A sub-adult Bald Eagle flew over the North End of Central Park at about 12:35
today. This was a ragged looking individual with a mostly white tail and head,
though quite a few brown feathers remained on both. I first spotted it over the
Reservoir as it traveled due north right down the center of
Yes!! Sorry!!
From: mike...@optonline.net
To: andya...@aol.com
Sent: 4/22/2013 6:46:22 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Phalarope
Hi Andy-- I'm assuming you mention to write Red-necked?
Mike Cooper
Sent from my iPhone
--
NYSbirds-L List Info:
ht
RBA
* New York
* Syracuse
* April 22, 2013
* NYSY 04. 22. 13
Hotline: Syracuse Rare bird Alert
Dates(s):
April 15, 2013 - April 22, 2013
to report by e-mail: brinjoseph AT yahoo.com
covering upstate NY counties: Cayuga, Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge
and Montezuma Wetlands Complex (MWC
Adult male Blue Grosbeak found today 2:10 pm @ Mashomack Preserve S.I.
Bird was perched in SE corner of South Field on the Green trail near where
it crosses the main driveway.
Nick Hamlet found an Indigo Bunting along the Yellow trail earlier today.
Mike Scheibel
Brookhaven
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NYSbirds-L List Inf
I just left Dune Road Hampton Bays, Long Island about 1/4 mile East of Road
" L" bay side, good looks at the bird for over a half hour 1:15 to 1:45
PM came as close as 30 yards to Dune Road in the bay side, feeds close to
the shore.
Good luck!
Andy Murphy
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NYSbirds-L List Info:
http:
And now for a reply that actually speaks to the subject line - the HOODED
WARBLER is still at Oakland Lake, left of (or south) of the Springfield
Blvd. staircase. It's usually back toward the hillside, but did come close
enough to the trail to be photographed on one occasion today.
Steve
Fr
Dave Means and I just had the Red-necked Phalarope bayside, opposite Road L as
previously described in previous posts. Striking little bird. Good luck if you
go.
Aaron Virgin
Westhampton, NY
On Apr 21, 2013, at 2:42 PM, Angus Wilson wrote:
> Correction: some confusion about roads off Dune Rd.
As Steve notes, spring 1996 was something to behold and to remember! That year
there were no fewer than three instances of the kind he describes--30 April, 11
May, and 19 May--all foggy dawns after favorable nights for movement to our
southwest. Some springs lack even one such event, and I've ne
It's true of any land bird migrating through Long Island that you're going
to see the westward movement. Most birds are attempting to head
northeastward in spring and land birds, well, they have land to fly over
once on the island. So the migration is going to be on a broad front and not
very notic
In my experience, visible spring migration of Barn Swallows along the central
ocean coast of Long Island (Jones Inlet to Shinnecock Inlet) is almost
invariably from east to west (the only exceptions seem to involve rare
occasions when very small numbers of birds are observed bucking easterly
he
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