Hi all,Jill and I, along with Luckworth (our daughter Jackie's dog) went out 
for a walk at Spring lake Park to try and locate Linda's Prothonotary Warbler 
last night.  We arrived at the archery unit and proceeded down the trail to the 
river, and when we arrived at the bench area, there was a small bird that 
flushed and then disappeared into the trees to our left as we faced the river.  
I suspect that it might have been a  Waterthrush, but who knows.We stayed a few 
minutes, and nothing.  We did see a fishing Belted Kingfisher, as well as a 
wading Great Egret on the river, but not much else.  Finally, we decided to 
leave.  My wife and  Luckworth went off up the path, where they saw an American 
Redstart and Great Crested Flycatchers.I was diverted by movement in the low 
bushes to my left (on the right as you face the river), about 10 yards or so 
from the bench.  I stood there for about 5 minutes and pished a few times.  The 
bird moved about in the middle of a bush that was about 3 to 4 feet high or so, 
and at one point was on the ground .  I managed to see flashes of black, white 
and yellow.  I figured it had to be a warbler, so I looked at my field guide 
and saw the possibilities: Yellow-rumped (no), Magnolia (?), Golden-winged (?), 
Chestnut-sided (?), Yellow-throated (no), and Common Yellowthroat (?).The nos 
are out of range guys, while the ?'s remain possibilities, though I am ruling 
out Common Yellowthroat, because I saw too much white and Chestnut-sided, 
because I didn't see any chestnut siding.  That leaves Magnolia and 
Golden-winged.  I'm leaning toward Golden-winged because his face pattern 
matches what I saw, and I believe it was his face that I saw (Golden-wings also 
nest on the ground).  He was also not far from the river and in the area the 
Prothonotary was seen (the NGS field guide puts the GWWA and PROW on the same 
page, indicating similar behavior and or habitat preference).I am fairly sure 
my guy was a Golden-winged, though I am hesitant to say so with 100% certainty, 
because he is a lifer for me (my wife got one a long time ago, while I was at 
work at Cornell and she was out birding, in Hawthorn Orchard in Ithaca, NY).  
According to my Kaufman guide, he would be in range, but not be very common.I'd 
be interested to hear what you all have to say about this sighting.     Good 
birding,RichardHastings, MN> Date: Wed, 27 Jun 2007 18:13:35 -0500> From: linda 
at moosewoods.us> To: mnbird at lists.mnbird.net; mou-net at moumn.org> 
Subject: [mnbird] Spring L. Park (Dakota Co.) prothonotary warbler> > 
prothonotary warbler at the archery unit of Spring Lake (Dakota Co.) > Park 
--in a tree at the end of the hiking trail down to the peninsula on > the 
river> >  From Hwy 52, turn onto Co. 55 toward Hastings. Take Fahey Ave., 
heading > east; this crosses Pine Bend Trail and leads directly into the 
parking > lot for the archery unit. Go all the way to the end of the parking 
lot; > across from the kiosk and on the right side of the lot, is a gate onto > 
the main hiking trail. Follow this double-track road all the way down to > the 
river. The bird perched in a tree to the right of the bench, before > heading 
across the water to an island.> > Also present, among others, on the archery 
trails: immature Cooper's > hawk; great looks, even at its pale eyes, as it 
waited out the scolds > from a warbling vireo.> > > Linda Whyte> 
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