[nysbirds-l] Slaty-backed Gull, Town of Porter, Niagara County

2011-03-16 Thread Willie D'Anna and Betsy Potter
For the second straight day, I checked fields along Youngstown-Wilson Road
(Y-W Rd) on my way home from work today.  The first field I checked was on
the north side of Y-W Rd, where Braley Road goes off to the southeast.
There were several hundred gulls here, including adult and second-cycle
GLAUCOUS, 3 adult ICELAND, 1 adult LESSER BLACK-BACKED, and the best, an
adult SLATY-BACKED GULL!  This was a large gull, equal to the size of the
largest Herring Gulls in the field and it showed a relatively short primary
extension beyond the end of the tail.  It showed a dark gray mantle, about
equivalent to a Lesser Black-backed Gull, although I had no comparisons with
dark-mantled gulls, and a very broad white tertial crescent as well as a
prominent scapular crescent.  The tertial and scapular crescents were wider
than on all of the Herring Gulls I compared it with.  The head and neck
looked dingy but not heavily streaked with streaking concentrated on the
crown, around the eyes, and on the lower hindneck.  By the patchiness of the
streaking, I suspect the bird was molting its head and neck feathers.  The
bill was yellow with a smallish red gonydial spot.  The spread outer
primaries showed black on the outer webs only and a row of prominent white
spots formed by white tongue-tips and white mirrors.  These spots appeared
to be on all five of the outermost primaries, which would mean that p9 and
p10 had white mirrors and p6-p7-p8 had white tongue-tips.  The white apical
spots on the outer primaries were relatively large.  The legs were not
usually visible due to the grass and weed growth in the field but when they
were, they were seen to be a rich reddish pink.  The eyes were pale.  I was
able to get photos which show most everything except the wing pattern.

FINDING THIS BIRD:
Over the years we have noticed that many of the gulls that feed at the
landfill in the Town of Lewiston like to roost on Lake Ontario.  In the
spring, when gulls appear in fields much more often than they do in winter
or fall, it makes sense that a Slaty-backed Gull would show up here, as the
species is known for having a taste for dumps and this field is very near
where the gulls like to roost on the lake.  Checking in the afternoon will
likely improve your chances over the morning but it should be noted that
some of the gulls were finding food in this field so they may be there in
the morning as well.  

There are other fields that are quite nearby that should also be checked.
One is on the southeast quadrant of Y-W Rd and Porter-Center Rd, perhaps a
mile east of here.  This field also had lots of gulls this evening but I had
little time left to look them over.  Nevertheless, I had two first-cycle
Iceland and a third-cycle Glaucous here.  There were also 41 SNOW GEESE in
this field, with Canada Geese - this is my highest personal count for Snow
Geese this far west in NY.  A third field that had many gulls is about
another mile further east along Y-W Rd, on the south side and about halfway
between Dickersonville and Ransomville Roads.

Good luck if you try for this bird!
Willie

Willie D'Anna
Betsy Potter
Wilson, NY
dannapotterATroadrunner.com
http://www.betsypottersart.com



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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[nysbirds-l] Sullivan County Varied Thrush - informational only

2011-03-16 Thread vanhaas
On January 3, 2011, I was observing Evening Grosbeaks and Common Redpolls at 
Sue Rayano's feeders up-county when I received a call from Arlene Borko.  She 
informed that a woman we know called to say she had an unknown bird under her 
feeders for the last three mornings and she can not figure out what it is.  She 
described the bird to Arlene, but it was nothing familiar to her.  When she 
gave me the homeowners really good description, I asked her to be ready and I'd 
be there ASAP!  A short time later we were in a back yard in Wurtsboro when a 
gorgeous adult male VARIED THRUSH flew into the yard!  After photographing the 
bird extensively, we began our negotiations with the home owner to have other 
birders come to see the bird. The home owner was immediatly apprehensive about 
having people come to her home.  That afternoon, we had a small core group from 
our community come to see the bird.  As I explained the extreme rarity of the 
bird and how I would like to have other people come to see it, the home owner 
expressed concern for her home and neighborhood.  By the end of the day, she 
had agreed to let a few people in that day, but declined having any publicity 
about the bird nor any postings on the internet.  She agreed to let me monitor 
the bird as long as it stayed providing word of it did not get out.  
Fortunately, those who saw it agreed to this and no problems ever occured 
during the birds stay.  The bird remained through at least March 3, 2011 when 
it was last seen by me.  The home owner agreed that I could submit a NYSARC 
report, but still does not want the location of her home disclosed.  This was a 
fabulous bird and the only thing that would have made the experience much 
better would have been if I could have shared it with others.  The bird did 
make our Christmas Count and a NYSARC report and report to ebird have been 
submitted.  If anyone is interested in seeing photos of the bird, I would be 
happy to send a few to you.  John Haas

--

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[nysbirds-l] Sullivan County Varied Thrush - informational only

2011-03-16 Thread vanhaas
On January 3, 2011, I was observing Evening Grosbeaks and Common Redpolls at 
Sue Rayano's feeders up-county when I received a call from Arlene Borko.  She 
informed that a woman we know called to say she had an unknown bird under her 
feeders for the last three mornings and she can not figure out what it is.  She 
described the bird to Arlene, but it was nothing familiar to her.  When she 
gave me the homeowners really good description, I asked her to be ready and I'd 
be there ASAP!  A short time later we were in a back yard in Wurtsboro when a 
gorgeous adult male VARIED THRUSH flew into the yard!  After photographing the 
bird extensively, we began our negotiations with the home owner to have other 
birders come to see the bird. The home owner was immediatly apprehensive about 
having people come to her home.  That afternoon, we had a small core group from 
our community come to see the bird.  As I explained the extreme rarity of the 
bird and how I would like to have other people come to see it, the home owner 
expressed concern for her home and neighborhood.  By the end of the day, she 
had agreed to let a few people in that day, but declined having any publicity 
about the bird nor any postings on the internet.  She agreed to let me monitor 
the bird as long as it stayed providing word of it did not get out.  
Fortunately, those who saw it agreed to this and no problems ever occured 
during the birds stay.  The bird remained through at least March 3, 2011 when 
it was last seen by me.  The home owner agreed that I could submit a NYSARC 
report, but still does not want the location of her home disclosed.  This was a 
fabulous bird and the only thing that would have made the experience much 
better would have been if I could have shared it with others.  The bird did 
make our Christmas Count and a NYSARC report and report to ebird have been 
submitted.  If anyone is interested in seeing photos of the bird, I would be 
happy to send a few to you.  John Haas

--

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L

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

--



[nysbirds-l] Slaty-backed Gull, Town of Porter, Niagara County

2011-03-16 Thread Willie D'Anna and Betsy Potter
For the second straight day, I checked fields along Youngstown-Wilson Road
(Y-W Rd) on my way home from work today.  The first field I checked was on
the north side of Y-W Rd, where Braley Road goes off to the southeast.
There were several hundred gulls here, including adult and second-cycle
GLAUCOUS, 3 adult ICELAND, 1 adult LESSER BLACK-BACKED, and the best, an
adult SLATY-BACKED GULL!  This was a large gull, equal to the size of the
largest Herring Gulls in the field and it showed a relatively short primary
extension beyond the end of the tail.  It showed a dark gray mantle, about
equivalent to a Lesser Black-backed Gull, although I had no comparisons with
dark-mantled gulls, and a very broad white tertial crescent as well as a
prominent scapular crescent.  The tertial and scapular crescents were wider
than on all of the Herring Gulls I compared it with.  The head and neck
looked dingy but not heavily streaked with streaking concentrated on the
crown, around the eyes, and on the lower hindneck.  By the patchiness of the
streaking, I suspect the bird was molting its head and neck feathers.  The
bill was yellow with a smallish red gonydial spot.  The spread outer
primaries showed black on the outer webs only and a row of prominent white
spots formed by white tongue-tips and white mirrors.  These spots appeared
to be on all five of the outermost primaries, which would mean that p9 and
p10 had white mirrors and p6-p7-p8 had white tongue-tips.  The white apical
spots on the outer primaries were relatively large.  The legs were not
usually visible due to the grass and weed growth in the field but when they
were, they were seen to be a rich reddish pink.  The eyes were pale.  I was
able to get photos which show most everything except the wing pattern.

FINDING THIS BIRD:
Over the years we have noticed that many of the gulls that feed at the
landfill in the Town of Lewiston like to roost on Lake Ontario.  In the
spring, when gulls appear in fields much more often than they do in winter
or fall, it makes sense that a Slaty-backed Gull would show up here, as the
species is known for having a taste for dumps and this field is very near
where the gulls like to roost on the lake.  Checking in the afternoon will
likely improve your chances over the morning but it should be noted that
some of the gulls were finding food in this field so they may be there in
the morning as well.  

There are other fields that are quite nearby that should also be checked.
One is on the southeast quadrant of Y-W Rd and Porter-Center Rd, perhaps a
mile east of here.  This field also had lots of gulls this evening but I had
little time left to look them over.  Nevertheless, I had two first-cycle
Iceland and a third-cycle Glaucous here.  There were also 41 SNOW GEESE in
this field, with Canada Geese - this is my highest personal count for Snow
Geese this far west in NY.  A third field that had many gulls is about
another mile further east along Y-W Rd, on the south side and about halfway
between Dickersonville and Ransomville Roads.

Good luck if you try for this bird!
Willie

Willie D'Anna
Betsy Potter
Wilson, NY
dannapotterATroadrunner.com
http://www.betsypottersart.com



--

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L

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

--