Re: [cayugabirds-l] Osprey

2021-03-01 Thread Candace E. Cornell
This sighting is very early for an Osprey. The Osprey used to arrive in the
Cayuga Lake Basin around April 1 like the swallows of Capistrano. For their
first three years, the Salt Point Natural Area pair would reunite on
April 5 like clockwork. Six years ago, things started changing. The Osprey
started arriving earlier, by a few days, each year. Last year they skipped
a week and the male returned  on March 15. There was an earlier sighting,
around March 1, but I did not have confidence in that sighting. However,
Diana Whitings knows her birds and has confidence in her sister's ID. I'm
not sure what to think as this can be a confusing time with eagles as Dave
Nutter stated especially when compounded with the affects of climate change.

Please keep your eyes posted and report any Osprey sighting—thank you!

Don't be taken aback by the 4-5 Canada Geese decoys along Rt. 90. NYSEG put
them up to keep the Ospreys from nesting in those places. I don't think the
Osprey will be intimidated, but we'll see.

Eyes to the sky!

Candace



On Mon, Mar 1, 2021 at 2:41 PM Peter Saracino 
wrote:

> Last spring the osprey began occupying the nests along 5&20 near the
> Refuge in early April. About the time the white Pelican was first seen at
> the north end of Cayuga Lake.
> But hey, like they say - if the book says one thing and the bird says the
> other.believe the bird!
> Stay safe all. Getting psyched for Migration, and I bet I have lots of
> company!!
> Sar
>
> On Mon, Mar 1, 2021, 2:35 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:
>
>> Hi Diana,
>>
>> Osprey would be new for the Cayuga Lake Basin 2021 list. This is early
>> though. It’s so early that there is only one eBird record ever for Osprey
>> in February in NYS north of Long Island, and that was several years ago
>> south of Kingston in Ulster County. This year the northernmost eBird report
>> of Osprey in the past month was on the 27th in Maryland.
>>
>> It’s certainly possible. Birds fly. There have been plenty of south winds
>> lately. Ospreys nest along 5&20 by the refuge. I am as interested as anyone
>> in finding out if birds are migrating sooner, and Ospreys have surprised me
>> with early returns to Myers in the recent past.
>>
>> But a report of Osprey even at the very end of February suggests some
>> care be taken, particularly since there are plenty of immature Bald Eagles
>> around, and in some plumages they share some of the color pattern of
>> Ospreys. Bald Eagles also nest earlier than Ospreys and have even been
>> known to take over Osprey nests before the Ospreys return, so Bald Eagles
>> or Red-tailed Hawks or other raptors might be near those nests.
>>
>> So, I’m wondering if you would mind asking your sister what about the
>> bird said “Osprey” to her instead of some other large raptor - shape,
>> behavior, pattern, etc. Thanks so much. And thanks for your photos and
>> reports. It’s a joy to hear what is happening all around us.
>>
>> - - Dave Nutter
>>
>> On Feb 28, 2021, at 8:53 PM, Whitings  wrote:
>>
>> Hi All,
>> My sister saw an osprey flying on Rt. 20 near the entrance to the refuge
>> yesterday. Also, a Sandhill crane was seen at Mercer Park in B’ville.
>> Spring is in the air!
>>
>> Diana Whiting
>>
>> dianawhitingphotography.com
>>
>>
>>
>> --
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Osprey

2021-03-01 Thread Peter Saracino
Last spring the osprey began occupying the nests along 5&20 near the Refuge
in early April. About the time the white Pelican was first seen at the
north end of Cayuga Lake.
But hey, like they say - if the book says one thing and the bird says the
other.believe the bird!
Stay safe all. Getting psyched for Migration, and I bet I have lots of
company!!
Sar

On Mon, Mar 1, 2021, 2:35 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:

> Hi Diana,
>
> Osprey would be new for the Cayuga Lake Basin 2021 list. This is early
> though. It’s so early that there is only one eBird record ever for Osprey
> in February in NYS north of Long Island, and that was several years ago
> south of Kingston in Ulster County. This year the northernmost eBird report
> of Osprey in the past month was on the 27th in Maryland.
>
> It’s certainly possible. Birds fly. There have been plenty of south winds
> lately. Ospreys nest along 5&20 by the refuge. I am as interested as anyone
> in finding out if birds are migrating sooner, and Ospreys have surprised me
> with early returns to Myers in the recent past.
>
> But a report of Osprey even at the very end of February suggests some care
> be taken, particularly since there are plenty of immature Bald Eagles
> around, and in some plumages they share some of the color pattern of
> Ospreys. Bald Eagles also nest earlier than Ospreys and have even been
> known to take over Osprey nests before the Ospreys return, so Bald Eagles
> or Red-tailed Hawks or other raptors might be near those nests.
>
> So, I’m wondering if you would mind asking your sister what about the bird
> said “Osprey” to her instead of some other large raptor - shape, behavior,
> pattern, etc. Thanks so much. And thanks for your photos and reports. It’s
> a joy to hear what is happening all around us.
>
> - - Dave Nutter
>
> On Feb 28, 2021, at 8:53 PM, Whitings  wrote:
>
> Hi All,
> My sister saw an osprey flying on Rt. 20 near the entrance to the refuge
> yesterday. Also, a Sandhill crane was seen at Mercer Park in B’ville.
> Spring is in the air!
>
> Diana Whiting
>
> dianawhitingphotography.com
>
>
>
> --
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Osprey

2021-03-01 Thread Dave Nutter
Hi Diana, 

Osprey would be new for the Cayuga Lake Basin 2021 list. This is early though. 
It’s so early that there is only one eBird record ever for Osprey in February 
in NYS north of Long Island, and that was several years ago south of Kingston 
in Ulster County. This year the northernmost eBird report of Osprey in the past 
month was on the 27th in Maryland. 

It’s certainly possible. Birds fly. There have been plenty of south winds 
lately. Ospreys nest along 5&20 by the refuge. I am as interested as anyone in 
finding out if birds are migrating sooner, and Ospreys have surprised me with 
early returns to Myers in the recent past. 

But a report of Osprey even at the very end of February suggests some care be 
taken, particularly since there are plenty of immature Bald Eagles around, and 
in some plumages they share some of the color pattern of Ospreys. Bald Eagles 
also nest earlier than Ospreys and have even been known to take over Osprey 
nests before the Ospreys return, so Bald Eagles or Red-tailed Hawks or other 
raptors might be near those nests. 

So, I’m wondering if you would mind asking your sister what about the bird said 
“Osprey” to her instead of some other large raptor - shape, behavior, pattern, 
etc. Thanks so much. And thanks for your photos and reports. It’s a joy to hear 
what is happening all around us. 

- - Dave Nutter

> On Feb 28, 2021, at 8:53 PM, Whitings  wrote:
> 
> Hi All,
> My sister saw an osprey flying on Rt. 20 near the entrance to the refuge 
> yesterday. Also, a Sandhill crane was seen at Mercer Park in B’ville. Spring 
> is in the air!
> 
> Diana Whiting
> 
> dianawhitingphotography.com
> 
> 
> 
> --
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[cayugabirds-l] Syracuse area RBA

2021-03-01 Thread Joseph Brin

RBA

 

*  New York

*  Syracuse

* March 01, 2021

*  NYSY  03. 01. 21

 

Hotline: Syracuse Rare bird Alert

Dates(s):

February 22 to March 01, 2021

to report by e-mail: brinjoseph AT yahoo.com

covering upstate NY counties: Cayuga, Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge

and Montezuma Wetlands Complex (MWC) (just outside Cayuga County),

Onondaga, Oswego, Lewis, Jefferson, Oneida, Herkimer,  Madison & Cortland

compiled: March 01 AT 1:00 p.m. (EDT)

compiler: Joseph Brin

Onondaga Audubon Homepage: www.onondagaaudubon.org

 

 

#741 

Monday March 01, 2021

 

Greetings. This is the Syracuse Area Rare Bird Alert for the week of 

February 22, 2021

 

Highlights:

---




SNOW GOOSE

WOOD DUCK

NORTHERN SHOVELER

KING EIDER

SURF SCOTER

TURKEY VULTURE

BLACK SCOTER

ICELAND GULL

LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL

SHORT-EARED OWL

SAW-WHET OWL

NORTHERN SHRIKE

RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET

HERMIT THRUSH

YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER

LAPLAND LONGSPUR

BOHEMIAN WAXWING

EVENING GROSBEAK

PINE GROSBEAK

HOARY REDPOLL
















Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge (MNWR) and Montezuma Wetlands Complex (MWC)

 




     2/24: A SHORT-EARED OWL was seen on the Esker Brook Trail.

     2/15: A SHORT-EARED OWL and a LAPLAND LONGSPUR. were seen in the Mucklands 
on Rt.31 just west of the Seneca River.







Cayuga County






     2/28: A LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL and an ICELAND GULL were seen at Fair 
Haven State Park.







Onondaga County






     COMMON REDPOLLS and PINE SISKINS are still being seen at many feeders.

     2/23: A RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET was seen at the Three Rivers WMA north of 
Baldwinsville.

     2/24: A SHORT-EARED OWL was seen on Monroe Road in Camillus.

     2/26: A HERMIT THRUSH was seen on Buckley Road in Liverpool.

     2/27: An ICELAND GULL was seen along the Creek Walk near Destiny in 
Syracuse.

     3/1: A YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER continues at Radisson River Park (private) on 
River Road north of Rt. 31 in Baldwinsville.







Oswego County






     2/26: BLACK SCOTERS, SURF SCOTERS, an ICELAND GULL and a NORTHERN SHOVELER 
were all seen in Oswego Harbor. Most were seen through yesterday. A WOOD DUCK 
was seen at Indian Point on the Oswego River north of Fulton.

     2/28: A WOOD DUCK was seen at Point Ontario on Lake Ontario.







Madison County






     2/23: SNOW GEESE were heard in flight in Hamilton.

     2/25: A NORTHERN SHRIKE was seen again on Eaton Brook Road near Erieville.







Oneida County






     2/27: A HOARY REDPOLL was seen near Forestport.







Herkimer County






     2/22: 5 BOHEMIAN WAXWINGS were at a residence in Salisbury Corners.

     2/23: A HOARY REDPOLL was at a feeding station in Dolgeville. It was 
present again on the 27th.

     2/24: An EVENING GROSBEAK and 5 PINE GROSBEAKS were at a residence in 
Salisbury Corners.

     2/26: A SAW-WHET OWL was seen at a residence on the Military Road north of 
Dolgeville.

     2/28: A NORTHERN SHRIKE were seen near a residence in Salisbury Corners.

         

   







End Report







Joseph Brin

Baldwinsville NY

Region 5






  
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[cayugabirds-l] Cayuga Bird Club March 2021 meeting/webinar

2021-03-01 Thread Colleen Richards
Next Monday, March 8, at 7:30 pm will be the next monthly meeting of the Cayuga 
Bird Club. Dr. Stephen Kress will give his presentation, "Saving Seabirds with 
Social Attraction".
 About one third of all seabird species are threatened because of effects of 
invasive mammals, marine pollution, loss of forage fish and climate change. 
Against this grim background, Stephen Kress' presentation offers hope that 
people can bring seabirds back to historic nesting places and expand ranges by 
using innovative restoration methods based on animal behavior. Steve will 
explain how seabird biologists are saving species by restoring nesting colonies 
using methods that were first developed on the Maine coast where Steve's 
pioneering research using decoys, audio recordings and mirrors has become known 
as social attraction. This method, often combined with translocation of seabird 
chicks, is now helping at least 95 seabird species in 25 countries. Steve will 
explain how these techniques brought puffins and terns back to nesting islands 
on the Maine coast and how others are using the methods to save endangered 
seabirds worldwide.
  
 Stephen Kress is the founder of National Audubon Society's Project Puffin and 
a Visiting Fellow of the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. He previously 
served as Vice-President for Bird Conservation for the National Audubon Society 
and Director of the Hog Island Audubon Camp in Bremen, Maine. His research 
focus is development of techniques for managing nesting seabirds. Hundreds of 
professional seabird biologists can trace their first interest in seabirds to 
internships with Project Puffin and many innovative seabird conservation 
methods that he developed in Maine are now standard practice worldwide. Dr. 
Kress received his Ph.D. from Cornell University and his Masters and 
undergraduate degrees from Ohio State University. He is coauthor with Derrick 
Z. Jackson of Project Puffin: The Improbable Quest to Bring a Beloved Seabird 
back to Egg Rock and the recently published The Puffin Plan, an autobiography 
for 12+ readers.  He is also author of many books on bird watching and 
gardening for birds. Many Ithacans know Steve from his popular Spring 
Ornithology courses at the Lab of Ornithology. This spring he is teaching it as 
a Zoom course for the Cayuga Bird Club.
  Register for Zoom meeting: 
 https://tinyurl.com/cbc202103mtg Cayuga Bird Club meetings start at 7:30pm on 
the second Monday of each month, September through June, and are open to the 
public. Each virtual meeting will begin with the speaker's presentation, 
followed by club business.  Colleen RichardsCorresponding Secretary
Cayuga Bird Club

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[cayugabirds-l] possible Vega Gull at SW corner of Cayuga Lake yesterday

2021-03-01 Thread Dave Nutter
Hi All, 

Yesterday (28 Feb) I went to Allan H Treman State Park to check on the progress 
of migration (big news: the Northern Pintails - at least 10 - from the day 
before had all departed, and the Lesser Scaups were the #2 Aythya species in 
the raft, Canvasback numbers being a tenth of what they had been). 

At about 12:25 I noticed a gull standing on the ice in the very corner of the 
lake, a gull which I thought might be a juvenile Glaucous Gull because it 
looked very pale, and it had a long pink bill with a small black tip. It had to 
be bigger than a Herring Gull which was in the foreground, although given the 
variation in size among Herring Gulls, and that their distance away from each 
other was small compared to their distance to me, their difference in size may 
not have been significant. I took a photo of it through my scope then continued 
viewing it while I waited for a view of its wingtips. When the birds shifted I 
was disappointed to see its wingtips were not white but light brown, darker 
than the body generally, which I figured ruled out Glaucous Gull. I also 
noticed that the darkest and most distinct feature of its plumage was on the 
row of overlapping feathers on the folded wing which would be the upper inner 
trailing edge of the wing. Each of these feathers had a long oval of light 
brown surrounded by white along the length of the feather, and their effect 
should produce a relatively dark bar next to the trailing edge of the inner 
wing. I figured this must be an example of the tremendous variation in Herring 
Gulls - I’ve seen some immatures which are extremely faded in Summer - and I 
didn’t pay more attention at the time. But late last night as I was writing up 
details of my list for eBird, I got to wondering if this might be a Glaucous 
hybrid. I double-checked my Sibley for the Glaucous-like bill on Herring Gulls, 
and a picture jumped out at me. The first summer Vega (Siberian) Herring Gull 
most resembled my bird, although the bird I saw was even faded compared to that 
Sibley plate. I have no experience with Vega Gull, but I’m putting it out there 
as a possibility, for gull experts to consider. I’m hoping someone has seen 
this bird or will see it, or can form an opinion from my photo & notes. I never 
saw the bird’s tail, nor did I see it with spread wings, nor did I see it 
directly next to another gull, so I apologize for the limited information. 

Reference to my updated eBird list is below, which also shows up in the 
Tompkins County rare birds list with less detailed notes.

Meanwhile I saw again a banded immature Great Black-backed Gull with a black 
plastic band on its left leg with white lettering saying “4JF”. This bird was 
hatched on Appledore Island, home of the Shoals Marine Lab, off the coast of 
the Maine - New Hampshire border, and this is the second winter I have seen it 
in Ithaca. Another observer this winter had remarked on how small this bird 
looked and unlike a Great Black-backed. My photos show that while it may be 
smaller than another Great Black-backed Gull, it is larger than a couple of 
Herring Gulls, and it is much larger than a Ring-billed Gull. 


- - Dave Nutter


> From: ebird-checkl...@cornell.edu
> Date: March 1, 2021 at 11:00:05 AM EST
> To: nutter.d...@mac.com
> Subject: eBird Report - NY:TOM:Ithaca: home to Cayuga L: Cass Pk - AHTreman 
> SMP, Feb 28, 2021
> 
> NY:TOM:Ithaca: home to Cayuga L: Cass Pk - AHTreman SMP, Tompkins, New York, 
> US
> Feb 28, 2021 9:57 AM - 2:20 PM
> Protocol: Traveling
> 3.0 mile(s)
> Checklist Comments: Walked N on CWT W, BDT, driveway, NYS-89; E on AHTSMP 
> entrance road; N on walkway to Hangar; N, E, N, & E on Hangar parking lots, 
> sidewalk, & driveway; N on maintenance building driveway, paved trail, 
> trampled snow shortcut, & snow/ ice covered gravel path; CW around N Field; S 
> on ice-covered paved path through & snow-covered grass path E/ N Woods; SW on 
> trampled snow path across grass field; S on mostly ice-covered paved path; W 
> along cleared S edge of marina; CW on cleared lane in boat ramp parking lot; 
> S on CWT E; W across NYS-89 & Turtle Ln S; S on spur & CWT W home. Totally 
> cloudy, low 40sF, light but increasing S breeze/ wind, liquid FCC except near 
> marina & bay by college boathouses; Williams Glen Estuary has cut a stream 
> through the ice in the SW corner of lake; Treman lakeshore generally 
> ice-free; considerable but deteriorating ice shelf off Stewart Park (Fall 
> Creek not seen but presumed eroded through ice). Lake calm, low shimmer.
> 39 species (+3 other taxa)
> 
> Canada Goose (Branta canadensis)  80 ~30 grazing on limited snow-free 
> part of Union Field; 6 & 10 flying seen from BDT. 3 flying over AHTSMP 
> marina. Very few & uncounted on lake (sorry, eBird). ~30 flying near golf 
> course (doubtless more grazing there).
> Gadwall (Mareca strepera)  3 2 males & 1 female, all together, in Aythya 
> raft.
> American Wigeon (Mareca americana)  

RE: [cayugabirds-l] Bluebirds

2021-03-01 Thread Susan Evans-Pond
Six bluebirds at Elm and Coy Glen, Friday.  

Susan Evans-Pond

West Hill

 

From: bounce-125425029-86332...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Donna Lee Scott
Sent: Sunday, February 28, 2021 5:19 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Bluebirds

 

On a short Sunday drive in southern Cayuga county & North Lansing, I saw some 
Snow Buntings, including 2 that stood out in a largish (40?) flock of flying 
Redpolls! 

 

Saw a few little flocks of Horned Larks, then a larger flock at Belltown Dairy, 
Mahaney Rd. at town/ county line, 

then found 3 lovely Bluebirds in a tall bare tree on Davis Rd (Lansing).

Donna Scott 

Lansing

Sent from my iPhone

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