The oven bord which appeared this spring scratching our yard below our 
Minneapolis (Lowry Hill) feeder, then a second, there for 3 days,  


James P. Lenfestey
TURNING 40 PRODUCTIONS
1833 Girard Ave. So.
Minneapolis, MN 55403
cell: 612-730-7435
www.coyotepoet.com



-----Original Message-----
From: Holly Peirson <[email protected]>
To: MOU-NET <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Jul 17, 2013 2:48 pm
Subject: Re: [mou-net] Most Surprising Bird?


The Wood Thrush singing in our woods, way after migration was over, so we
know they are here for the summer! 

Holly Peirson
SE Anoka Co


-----Original Message-----
From: Minnesota Birds [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Al
Schirmacher
Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2013 12:56 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mou-net] Most Surprising Bird?

What is your most surprising bird of the (half) year?

Mine would have to be the (lifer) Chuck's-wills-widow that visited our
Kansas backyard the first week we moved here from central Minnesota; then
it, of course, hasn't dropped by audibly or visibly since.

(Unless, of course, it was the surfeit of shorebirds that graced Princeton
Sewage Ponds our last week or so in Princeton, adding new county birds not
seen in the previous nine years there.  Nice to have godwits and avocets
dropping bye to say goodbye.)

Al Schirmacher
Muscotah, KS 
(formerly Princeton, MN & Madison, WI)
                                          
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