interesting
botanical areas. To the east it includes Crane Brook (thus the western edge
of the City of Auburn), the Owasco Outlet downstream of NYS-38, and the
Seneca River east to just north of Weedsport (but it does NOT include Port
Byron or Weedsport). INCLUDED are Howland Island, Duck Lake, Mud Pond,
Slayton Pond and Stark Pond and associated drainages. In the west, the
north-draining lands include Silver Creek and the next small stream to the
west but not Kendig Creek. Seneca Lake and its drainage are NOT included.
The Seneca River itself is the border west just beyond Packwood Road, then
the border goes west and then north between the Ontario/Seneca County Line
and NYS-14 so as to include the southeast-flowing Black Brook, the Junius
Ponds, Burnett Pond (not sure how the drainage allows this), north-flowing
Pond Brook, a strip of the Town of Lyons (but not the Village of Lyons),
and a different south-flowing Black Brook. The northern border is tricky to
determine at a fine scale because of the chaos created by the huge field of
drumlins and various drainage ditches in farmland and along roads, but the
general principle holds: any stream leading directly to Lake Ontario is
OUT.

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