I want to shout out a hearty THANKS! to Mark Chao, not just for fun, 
informative and ever-entertaining field trips, but also for his dedicated 
support of the Finger Lakes Land Trust! Truly wonderful to have these special 
places to enjoy birds.

Marie

Marie Read Wildlife Photography
452 Ringwood Road
Freeville NY  13068 USA

Phone  607-539-6608
e-mail   [email protected]

http://www.marieread.com

Author of Sierra Wings: Birds of the Mono Lake Basin    Available here:

http://marieread.photoshelter.com/gallery/Sierra-Wings-Birds-of-the-Mono-Lake-Basin/G0000NlCxX37uTzE/C0000BPFGij6nLfE
________________________________________
From: [email protected] 
[[email protected]] on behalf of Mark Chao 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2015 4:26 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Goetchius Wetland Preserve and Roy H. Park Preserve, 
Mon 5/25

Early-morning birding at the Goetchius Wetland Preserve was excellent as usual 
for our group of 12 on Memorial Day.  We saw a pair of BOBOLINKS descending 
together to a presumed nesting or trysting site on the ground, plus three other 
males perched up in song.   We also saw a SAVANNAH SPARROW and one EASTERN 
MEADOWLARK in the grassy field by the parking area.

Around the wetland itself, we got an excellent lesson in “Traill’s” Flycatcher 
songs, with several WILLOW FLYCATCHERS and ALDER FLYCATCHERS all in full voice. 
 We saw about 60 CEDAR WAXWINGS foraging and streaming from tree to tree and 
across the road in a few loose flocks.  And thanks to John Confer, we got the 
morning’s second-biggest surprise – a SORA that responded to playback with both 
its high squealing whinny and its song of similar structure but lower, richer 
tone.

Most of us then went to the Baldwin Tract of the Roy H. Park Preserve in 
Dryden.  Others joined us there, and soon we had an impressive group of 20, 
including three very special guests – Frank and Blythe Baldwin, the former 
longtime owners and protectors of the property, and Miyoko Chu, my wife and 
constant supporter for the Spring Bird Quest and everything else.  An ALDER 
FLYCATCHER greeted us all with many ripping songs from a low perch just beyond 
the parking lot.  Soon afterward, we had our best warbler sighting of the day – 
a PRAIRIE WARBLER right above the first trail fork.

For me, the defining aspect of this walk was the delightful, humbling, 
sometimes vexing challenge of sound ID of atypically-vocalizing birds.  First 
we heard a very high-pitched song consisting of a few straight notes and then 
followed by some faster tripping ones.  The notes had a pinched, forced quality 
and sometimes the song would rise.  I remembered watching and photographing a 
bird singing just such an unusual in-between repertoire here eleven days ago.  
So I declared it a Blackburnian Warbler.  Then Miyoko saw a GOLDEN-CROWNED 
KINGLET.  Ken Kemphues played this species’ song on his mobile device.  It was 
an exact match.

But further along the trail, we again heard a very high two-part song, just 
like the other one with straight notes and a short tripping half-trill.  Many 
of us visually confirmed this one.  It was a splendid male BLACKBURNIAN 
WARBLER.  So, crazy as it seems, I have to conclude that we have two species 
singing indistinguishable songs within earshot of each other in the preserve.  
And I think the spruces that Frank and Blythe had planted here many years ago, 
when the place was just an old untended cornfield, have now grown tall enough 
for Blackburnians to breed here.

Our second sound ID challenge was yet more puzzling – and it had an even more 
mind-blowing resolution.  For about 20 minutes, we approached a bird issuing a 
high, pure “chu-wee” call, once every 30 seconds or so.  I said I thought it 
was a Yellow-bellied Flycatcher because it was too simple and pure and short to 
be anything else, including a goldfinch or an Eastern Wood-Pewee (even 
considering that this species’ song is sometimes abbreviated to two syllables, 
especially late in the breeding season).  Ken played the call of Yellow-bellied 
Flycatcher on his app – again, a perfect match.  But I hedged because it seemed 
to be coming from the tops of hardwood trees, loudly and repeatedly as if from 
a singing bird on a territory.

Want to guess what it was?

Ken and another participant eventually saw the bird making that repeated, pure, 
rising two-syllable sound.  It was an utterly atypical RED-EYED VIREO.  I have 
found nothing remotely similar to this vocalization in any online audio 
library, nor in the Birds of North America account.

Maybe some local sound recordist ought to go check this bizarro place out.

The rest of our walk seemed much more normal.  We all heard and some of us saw 
a singing LOUISIANA WATERTHRUSH at the bottom of the ravine.  We heard many 
other species typical of the site, including at leaste half a dozen MAGNOLIA 
WARBLERS, a few BLACK-THROATED GREEN WARBLERS, SCARLET TANAGER, INDIGO BUNTING, 
EASTERN TOWHEE, and others.  I added just one more species to the month’s SBQ 
count – a COMMON RAVEN, also heard only.

My thanks to all participants and of course the Finger Lakes Land Trust for 
another great morning!

Mark Chao

Running SBQ tally:  117 bird species
Running count of bird walk participants (counting repeat customers each time, 
but not including me):   114
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