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Rich Peet and I headed north at dark thirty to arrive East of Kerrick, just 
SEof the Nickerson Bog in Pine County at a half hour before dawn. We were 
rewarded with calls of Sora's and Virginia Rails and many warblers lifting off 
from alder and willow thickets to begin the day. The Warblers and Vireos 
numbered in the hundreds and were only really very viewable in the alder 
thickets that border meadows and wetlands in the region. The only bird heard 
singing were Sedge Wrens right at dawn, then hundreds of Red-eyed Vireos and a 
Philadelphia Vireo (seen well singing and recorded) the rest of the day. 
Sandhill Cranes were very common; a single private residence treated us to the 
spectacle of more than 25 Hummingbirds feeding from an array of feeders, what a 
view!  Only two adult males seen in the fracas. We captured sound and video, 
these buggers sing so high and their humming is so low in frequency, it posed a 
technical problem for us.  I found when a hummer screams by 1 foot awa
 y at full speed he sounds more like a passing NASCAR racer than a bird the 
size of a strawberry -   Doppler effect and all! 2 Evening Grosbeaks have shown 
up at feeders east of Kerrick after a 2 month absence. Bluebirds are flocking 
up and seen in many places. Tree Swallows were flocking and swarming on 
telephone wires, and the Sandstone Sewage ponds had hundreds of Bank Swallows. 
I heard what I am fairly certain is the "feed me " call of a Great Grey owl 
east of Kerrick, yet I could not see the culprit, we captured it on audio, 
though. This is where Mark Martell and I saw one feeding actively in mid April. 
Olive Sided Flycatchers seen but not heard also. Warblers and Vireos were very 
active and easy to find only from 6 am till 7:30 am then scarce to find. Call 
notes were given, we recorded many, but in an active flock of 40. try picking 
them out. These birds should be in the cities shortly. My advise is get out at 
dawn and try and find them in the short stuff. The toughest 
 ID's were the fall Cape May Warbler and confirming the ID of a Philadelphia 
Vireo giving it's Red Eyed Vireo call. If you hear a Red Eeye, take time to 
check it out, I was only alerted by seeing a Philadelphia Vireo in the area, so 
I checked out 2 calling birds, one was the Philadelphia! It will be nice to 
compare the sonogram to compare the frequencies of the two.

We saw 73 birds today in 6 hours of birding, and covered hardly any area at 
all. I think we have major fall movement right now and if the rain pins the 
birds down the next few days, it may get even better. Pine Warblers, Red-eyed 
Vireos, Bank and Tree Swallows all were abundant today. And of course, enough 
Ruby Throats to fill a Hummer (each maintaining territorial space, of course). 
Good Birding!

Incidentally, if you re not using the MOU seasonal reports  on line, you are 
missing the boat, it is easy and informative and fun! Check it out, it is a 
real joy to use a tool so aligned with the needs of a MN birder. Thank You Dave 
Cahlander!  Enjoy!
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<html><body>
<DIV>Rich Peet and I headed north at dark thirty to arrive East of Kerrick, 
just SEof the Nickerson Bog&nbsp;in Pine County at a half hour before dawn. We 
were rewarded with calls of Sora's and Virginia Rails and many warblers lifting 
off from alder and willow thickets to begin the day. The Warblers and Vireos 
numbered in the hundreds and were only really very viewable in the alder 
thickets that border meadows and wetlands in the region. The only bird heard 
singing were Sedge Wrens right at dawn, then&nbsp;hundreds of Red-eyed Vireos 
and a Philadelphia Vireo (seen well singing and recorded)&nbsp;the rest of the 
day. Sandhill Cranes were very common; a single private residence treated us to 
the spectacle of more than 25 Hummingbirds feeding from an array of feeders, 
what a view!&nbsp; Only two adult males seen in the fracas. We captured sound 
and video, these buggers sing so high and their humming is so low in frequency, 
it posed a technical problem for us.&nbsp; I found when 
 a hummer screams by 1 foot away at full speed he sounds more like a passing 
NASCAR racer than a bird the size of a strawberry - &nbsp; Doppler effect and 
all! 2 Evening Grosbeaks have shown up at feeders east of Kerrick after a 2 
month absence. Bluebirds are flocking up and seen in many places. Tree Swallows 
were flocking and swarming on telephone wires, and the Sandstone Sewage ponds 
had hundreds of Bank Swallows. I heard what I am fairly certain is the "feed me 
" call of a Great Grey owl east of Kerrick, yet I could not see the culprit, we 
captured it on audio, though. This is where Mark Martell and I saw one feeding 
actively in mid April. Olive Sided Flycatchers seen but not heard also. 
Warblers and Vireos were very active and easy to find only from 6 am till 7:30 
am then scarce to find. Call notes were given, we recorded many, but in an 
active flock of 40. try picking them out. These birds should be in the cities 
shortly. My advise is get out at dawn and try and find the
 m in the short stuff. The toughest ID's were the fall Cape May Warbler and 
confirming the ID of a Philadelphia Vireo giving it's Red Eyed Vireo call. If 
you hear a Red Eeye, take time to check it out, I was only alerted by seeing a 
Philadelphia Vireo in the area, so&nbsp;I checked out 2 calling birds, one was 
the Philadelphia! It will be nice to compare the sonogram to compare the 
frequencies of the two.</DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>We saw 73 birds today in 6 hours of birding, and covered hardly any area 
at all. I think we have major fall movement right now and if the rain pins the 
birds down the next few days, it may get even better. Pine Warblers, Red-eyed 
Vireos, Bank and Tree Swallows all were abundant today. And of course, enough 
Ruby Throats to fill a Hummer (each maintaining territorial space, of course). 
Good Birding!</DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>Incidentally, if you re not using the MOU seasonal reports&nbsp; on line, 
you are missing the boat, it&nbsp;is easy and informative and fun! Check it 
out, it is a real joy to use a tool so aligned with the needs&nbsp;of a MN 
birder. Thank You Dave Cahlander!&nbsp; Enjoy!</DIV></body></html>

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