[nysbirds-l] Manhattan, NYC 6/23 - 7/1

2018-07-01 Thread Thomas Fiore
Canada Jay is the ‘new' common English name of that boreal bird (as proscribed 
by the American Ornithological Society, A.O.S., recently), no longer "Gray Jay" 
as this had been for some time.  Canada Day, the national holiday of that 
neighbor-nation, falls each year on the first day of July.  

-  -  -  -  -
Saturday, 23 June, thru Sunday, 1st of July (Canada Day), 2018
Manhattan, N.Y. City, including Central & Riverside Parks, plus many smaller 
parks on that island.  I’ve put in approx. 60 hours of field-time in the noted 
period & locations, these past 9 days. (additional time in parks in The Bronx, 
which may yield a separate report at some point this summer)

an annotated list for 6/23 - 7/1-

Double-crested Cormorant (common as fly-overs, many also visiting Central Park)
Great Egret (common flyovers over the island, almost all in west-east & 
east-west direction & most fly-overs between ‘latitudes’ of about 100th to 
about 130th Streets; also visiting several locations to feed at times)
Snowy Egret (as above but less-common, and now rare seen feeding)
Green Heron (nesting, multiple locations)
Black-crowned Night-Heron (regular esp. in a few locations in Central Park; up 
to one dozen on some very early mornings in that park, also occasionally 
elsewhere with water-bodies, & some seen flying in & out to their feeding 
areas, or their non-Manhattan nesting sites)
Turkey Vulture (several sightings)
Canada Goose (regular, common nester in multiple locations)
Wood Duck (2 drakes continue, Central Park; lately in ‘eclipse’ - a rather 
female-like plumage term used mainly for waterfowl & to avoid confusion; see: 
any manual of ornithology for more)
Gadwall (several, poss. just summering; Hudson river)
American Black Duck (several, poss. summering but could be nesting in some 
inconspicuous areas; Hudson river)
Mallard (common, nester)
Osprey (multiple sightings, esp. from both n. end of Central Park, south & 
central Harlem locations, & off each of Manhattan’s river-estuaries)
Bald Eagle (adult, seen from Inwood Hill Park, 6/30)
Red-tailed Hawk (common, many succesful nestings, around Manhattan & in various 
parks as well as on buldings)
Greater Yellowlegs (Friday, 6/29, at least 4 fly-bys, a.m. - seen calling - 
from lower Manhattan/E. River)
Lesser Yellowlegs (Friday, 6/29, at least 2 fly-bys, a.m. - seen calling - from 
lower Manhattan/E. River)
Short-billed Dowitcher (Friday, 6/29, at least 7 fly-bys, a.m. - seen calling - 
from lower Manhattan/E. River)
Laughing Gull (not rare off southerly points in Manhattan; a few as fly-bys 
farther north from the latitudes of Central, Riverside & farther north parks)
Ring-billed Gull (rather scarce now, but some seen in one’s & two’s at multiple 
locations and as fly-bys)
[American] Herring Gull (regular, all year in Manhattan)
Great Black-backed Gull (uncommon but still regular in summer in Manhattan)
Common Tern (few, from The Battery and adjacent viewpoints)
Forster's Tern (2, as above)
Black Skimmer (as above)
['feral'] Rock Pigeon (ubiquitous, nesting)
Mourning Dove (common nester)
American Kestrel (fairly common, many succesful fledges from multiple locations 
all around Manhattan)
Peregrine Falcon (uncommon, multiple nesting locations in Manhattan, with 
succesful fledgings)
Black-billed Cuckoo (at least to Friday, 6/29, Central Park)
Yellow-billed Cuckoo (Saturday, 6/30, Inwood Hill Park - s. woods area, not far 
from Isham St. entrance)
Chimney Swift (multiple, but not that many)
Ruby-throated Hummingbird (my first male seen in Manhattan this summer, 6/28, 
Riverside Park flower garden area)
Belted Kingfisher (Wed., 6/27 at The Pond, Central Park [south end of park] - a 
male, quite “early” or poss. non-breeder returning)
Red-bellied Woodpecker (fairly common, nesting & fledglings seen)
Downy Woodpecker (fairly common, nesting in multiple parks also)
Hairy Woodpecker (rather scarce nester,but  in several n. Manhattan parks)
Yellow-shafted Flicker (uncommon nester, some fledglings seen)
Eastern Wood-Pewee (uncommon but regular-annual nester, in multiple n. 
Manhattan parks)
Acadian Flycatcher (heard & seen, but so far just one in two widely separated 
parks: Central Park, & Highbridge Park in upper Manhattan)
Great Crested Flycatcher (uncommon but annual nester, in at least several 
parks, including Central Park)
Eastern Kingbird (nesting, multiple fledges seen in past 10+ days in multiple 
parks)
Warbling Vireo (uncommon but in Central Park alone, 8 or poss. 9 active nests, 
all with fledglings; also 1 storm-related nest-failure; additional many more 
nesting in other larger parks)
Red-eyed Vireo (very uncommon nester; several pairs in Central Park, at least 2 
pairs with young in nests, & also found in other larger parks)
Blue Jay (fairly common nester - & a well-known nest-robber as they will take 
eggs or fledglings opportunistically)
American Crow (uncommon nester - well-known nest-robber as they will take eggs 
or fledglings opportunistically)

[nysbirds-l] Manhattan, NYC 6/23 - 7/1

2018-07-01 Thread Thomas Fiore
Canada Jay is the ‘new' common English name of that boreal bird (as proscribed 
by the American Ornithological Society, A.O.S., recently), no longer "Gray Jay" 
as this had been for some time.  Canada Day, the national holiday of that 
neighbor-nation, falls each year on the first day of July.  

-  -  -  -  -
Saturday, 23 June, thru Sunday, 1st of July (Canada Day), 2018
Manhattan, N.Y. City, including Central & Riverside Parks, plus many smaller 
parks on that island.  I’ve put in approx. 60 hours of field-time in the noted 
period & locations, these past 9 days. (additional time in parks in The Bronx, 
which may yield a separate report at some point this summer)

an annotated list for 6/23 - 7/1-

Double-crested Cormorant (common as fly-overs, many also visiting Central Park)
Great Egret (common flyovers over the island, almost all in west-east & 
east-west direction & most fly-overs between ‘latitudes’ of about 100th to 
about 130th Streets; also visiting several locations to feed at times)
Snowy Egret (as above but less-common, and now rare seen feeding)
Green Heron (nesting, multiple locations)
Black-crowned Night-Heron (regular esp. in a few locations in Central Park; up 
to one dozen on some very early mornings in that park, also occasionally 
elsewhere with water-bodies, & some seen flying in & out to their feeding 
areas, or their non-Manhattan nesting sites)
Turkey Vulture (several sightings)
Canada Goose (regular, common nester in multiple locations)
Wood Duck (2 drakes continue, Central Park; lately in ‘eclipse’ - a rather 
female-like plumage term used mainly for waterfowl & to avoid confusion; see: 
any manual of ornithology for more)
Gadwall (several, poss. just summering; Hudson river)
American Black Duck (several, poss. summering but could be nesting in some 
inconspicuous areas; Hudson river)
Mallard (common, nester)
Osprey (multiple sightings, esp. from both n. end of Central Park, south & 
central Harlem locations, & off each of Manhattan’s river-estuaries)
Bald Eagle (adult, seen from Inwood Hill Park, 6/30)
Red-tailed Hawk (common, many succesful nestings, around Manhattan & in various 
parks as well as on buldings)
Greater Yellowlegs (Friday, 6/29, at least 4 fly-bys, a.m. - seen calling - 
from lower Manhattan/E. River)
Lesser Yellowlegs (Friday, 6/29, at least 2 fly-bys, a.m. - seen calling - from 
lower Manhattan/E. River)
Short-billed Dowitcher (Friday, 6/29, at least 7 fly-bys, a.m. - seen calling - 
from lower Manhattan/E. River)
Laughing Gull (not rare off southerly points in Manhattan; a few as fly-bys 
farther north from the latitudes of Central, Riverside & farther north parks)
Ring-billed Gull (rather scarce now, but some seen in one’s & two’s at multiple 
locations and as fly-bys)
[American] Herring Gull (regular, all year in Manhattan)
Great Black-backed Gull (uncommon but still regular in summer in Manhattan)
Common Tern (few, from The Battery and adjacent viewpoints)
Forster's Tern (2, as above)
Black Skimmer (as above)
['feral'] Rock Pigeon (ubiquitous, nesting)
Mourning Dove (common nester)
American Kestrel (fairly common, many succesful fledges from multiple locations 
all around Manhattan)
Peregrine Falcon (uncommon, multiple nesting locations in Manhattan, with 
succesful fledgings)
Black-billed Cuckoo (at least to Friday, 6/29, Central Park)
Yellow-billed Cuckoo (Saturday, 6/30, Inwood Hill Park - s. woods area, not far 
from Isham St. entrance)
Chimney Swift (multiple, but not that many)
Ruby-throated Hummingbird (my first male seen in Manhattan this summer, 6/28, 
Riverside Park flower garden area)
Belted Kingfisher (Wed., 6/27 at The Pond, Central Park [south end of park] - a 
male, quite “early” or poss. non-breeder returning)
Red-bellied Woodpecker (fairly common, nesting & fledglings seen)
Downy Woodpecker (fairly common, nesting in multiple parks also)
Hairy Woodpecker (rather scarce nester,but  in several n. Manhattan parks)
Yellow-shafted Flicker (uncommon nester, some fledglings seen)
Eastern Wood-Pewee (uncommon but regular-annual nester, in multiple n. 
Manhattan parks)
Acadian Flycatcher (heard & seen, but so far just one in two widely separated 
parks: Central Park, & Highbridge Park in upper Manhattan)
Great Crested Flycatcher (uncommon but annual nester, in at least several 
parks, including Central Park)
Eastern Kingbird (nesting, multiple fledges seen in past 10+ days in multiple 
parks)
Warbling Vireo (uncommon but in Central Park alone, 8 or poss. 9 active nests, 
all with fledglings; also 1 storm-related nest-failure; additional many more 
nesting in other larger parks)
Red-eyed Vireo (very uncommon nester; several pairs in Central Park, at least 2 
pairs with young in nests, & also found in other larger parks)
Blue Jay (fairly common nester - & a well-known nest-robber as they will take 
eggs or fledglings opportunistically)
American Crow (uncommon nester - well-known nest-robber as they will take eggs 
or fledglings opportunistically)

[nysbirds-l] NYS eBird Hotspots: State, Counties & Locations Updated (Jul/'18)

2018-07-01 Thread Ben Cacace
Thanks to @Team_eBird for their dedication to keeping eBird.org running
smoothly and for the group of New York State hotspot moderators for their
time reviewing shared location suggestions.

The wiki page site was developed to access data on eBird.org and in places
it includes additional links to birding resources at the county and
location levels. If you have any suggestions for additional links please
send them to me off list.

All County pages currently have links for the *Illustrated Checklists* and
links to both *Images and Audio* from the Macaulay Library.

*Species totals* have been updated for all county pages. This includes the
total number of species with an equivalent color code highlighting the
county name based on colors used on eBird maps. The alphabetical list of
counties on the main page has been updated with total spp. #.

*Hotspot pages*: All location pages have been updated on the wiki. These
include 913 pages representing a total of 1,878 out of 6,261 hotspots
(30.4%). Updates involve # of species and color codings based on species #
along with updated 2018 periods on the bar chart tables displaying the:

• Current Month: Jul./2018
• Prior Month: Jun./2018
• the current two month period Jun.-Jul./2018
• along with the current year: 2018

For the following counties there are individual 'dynamic' wiki pages for
the Top 10+ locations at the top of the list of shared locations: Cayuga,
Erie, Monroe, Niagara, Orange, Oswego, Seneca, Tompkins, Kings (Brooklyn),
Queens, Richmond (Staten Island), Nassau and Suffolk Counties. Westchester
and New York (Borough of Manhattan) Counties have all shared locations
linked to wikipages.

Counties with 'static' pages do not need to be maintained on a monthly
basis. These include pages for the Top 10+ locations and includes Albany,
Bronx, Broome, Chautauqua, Clinton, Columbia, Delaware, Dutchess, Essex,
Genesee, Greene, Hamilton, Jefferson, Livingston, Madison, Oneida,
Onondaga, Ontario, Orleans, Rensselaer, Rockland, St. Lawrence, Saratoga,
Sullivan, Ulster & Wayne with Putnam County currently having all shared
locations linked to wikipages.

An alphabetical list of all hotspots (6,261) can be found on a single page.
Links exist for any hotspot with a wikipage. Clicking the county name to
the right of any hotspot will bring up the county page showing all county
hotspots. A link to the alphabetical list page is at the bottom of this
message. There is a link to the page at the top of the New York State page.

*Bar Charts (Species Lists)*: For all county and Top 10+ location pages
there's a table showing the months, seasons and several time frames for the
current year. Clicking any of these links will bring up a complete list of
species and other taxa with bar charts representing abundance. To see a
list of species for *all* periods click on the name above the months i.e.
'New York State (489 spp.)' or 'New York County (324 spp.)'.

*Maps of sightings*: After bringing up a bar chart list you'll see a MAP
button to the right of each species. Clicking this will produce a map of
the latest sightings. Red icons show sightings within the past 30 days.
Click on the icons to see a list of who reported each species and click on
'Checklist' to view their submission. Click on 'Explore Rich Media' in the
right sidebar to view locations with photos, audio or video. These also
exist for any multi-location page combining the hotspots associated with
the location i.e. Riverside Park in New York County with its 6 locations.

*Printable Checklists*: a link has been created to produce an eBird
checklist (PDF format) for all hotspots on the wiki site. Additional
details are in this email sent to the list <
https://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/msg20153.html >.

*Tide Graphs* exist for *New York County*, *Kings County (Brooklyn)*
and *Richmond
County (Staten Island)*. There's a quick link to the tide graphs on the "Go
To >" line highlighted in blue for each location. If there are multiple
graphs on a page the left/right is generally north/south or west/east. If
you spot any issues please let me know[ off line **].

Click '*Overview*' on any of the wiki pages to bring up a sortable list of
all species along with the latest checklists submitted and a list of the
Top eBirders. The default sort is for the latest additions to the State,
County or location.

Check out '*My Location Life List*', '*My County Life List*' and '*My State
Life List*' links on their respective pages.

For each location page click on '*Google Map Directions*' to bring up a
Google Map page. On Google Maps click 'Directions' then 'Transit' to plot a
public transportation route. By clicking 'More Options and Times' you can
refine your search. This also works with 'Driving' and 'Walking'.

• Home page: http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York
• Alphabetical list of hotspots:
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/AlphaHotspots
-- 
Ben Cacace
Manhattan, NYC
Wiki for NYS eBird Hotspots

[nysbirds-l] NYS eBird Hotspots: State, Counties & Locations Updated (Jul/'18)

2018-07-01 Thread Ben Cacace
Thanks to @Team_eBird for their dedication to keeping eBird.org running
smoothly and for the group of New York State hotspot moderators for their
time reviewing shared location suggestions.

The wiki page site was developed to access data on eBird.org and in places
it includes additional links to birding resources at the county and
location levels. If you have any suggestions for additional links please
send them to me off list.

All County pages currently have links for the *Illustrated Checklists* and
links to both *Images and Audio* from the Macaulay Library.

*Species totals* have been updated for all county pages. This includes the
total number of species with an equivalent color code highlighting the
county name based on colors used on eBird maps. The alphabetical list of
counties on the main page has been updated with total spp. #.

*Hotspot pages*: All location pages have been updated on the wiki. These
include 913 pages representing a total of 1,878 out of 6,261 hotspots
(30.4%). Updates involve # of species and color codings based on species #
along with updated 2018 periods on the bar chart tables displaying the:

• Current Month: Jul./2018
• Prior Month: Jun./2018
• the current two month period Jun.-Jul./2018
• along with the current year: 2018

For the following counties there are individual 'dynamic' wiki pages for
the Top 10+ locations at the top of the list of shared locations: Cayuga,
Erie, Monroe, Niagara, Orange, Oswego, Seneca, Tompkins, Kings (Brooklyn),
Queens, Richmond (Staten Island), Nassau and Suffolk Counties. Westchester
and New York (Borough of Manhattan) Counties have all shared locations
linked to wikipages.

Counties with 'static' pages do not need to be maintained on a monthly
basis. These include pages for the Top 10+ locations and includes Albany,
Bronx, Broome, Chautauqua, Clinton, Columbia, Delaware, Dutchess, Essex,
Genesee, Greene, Hamilton, Jefferson, Livingston, Madison, Oneida,
Onondaga, Ontario, Orleans, Rensselaer, Rockland, St. Lawrence, Saratoga,
Sullivan, Ulster & Wayne with Putnam County currently having all shared
locations linked to wikipages.

An alphabetical list of all hotspots (6,261) can be found on a single page.
Links exist for any hotspot with a wikipage. Clicking the county name to
the right of any hotspot will bring up the county page showing all county
hotspots. A link to the alphabetical list page is at the bottom of this
message. There is a link to the page at the top of the New York State page.

*Bar Charts (Species Lists)*: For all county and Top 10+ location pages
there's a table showing the months, seasons and several time frames for the
current year. Clicking any of these links will bring up a complete list of
species and other taxa with bar charts representing abundance. To see a
list of species for *all* periods click on the name above the months i.e.
'New York State (489 spp.)' or 'New York County (324 spp.)'.

*Maps of sightings*: After bringing up a bar chart list you'll see a MAP
button to the right of each species. Clicking this will produce a map of
the latest sightings. Red icons show sightings within the past 30 days.
Click on the icons to see a list of who reported each species and click on
'Checklist' to view their submission. Click on 'Explore Rich Media' in the
right sidebar to view locations with photos, audio or video. These also
exist for any multi-location page combining the hotspots associated with
the location i.e. Riverside Park in New York County with its 6 locations.

*Printable Checklists*: a link has been created to produce an eBird
checklist (PDF format) for all hotspots on the wiki site. Additional
details are in this email sent to the list <
https://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/msg20153.html >.

*Tide Graphs* exist for *New York County*, *Kings County (Brooklyn)*
and *Richmond
County (Staten Island)*. There's a quick link to the tide graphs on the "Go
To >" line highlighted in blue for each location. If there are multiple
graphs on a page the left/right is generally north/south or west/east. If
you spot any issues please let me know[ off line **].

Click '*Overview*' on any of the wiki pages to bring up a sortable list of
all species along with the latest checklists submitted and a list of the
Top eBirders. The default sort is for the latest additions to the State,
County or location.

Check out '*My Location Life List*', '*My County Life List*' and '*My State
Life List*' links on their respective pages.

For each location page click on '*Google Map Directions*' to bring up a
Google Map page. On Google Maps click 'Directions' then 'Transit' to plot a
public transportation route. By clicking 'More Options and Times' you can
refine your search. This also works with 'Driving' and 'Walking'.

• Home page: http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/Birding+in+New+York
• Alphabetical list of hotspots:
http://ebirding-nys.wikispaces.com/AlphaHotspots
-- 
Ben Cacace
Manhattan, NYC
Wiki for NYS eBird Hotspots

[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC - Sun. July 1, 2018 - Magnolia Warbler, White-throated Sparrows, Wood Duck & Nesting Birds

2018-07-01 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park NYC
Sunday July 1, 2018
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.

Highlights on a hot and humid morning: Magnolia Warbler, White-throated 
Sparrows, Wood Duck & Nesting Birds.

Canada Goose - 10 (5 on the Lake, 5 at the Pond)
Wood Duck - male in eclipse (alternate) plumage at the Pond
Mallard - 35+ (several Turtle Pond incl. female with lone duckling in tow, 32 
at the Pond)
Mourning Dove - 6 including older juvenile at Turtle Pond
Chimney Swift
Herring Gull - flyovers
Double-crested Cormorant -2 (adult near Bow Bridge, immature bird at Upper Lobe)
Black-crowned Night-Heron - 2 or 3 (adult Upper Lobe, imm. at the Pond, another 
reported at the Oven (Tom Walsh))
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 2 males (Balancing Rock, Azalea Pond)
Downy Woodpecker - heard in two locations
Northern Flicker - pair Gill Overlook
Eastern Kingbird - pair Turtle Pond (female on nest)
Warbling Vireo - 3
Blue Jay - 5 or 6 including 2 older juveniles at Laupot Bridge
Barn Swallow - 2 over Maintenance Field
White-breasted Nuthatch - Tupelo Field
American Robin - several nests with young
Gray Catbird - individuals & pairs in many locations
European Starling - flock of around 20 juveniles outside the Boathouse Cafe at 
lunchtime
Cedar Waxwing - low numbers, but a nest with young in Shakespeare Garden & an 
adult on a nest at Maintenance Field
Song Sparrow - singing at the Pond
White-throated Sparrow - 2 between Mugger's Wood & Azalea Pond
Baltimore Oriole - female at the Oven
Red-winged Blackbird - 2 males & a female Turtle Pond
Common Grackle - many locations, adult feeding a juvenile at the Pond
Magnolia Warbler - male migrant
Northern Cardinal - summer residents

Ed Gaillard reported two juvenile Red-tailed Hawks north of the Met Museum late 
this morning via the Manhattan Bird Alert (@BirdCentralPark) on twitter.

Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter #BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC

--

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/

--


[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC - Sun. July 1, 2018 - Magnolia Warbler, White-throated Sparrows, Wood Duck & Nesting Birds

2018-07-01 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park NYC
Sunday July 1, 2018
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.

Highlights on a hot and humid morning: Magnolia Warbler, White-throated 
Sparrows, Wood Duck & Nesting Birds.

Canada Goose - 10 (5 on the Lake, 5 at the Pond)
Wood Duck - male in eclipse (alternate) plumage at the Pond
Mallard - 35+ (several Turtle Pond incl. female with lone duckling in tow, 32 
at the Pond)
Mourning Dove - 6 including older juvenile at Turtle Pond
Chimney Swift
Herring Gull - flyovers
Double-crested Cormorant -2 (adult near Bow Bridge, immature bird at Upper Lobe)
Black-crowned Night-Heron - 2 or 3 (adult Upper Lobe, imm. at the Pond, another 
reported at the Oven (Tom Walsh))
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 2 males (Balancing Rock, Azalea Pond)
Downy Woodpecker - heard in two locations
Northern Flicker - pair Gill Overlook
Eastern Kingbird - pair Turtle Pond (female on nest)
Warbling Vireo - 3
Blue Jay - 5 or 6 including 2 older juveniles at Laupot Bridge
Barn Swallow - 2 over Maintenance Field
White-breasted Nuthatch - Tupelo Field
American Robin - several nests with young
Gray Catbird - individuals & pairs in many locations
European Starling - flock of around 20 juveniles outside the Boathouse Cafe at 
lunchtime
Cedar Waxwing - low numbers, but a nest with young in Shakespeare Garden & an 
adult on a nest at Maintenance Field
Song Sparrow - singing at the Pond
White-throated Sparrow - 2 between Mugger's Wood & Azalea Pond
Baltimore Oriole - female at the Oven
Red-winged Blackbird - 2 males & a female Turtle Pond
Common Grackle - many locations, adult feeding a juvenile at the Pond
Magnolia Warbler - male migrant
Northern Cardinal - summer residents

Ed Gaillard reported two juvenile Red-tailed Hawks north of the Met Museum late 
this morning via the Manhattan Bird Alert (@BirdCentralPark) on twitter.

Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter #BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC

--

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/

--


[nysbirds-l] Black Bellied Whistling Duck

2018-07-01 Thread Paul Maldonado
Currently viewing 1 BBW, as well as a pair of F Wood Ducks. 1 F Wood Duck with 
5 chicks in tow. Current time is 1 pm. 

Paul Maldonado
--

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/

--



[nysbirds-l] Black Bellied Whistling Duck

2018-07-01 Thread Paul Maldonado
Currently viewing 1 BBW, as well as a pair of F Wood Ducks. 1 F Wood Duck with 
5 chicks in tow. Current time is 1 pm. 

Paul Maldonado
--

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/

--



[nysbirds-l] King Eiders - Shinnecock Inlet

2018-07-01 Thread Ryan Zucker
Hello all,

In addition to the continuing adult male King Eider at Shinnecock Inlet, there 
is also an immature male in the same flock of Common Eiders. The flock was 
close to the eastern shore of the inlet.

Good birding!

Ryan Zucker
New York, NY
--

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[nysbirds-l] King Eiders - Shinnecock Inlet

2018-07-01 Thread Ryan Zucker
Hello all,

In addition to the continuing adult male King Eider at Shinnecock Inlet, there 
is also an immature male in the same flock of Common Eiders. The flock was 
close to the eastern shore of the inlet.

Good birding!

Ryan Zucker
New York, NY
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Request for Black-bellied Whistling-Duck Reports Today (7/1)

2018-07-01 Thread matt klein
It’s here now.

... to be continued.

On Jul 1, 2018, at 6:51 AM, Adrian Burke 
mailto:aburke...@gmail.com>> wrote:

I’ll be in the Nissequogue River SP area today (7/1), and seeing as only one of 
the continuing Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks was seen yesterday, I’d very much 
appreciate any reports today, positive or negative, so if they aren’t there I 
don’t waste my time walking in the intense heat (no car). Thanks!

Adrian Burke
Manhattan
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Request for Black-bellied Whistling-Duck Reports Today (7/1)

2018-07-01 Thread matt klein
It’s here now.

... to be continued.

On Jul 1, 2018, at 6:51 AM, Adrian Burke 
mailto:aburke...@gmail.com>> wrote:

I’ll be in the Nissequogue River SP area today (7/1), and seeing as only one of 
the continuing Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks was seen yesterday, I’d very much 
appreciate any reports today, positive or negative, so if they aren’t there I 
don’t waste my time walking in the intense heat (no car). Thanks!

Adrian Burke
Manhattan
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[nysbirds-l] Revised: Brown Pelicans Robert Moses field 2

2018-07-01 Thread Robert Taylor
took off, traveling east

On Sunday, July 1, 2018, Robert Taylor  wrote:

> 4 currently on water, just landed, viewing from field 2
>
> Rob in Massapequa
>

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[nysbirds-l] Revised: Brown Pelicans Robert Moses field 2

2018-07-01 Thread Robert Taylor
took off, traveling east

On Sunday, July 1, 2018, Robert Taylor  wrote:

> 4 currently on water, just landed, viewing from field 2
>
> Rob in Massapequa
>

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[nysbirds-l] Brown Pelicans Robert Moses field 2

2018-07-01 Thread Robert Taylor
4 currently on water, just landed, viewing from field 2

Rob in Massapequa

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[nysbirds-l] Brown Pelicans Robert Moses field 2

2018-07-01 Thread Robert Taylor
4 currently on water, just landed, viewing from field 2

Rob in Massapequa

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[nysbirds-l] Request for Black-bellied Whistling-Duck Reports Today (7/1)

2018-07-01 Thread Adrian Burke
I’ll be in the Nissequogue River SP area today (7/1), and seeing as only
one of the continuing Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks was seen yesterday, I’d
very much appreciate any reports today, positive or negative, so if they
aren’t there I don’t waste my time walking in the intense heat (no car).
Thanks!

Adrian Burke
Manhattan

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[nysbirds-l] Request for Black-bellied Whistling-Duck Reports Today (7/1)

2018-07-01 Thread Adrian Burke
I’ll be in the Nissequogue River SP area today (7/1), and seeing as only
one of the continuing Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks was seen yesterday, I’d
very much appreciate any reports today, positive or negative, so if they
aren’t there I don’t waste my time walking in the intense heat (no car).
Thanks!

Adrian Burke
Manhattan

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