Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-30 Thread Stephanie P. Herrick
Chipping sparrow amongst ground foraging juncos in guthrie parking lot on 
willow ave.

- S

From: bounce-127957815-82496...@list.cornell.edu 
 on behalf of Marty Schlabach 

Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2023 10:44:39 AM
To: Carol Cedarholm ; Geo Kloppel 
Cc: Kevin J. McGowan ; CAYUGABIRDS-L 

Subject: RE: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!


Ditto to what Carol reported.  Mary Jean, Phil and I walked the Black Diamond 
yesterday between Garrett and Glenwood Heights (met Carol and Lisa) and had a 
similar selection of birds.  A couple of additional birds included bluebirds, 
junco, pileated, tree sparrow.  We missed the flicker and Red breasted 
nuthatch.  --Marty



From: bounce-127957810-3494...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Carol Cedarholm
Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2023 10:12 AM
To: Geo Kloppel 
Cc: Kevin J. McGowan ; CAYUGABIRDS-L 

Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!



Walked on Black Diamond yesterday between Glenwood Heights and Garrett Road .  
Very birdy. Saw at least 4 Golden Crowned Kinglets with their crowns blazing, 
along with many Chickadees, Titmice, some Robins, Downy, Hairy, Red Bellied, 
Flickers, Cardinal, White Breasted and Red Breasted Nuthatches.  Heard a White 
Throated Sparrow.

Carol Cedarholm



On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 9:29 AM Geo Kloppel 
mailto:geoklop...@gmail.com>> wrote:

Given the open streams and the forecast, the Great Blue Heron I‘m looking at 
just now is not going to be needed as a “count week” addition. Confluence of 
Buttermilk Creek and Cayuga Inlet.

-Geo


> On Dec 29, 2023, at 6:12 PM, Kevin J. McGowan 
> mailto:k...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
>
> It’s actually frustrating to see things like coot and Great Blue Herons at 
> Myers and not be able to count them for the Ithaca CBC.

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RE: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-30 Thread Marty Schlabach
Ditto to what Carol reported.  Mary Jean, Phil and I walked the Black Diamond 
yesterday between Garrett and Glenwood Heights (met Carol and Lisa) and had a 
similar selection of birds.  A couple of additional birds included bluebirds, 
junco, pileated, tree sparrow.  We missed the flicker and Red breasted 
nuthatch.  --Marty

From: bounce-127957810-3494...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Carol Cedarholm
Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2023 10:12 AM
To: Geo Kloppel 
Cc: Kevin J. McGowan ; CAYUGABIRDS-L 

Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

Walked on Black Diamond yesterday between Glenwood Heights and Garrett Road .  
Very birdy. Saw at least 4 Golden Crowned Kinglets with their crowns blazing, 
along with many Chickadees, Titmice, some Robins, Downy, Hairy, Red Bellied, 
Flickers, Cardinal, White Breasted and Red Breasted Nuthatches.  Heard a White 
Throated Sparrow.
Carol Cedarholm

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 9:29 AM Geo Kloppel 
mailto:geoklop...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Given the open streams and the forecast, the Great Blue Heron I‘m looking at 
just now is not going to be needed as a “count week” addition. Confluence of 
Buttermilk Creek and Cayuga Inlet.

-Geo


> On Dec 29, 2023, at 6:12 PM, Kevin J. McGowan 
> mailto:k...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
>
> It’s actually frustrating to see things like coot and Great Blue Herons at 
> Myers and not be able to count them for the Ithaca CBC.

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RE: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week Tundra Swans

2023-12-30 Thread Marty Schlabach
On Thursday the 28th, while looking for short eared owls on Dean Rd in Lodi, 
Seneca County, a flock of snow geese flew over, mostly hidden by the 
low-hanging clouds.  They were heading south, but circled back north before 
going out of ear shot.  Merlin indicated that in addition to snow geese, there 
were tundra swans and cackling geese in the flock.  Should Merlin be believed?
--Marty

From: bounce-127957809-3494...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Dave Nutter
Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2023 10:10 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week Tundra Swans

A few minutes ago a flock of 26 TUNDRA SWANS circled over downtown Ithaca, last 
seen heading south. Caleb Centanni (whom I just met) and I saw them first from 
near the Children’s Garden and then I hustled home to add them to my daily yard 
list. I think this is an unusual species for the count, and being flyovers, I 
suspect they will not stick around until January 1, even though they were not 
very high.
- - Dave Nutter
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-30 Thread Kenneth V. Rosenberg
26 Tundra Swans flying south over downtown about 10 am

Ken

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 30, 2023, at 10:12 AM, Carol Cedarholm  wrote:


Walked on Black Diamond yesterday between Glenwood Heights and Garrett Road .  
Very birdy. Saw at least 4 Golden Crowned Kinglets with their crowns blazing, 
along with many Chickadees, Titmice, some Robins, Downy, Hairy, Red Bellied, 
Flickers, Cardinal, White Breasted and Red Breasted Nuthatches.  Heard a White 
Throated Sparrow.
Carol Cedarholm

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 9:29 AM Geo Kloppel 
mailto:geoklop...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Given the open streams and the forecast, the Great Blue Heron I‘m looking at 
just now is not going to be needed as a “count week” addition. Confluence of 
Buttermilk Creek and Cayuga Inlet.

-Geo


> On Dec 29, 2023, at 6:12 PM, Kevin J. McGowan 
> mailto:k...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
>
> It’s actually frustrating to see things like coot and Great Blue Herons at 
> Myers and not be able to count them for the Ithaca CBC.

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-30 Thread Carol Cedarholm
Walked on Black Diamond yesterday between Glenwood Heights and Garrett Road
.  Very birdy. Saw at least 4 Golden Crowned Kinglets with their crowns
blazing, along with many Chickadees, Titmice, some Robins, Downy, Hairy,
Red Bellied, Flickers, Cardinal, White Breasted and Red Breasted
Nuthatches.  Heard a White Throated Sparrow.
Carol Cedarholm

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 9:29 AM Geo Kloppel  wrote:

> Given the open streams and the forecast, the Great Blue Heron I‘m looking
> at just now is not going to be needed as a “count week” addition.
> Confluence of Buttermilk Creek and Cayuga Inlet.
>
> -Geo
>
>
> > On Dec 29, 2023, at 6:12 PM, Kevin J. McGowan  wrote:
> >
> > It’s actually frustrating to see things like coot and Great Blue Herons
> at Myers and not be able to count them for the Ithaca CBC.
>
> --
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-30 Thread Geo Kloppel
Given the open streams and the forecast, the Great Blue Heron I‘m looking at 
just now is not going to be needed as a “count week” addition. Confluence of 
Buttermilk Creek and Cayuga Inlet.

-Geo


> On Dec 29, 2023, at 6:12 PM, Kevin J. McGowan  wrote:
> 
> It’s actually frustrating to see things like coot and Great Blue Herons at 
> Myers and not be able to count them for the Ithaca CBC.

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-29 Thread Dave Nutter
What are some Count Week analogies? Doing stretches before a Marathon. 
Tailgating before a football game. A 3-day end-of-year party before the ball 
drops, plus, after the 24-hour Count itself, another 3-day effort to get the 
New Year going. 

Anyway, thanks for the reminder. Everyone: please post here on CayugaBirds-L as 
well as to eBird any unusual birds within or alongside the Ithaca Count Circle 
https://sites.google.com/site/cbc14850/resources/christmas-bird-count
 found December 29, 39, & 31 with a description of exactly where it was, so 
that everyone who is going to be looking for them on the count can know where 
to make an extra-special effort. On January 2, 3, & 4 there may be other 
species missed on the Count to seek and report. 

For myself, I saw a SONG SPARROW today below the weeds along the paved trail on 
the north side of Treman Marina. I hope others will find this species this mild 
winter, but it’s the first I’ve encountered in awhile, so I’m putting it out 
there. 

RUBY-CROWNED KINGLETS have been reported so much around the south end of Cayuga 
Lake recently that I predict this seasonal rarity will have a record high on 
the Count, but just in case, note that Diane Morton & Ken Kemphues reported it 
today in trees along the trails at Allan Treman State Marine Park. 

As Ken noted, a seasonally rare NORTHERN PARULA was reported to eBird this 
afternoon by Eric Mueller, complete with an excellent description of field 
marks seen and a promise of photos, in berry bushes in the Ithaca Farmers’ 
Market parking lot. 

Today John Garrett heard and saw an EASTERN TOWHEE in the NW corner of the 
Pleasant Grove Cemetery near the Carriage House Apartments which is near 
Community Corners. 

Today Adriaan Dokter and Jillian Ditner, on a stationary count from Ladoga Park 
(the pin was at the rough gravel boat launch)  saw the continuing TRUMPETER 
SWAN duo “foraging at the docks of Ladoga” so they are close to the circle. 

As of Christmas Day there was a TUFTED DUCK in an Aythya raft off Stewart Park 
and CACKLING GEESE among a large Canada Goose flock. I didn’t check on the 
26th, BUT both those rafts were cleared out on the 27th & 28th, and as of this 
afternoon only about a hundred Aythya had returned. If hunters are as vigorous 
on New Year’s Day as I have sometimes seen them, deliberately using boats to 
flush the rafts toward hunting blinds, then not just the above rarities but ANY 
DIVING DUCK SPECIES might be missed on the count. The 50 or so AMERICAN COOTS 
also seem to have vacated. 

For the record, scoping eastward today from Allan Treman, I saw REDHEAD, 
GREATER SCAUP, and LESSER SCAUP; I saw a pair of RUDDY DUCKS off the Treman 
lakeshore; and Diane & Ken reported a single COMMON GOLDENEYE from Treman. I 
also saw typical numbers of some species which are less disturbed by hunters, 
including DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS, COMMON LOONS, and (in a tree crown in 
Jetty Woods) GREAT BLUE HERONS. I expect BALD EAGLE to be on the count, but 
just in case, I saw an adult over Cayuga Lake near the west shore, plus a 
MERLIN in a tree along the east side of the marina. 

Have a great time birding, and share your news!

- - Dave Nutter

> On Dec 29, 2023, at 6:34 PM, Kenneth V. Rosenberg  wrote:
> 
> Thanks for this reminder, Kevin. Perhaps the most extraordinary count-week 
> find has just come in on the Tompkins County eBird alert – a Northern Parula 
> seen today at the Ithaca Farmers Market!
>  
> As others have noted, there are many late-lingering birds around this year, 
> as well as an unprecedented number of western vagrants scattered across the 
> Northeast, including a Townsend’s Warbler in Elmira, “Audubon’s” 
> Yellow-rumped Warbler also at the Farmers Market, Say’s Phoebe near Cortland, 
> not to mention the continuing Red-flanked Bluetail in the middle of nowhere 
> in central New Jersey. So nearly anything is possible!
>  
> Finding these rarities and strays may require a shift in Christmas counting 
> strategy, as these birds will be hiding in patches of remaining greenery, 
> fruiting shrubs or trees, and wet thickets, and possibly more likely around 
> town in urban and suburban neighborhoods than in the forested hinterlands 
> (but not necessarily around feeders). Paying close attention to any chickadee 
> or sparrow/junco flock that might have attending small birds, and liberal use 
> of owl-mobbing playback to get close looks at every bird, should yield some 
> interesting finds – as well as large numbers of common species.
>  
> Good luck out there!
>  
> Ken
>  
> Ken Rosenberg (he/him/his)
> Applied Conservation Scientist, Retired
> Cornell Lab of Ornithology
> k...@cornell.edu
> Cell: 607-342-4594
>  
>  
> From: bounce-127957289-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
>  on behalf of Kevin J. McGowan 
> 
> Date: Friday, December 29, 2023 at 6:12 PM
> To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
> Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!
> 
> Today was the first day of COUNT WEEK for the Ithaca Christmas 

Re:[cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!

2023-12-29 Thread Kenneth V. Rosenberg
Thanks for this reminder, Kevin. Perhaps the most extraordinary count-week find 
has just come in on the Tompkins County eBird alert – a Northern Parula seen 
today at the Ithaca Farmers Market!

As others have noted, there are many late-lingering birds around this year, as 
well as an unprecedented number of western vagrants scattered across the 
Northeast, including a Townsend’s Warbler in Elmira, “Audubon’s” Yellow-rumped 
Warbler also at the Farmers Market, Say’s Phoebe near Cortland, not to mention 
the continuing Red-flanked Bluetail in the middle of nowhere in central New 
Jersey. So nearly anything is possible!

Finding these rarities and strays may require a shift in Christmas counting 
strategy, as these birds will be hiding in patches of remaining greenery, 
fruiting shrubs or trees, and wet thickets, and possibly more likely around 
town in urban and suburban neighborhoods than in the forested hinterlands (but 
not necessarily around feeders). Paying close attention to any chickadee or 
sparrow/junco flock that might have attending small birds, and liberal use of 
owl-mobbing playback to get close looks at every bird, should yield some 
interesting finds – as well as large numbers of common species.

Good luck out there!

Ken

Ken Rosenberg (he/him/his)
Applied Conservation Scientist, Retired
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
k...@cornell.edu
Cell: 607-342-4594


From: bounce-127957289-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
 on behalf of Kevin J. McGowan 

Date: Friday, December 29, 2023 at 6:12 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week!!!
Today was the first day of COUNT WEEK for the Ithaca Christmas Bird Count, 
being held on Monday, January first. That means, any rare birds you see in the 
count circle today through January 4th get onto the count, even if we don’t see 
them on the actual count day.

It’s a little bit like the saying, “kissing your sister” to get count week (CW) 
birds that are missed on the real count day. But, it’s still important to log 
them in the official CBC database.

Unfortunately, I don’t have anything fun to add to the CW list from today 
myself. But, I hope people are keeping track and thinking about it. Towhees, 
kinglets, catbirds, Tufted Ducks are around and could be missed on Monday.

Dave Nutter! You’re the king of Count Week. You’re always out there scouring 
the reeds for CW birds. What do you have to report? ;^)

Here is another thing to keep track of. Those Trumpeter Swans hanging around 
Myers Point would be a new species for the Ithaca count IF they ever made it 
into the count circle. Myers Point is NOT in the circle! They would need to be 
seen over near the shore of Portland Point by the Cargill mine. I don’t know if 
they have ever been seen that far south. I will be checking the waters along 
Portland Point from Myers on the count. (It’s actually frustrating to see 
things like coot and Great Blue Herons at Myers and not be able to count them 
for the Ithaca CBC.) But if people are around Myers during the day, look south 
and see if you ever see those swans wander to the far shore and into the Ithaca 
CBC circle!

Oh, going to quote a departed wonderful birding friend, Bard Prentiss – Bird 
Hard!

Kevin





Kevin J. McGowan, Ph.D.
Senior Course Developer and Instructor
Bird Academy
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850
k...@cornell.edu
607-254-2452



Do you know about our other distance-learning opportunities? Visit Bird 
Academy, 
https://academy.allaboutbirds.org/courses/  to see our list of courses.



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Re: [cayugabirds-l] count week birds

2017-12-30 Thread Ann Mitchell
Peregrine Falcon - I stopped by Stevenson Road today to see the Black Vultures 
and it flew by landing among the Pheasants for a minute, but didn’t carry any 
off!
Ann

Sent from my iPhone

> On Dec 30, 2017, at 5:42 PM, Kevin J. McGowan  wrote:
> 
> I was scouting out my Christmas bird count area yesterday, and did a little 
> birding today. I managed to see a good number of things that are often missed 
> on the Ithaca CBC, so at least they will be count week. Here is an incomplete 
> list.
>  
> Snow Goose – a single bird flying past Myers Point yesterday
> Cackling Goose – a single bird in with a massive number of Canada Geese 
> flying over Stewart Park going out to the lake this afternoon; possibly 
> disturbed off the Newman golf course. I could not refind it on the water.
> Mute Swan – 8 individuals flying in from the north and landing off Stewart 
> Park this afternoon
> Tundra Swan – 11 individuals in the water off Stewart Park this afternoon
> American Wigeon – two south of Myers Point yesterday, and one or two in the 
> big Redhead flock
> Canvasback – not usually uncommon, but I saw fewer than a dozen in the 
> Redhead flock yesterday, which I estimated (twice) to be 10,000 ducks
> Ring-necked Duck – many in Redhead flock
> Greater Scaup – several south of Myers
> Lesser Scaup – some in with Redhead flock
> (Possible) Surf Scoter – far NW of East Shore Park this afternoon; too far 
> for positive ID, but head shape looked good, and I never saw white in the 
> wings, even when it was preening
> White-winged Scoter – At least 11 in flock just off East Shore this 
> afternoon; included 3 adult males; foraging for zebra mussels
> Long-tailed Duck – 3 off East Shore this afternoon, 3 off Myers yesterday 
> (but out of count area)
> Common Goldeneye – a few off East Shore
> Red-breasted Merganser – at least one female south of Myers, and a group of 4 
> females off East Shore yesterday
> Ruddy Duck – 3 in Redhead flock off East Shore yesterday
> Horned Grebe – 2 far NW of East Shore this afternoon. I only found them 
> because they swam past my scoter “sp.” that I was intently staring at in the 
> scope for what seemed like an hour. They were so small and pale, and the 
> shimmer was so intense that I am pretty sure I would not have picked them up 
> on a normal scan.
> Great Blue Heron – flying over Aldi’s parking lot this afternoon
> Black Vulture – 4 at the Game Farm today. New to count!!!
> American Coot – never missed, I don’t think, but I only had 7 at Myers and 3 
> in the Redhead flock
> Iceland Gull – 3 on the ice north of Stewart Park at dusk this evening. Gulls 
> are short this year. I’ve seen very few individuals of Ring-billed Gull, and 
> after having 5 in one day a month ago, I haven’t seen a Lesser Black-backed 
> Gull for weeks
> Fish Crow – Not rare, but could be missed. They seem to have stopped coming 
> to the Cornell compost facility as of this week, which is their normal 
> pattern. They want dorm waste, not stuff from greenhouses, so they often take 
> a break until  school starts up again at the end of January. I did encounter 
> a few of them quietly foraging with the noisy American Crow group in Ithaca 
> near Beverly J. Martin school this afternoon. We have more than half of the 
> local population banded and tagged right now, so if you read the letters on a 
> tag of a bird you suspect of being a Fish Crow, let me know and I’ll check 
> out who it is.
> (outside the count area) American Pipit – One or two on the point at Myers 
> and the gravel spit off Salt Point. Outside the CBC zone, but still present 
> for people who want to get a jump on the 2018 David Cup.
>  
> Okay, we know these birds are in the area, so let’s get them officially on 
> the count! Also, I heard that a couple of Northern Pintail were seen 
> yesterday in the big Redhead flock when it was along the east shore.
>  
> Anyone else have notable birds for count week so far?
>  
> Kevin
>  
>  
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Count week starts Wed 29 Dec, so note any unusual birds

2010-12-28 Thread Caroline Manring
There was a Field Sparrow at the Lab of O bird garden this afternoon mingled
with a large group of American Tree Sparrows on the open ground. Anyone
who's at Sapsucker should check for him tomorrow and the rest of count week!

Caroline Manring
Ithaca

On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 9:46 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 The Ithaca Christmas Bird Count will be on New Year's Day as usual,
 but the three days before and after the count day comprise the count week.

 Any species found starting Wednesday 29 December through Tuesday 4
 January will still count toward our total even if it is missed on count
 day.
 So please post to the list any unusual species found within the count
 circle.

 Good examples would be out-of-season birds such as the Red-winged Blackbird

 at Stephanie's feeder if it shows up again, uncommon birds such as Pine
 Siskins,
 or just plain rarities such as the King Eider.  For that matter, now that
 duck-hunting
 has begun, take note of all less-common waterfowl species.  As of a few
 days
 ago there were at least 17 species of waterfowl on the south end of the
 lake,
 but most were in small numbers and may now be hard to find if they survive
 here.

 As another guide for what sort of birds are especially worth noting,
 last year these species were only found during count week:

 Northern Pintail, Ring-necked Duck, White-winged Scoter,
 Ring-necked Pheasant, Bald Eagle, Red-winged Blackbird,
 Common Grackle;

 and these species had a single easy-to-miss individual found on count day:

 American Wigeon, Northern Shoveler, Long-tailed Duck,
 Northern Harrier, Northern Goshawk, Red-shouldered Hawk,
 Merlin, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker,
 Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Gray Catbird, Ovenbird(!),
 Rose-breasted Grosbeak(!), Rusty Blackbird, Common Redpoll.

 A big benefit from posting uncommon birds over the next 3 days is that it
 may help people track them down on count day.

 Another thing to consider is talking to friends with bird feeders, to see
 if
 they would like to note the highest number of each species they see on
 New Year's Day and the total time they spend watching feeders that day,
 and call the Lab of O at 254-2473 between 4pm  6pm that evening.

 What area are we talking about?  Here's a link to the map:

 http://www.birds.cornell.edu/cayugabirdclub/pdf/CBCMap.pdf.

 It's a standard CBC 15-mile diameter circle, in our case centered on
 Mount Pleasant.  It includes nearly all of the Town of Ithaca (including
 all of the City of Ithaca), much of the Town of Dryden (including most
 of the Village of Dryden), considerable chunks of Danby, Caroline, and
 Lansing, and smaller parts of Groton, Newfield and Ulysses (okay,
 it also includes one side of one road in Enfield), and Cayuga Lake north
 past the Ithaca Yacht Club and Portland Point.

 Here's a brief list of what's IN the circle around the edge:

 On the WEST:

 Garrett Road
 Wilkins Road
 Sheffield Road
 part of Lower Treman Park closest to NYS 13

 On the SOUTH:

 parts of Blakeslee Hill, Town Line, Layen,  Jersey Hill Roads
 Comfort Rd south to Gunderman Rd
 Gunderman Rd east of Comfort Rd
 the hamlet of Danby
 Hornbrook Rd
 most of Steam Mill Rd
 Durfee Hill Rd southeast as far as Howard Rd
 Deputron Hollow Rd
 Belle School Rd plus a bit further south on Coddington  White Church Roads
 parts of Bald Hill School, Leonard, Central Chapel, Chestnut, Old 76,
 Bailor, Buffalo  Harford Rds

 On the EAST:

 Hammond Hill Rd south almost to Harford Rd
 Canaan Rd
 part of Star Stanton Hill Rd
 part of Chaffee Rd
 Keith Lane
 Lake Rd north of Keith Lane
 Village of Dryden except northeast corner
 Mott Rd
 Cady Lane

 On the NORTH:

 part of Red Mill Rd
 Hile School Rd
 part of Ed Hill Rd
 Old Peruville Rd
 Sharpsteen Rd
 Pleasant Valley Rd west of Sharpsteen Rd
 part of Buck Rd to west of Van Ostrand Rd
 southern bit of Conlon Rd
 Portland Point Rd

 ...PLUS all the main roads out to the smaller roads listed above.
 Sorry to bore everyone with that description.  I figured someone might
 see their road or a nearby road on the list and think, Hey, I should keep
 my eyes and ears open around here, and let people know what I found.

 --Dave Nutter


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Fwd: RE: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week

2009-12-28 Thread Dave Nutter
To clarify, the message from Joe  Carol Slattery was about the GENEVA count on 
Sunday January 3, with the count week including Thursday 31 Dec through 
Wednesday 6 Jan.  

Meanwhile the ITHACA count is on Friday, New Year's Day, the first 24 hours of 
2010.  Keep track of any unusual birds in the Ithaca area starting midnight 
tonight, the start of 29 December until midnight at the end of Monday 4 
January.  This can help counters find the birds on count day, and if the birds 
are missed on count day they can still be included on count week.  The count 
circle is a standard 15 miles in diameter, and I believe it is centered on 
Mount Pleasant.  I believe it includes Dryden Lake, the north end of Scofield 
Road, just south of Myers Point, some of Sheffield Road, and a bit of lower 
Robert Treman Park as a few landmarks.  But hey, any interesting bird in the 
area is worth posting about, even if you don't know if it's in the count circle 
or even in the Cayuga Lake Basin.  
--Dave Nutter


From: Joe  Carol Slattery jslatte...@rochester.rr.com
To: 'Dave Nutter' nutter.d...@mac.com
Date: December 28, 2009 09:14:20 AM PST
Subject: RE: [cayugabirds-l] Count Week



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