To clarify, the Yellow-headed Blackbird is on tje EAST side of the Albany 
International Airport, at the end of Sicker Rd. There are two pieces of Sicker 
Rd, one on each side of the Airport. Scott Stoner, Loudonville. Sent from my 
Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: Thomas Fiore <tom...@earthlink.net> 
Date: 5/16/21  17:28  (GMT-05:00) To: NYS Birds <NYSBirds-L@cornell.edu> 
Subject: [nysbirds-l] N.Y. County (NYC) - Sun., 5/16 - Central Park 
Prothonotary Warbler & 25+ add'l. warbler species there, etc. The Yellow-headed 
Blackbird was continuing to be seen at Albany airport’s west side (Albany 
County, NY), by observers on-scene there into Sunday afternoon - May 
16th.----------Sunday, May 16th -The female Prothonotary Warbler in Central 
Park, first reported on eBird in the morning, was seen by many as the day 
continued, at the northern end of The Lake, with the closest park entrance 
being that on West 77th Street & Central Park West. A lot of the views were had 
from “Oak Bridge” which sits astride the northern narrow arm of the lake.  This 
appears to be the first sighting of this species for Manhattan this year, and 
perhaps just the 2nd in N.Y. County (an earlier one was also photographed at 
Randall’s Island this spring). A minimum of 25 other warbler species were also 
being found in Central Park, & many all across Manhattan in its dozens of parks 
larger & smaller.  Among those many, Bay-breasted Warblers in double-digit 
numbers (including that many within Central Park alone, as well as many in 
other locations) were delighting a lot of observers.  This continued a 
several-days-long trend of that species’ increase in the county.  At least a 
few warbler species now running ‘late’ (for here) added to the diversity being 
found, including Pine & Palm Warbler[s].There have been some Gray-cheeked-type 
Thrushes showing in multiple locations in N.Y. County, & at least a few of 
these could - potentially - be Bicknell’s Thrush (which is not actually a 
mega-rare migrant in this area, but is rarely-identified with complete 
certainty away from the species’ pockets of specialized habitat for both 
breeding, & winterng (the latter all in the Greater Antilles of the Caribbean). 
 Audio of any full song for these closely related species (Gray-cheeked &/or 
Bicknell’s) is a useful way of discerning the ID to species-level, on 
migration-passage observations. I have heard what sounded to my ear as 
Gray-cheeked singing, while observing a few of them, and counting as that 
species on my own list, this month - all in just the last few days in 
Manhattan. Being out at both 5 am & 8:30 pm can help.  (N.B., a Bicknell’s 
Thrush has been reported as singing from Prospect Park with over a dozen 
observers, on Sunday, 5/16 - and also of interest at Prospect Park in Brooklyn 
(Kings County, N.Y. City) have been sightings of Mourning Warbler with multiple 
experienced observers/photos.)Among notable sightings for Saturday, May 15th 
were a Purple Martin seen by a small group of keen & sharp-eyed observers, at 
Central Park (with thanks to A. Burke for the spotting), as well as a 
well-described Yellow-throated Warbler at the small Canal Park in lower 
Manhattan (thanks to A. Evans for that report). And there certainly were many 
many other great sightings all around the county for these past several days 
into Sunday.We’re working towards the 33rd warbler species of the spring for 
N.Y. County, with one species so far being unconfirmed, albeit possibly having 
moved through in some of the recent excellent migration (that would be 
Golden-winged Warbler).  Lots of other excellent finds for Sunday 5/16 which 
among the many, include both species of Cuckoo (Black-billed the low-volume 
migrant this day, while Yellow-billed Cuckoos were nearly-common and some were 
calling well in at least 3 parks in manhattan on the early morn’), Olive-sided 
Flycatcher (seen as well as heard), at least 3 species of singing Empidonax 
(Acadian, Willow, Least) and even E. Phoebe still around (but scarcer now 
-here- than Great Crested Flycatcher or E. Kingbird, & E. Wood-Pewee that’s 
been increasing as expected now), all six of our regularly-occuring Vireo 
species (Philadelphia the latest of these to be passing thru), additional finds 
of Summer Tanagers (of both sexes), and a whole lot more.Perhaps a write-up 
with more of these many migrants on another day.good peak-spring landbird 
migration to all,Tom Fioremanhattan--NYSbirds-L List 
Info:http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htmhttp://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES.htmhttp://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htmARCHIVES:1)
 http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html2) 
http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L3) 
http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01Please submit your observations to 
eBird:http://ebird.org/content/ebird/--
--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES.htm
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

--

Reply via email to