[nysbirds-l] Westchester ash throated flycatcher

2021-12-21 Thread Andrew Block
Just seen at the top of the highest point of Rockwood hall in the large fields 
with the trail through it.  It was in the area of the old wooden fence 
enclosure.  Which is surrounded by maples.  Check the fields in this area.  
This is at the Rockwood hall section of Rockefeller s p.p. off Rte. 9 on 
Rockwood rd.
Andrew

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[nysbirds-l] Franklin's gull seen

2021-12-21 Thread Andrew Block
The Newburgh waterfront park Franklin's gull is still there in the water in 
front of the treatment plant.  Park and go south on trail along water to plant. 
 In water in front of plant.  Entrance to park is off water st.
Andrew

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[nysbirds-l] MEW GULL (Short-billed Gull) @ Bush Terminal Piers Park, Brooklyn NYC…

2021-12-21 Thread Andrew Baksh
Salutations: While gulling, I picked out a Mew Gull (Short-billed Gull) out on 
the water feeding with Ring-billed Gulls. The bird was quite a ways out and has 
drifted south towards the area where the Scaup flock tends to hang out.

Water taxis are frequent in the area and has so far put the bird up a few times 
but it does a short flight and drops back to feed. See a few heavily cropped 
Digiscoped shots that I posted on Twitter here: 
https://twitter.com/birdingdude/status/1473337570482397189?s=21

Happy Holidays to all. Bless up!

Cheers,


“Tenderness and Kindness are not signs of weakness and despair but 
manifestations of strength and resolution” ~ Khalil Gibran

"I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of 
others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence." ~ Frederick 
Douglass

風 Swift as the wind
林 Quiet as the forest
火 Conquer like the fire
山 Steady as the mountain
Sun Tzu  The Art of War

> (\__/)
> (= '.'=)
> (") _ (") 
> Sent from somewhere in the field using my mobile device! 

Andrew Baksh
www.birdingdude.blogspot.com
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[nysbirds-l] Ash-throated Flycatcher

2021-12-21 Thread Gus Keri




Ash-throated Flycatcher continues at Owl's Head Park of Brooklyn. 
Look for the broken pine tree on top of the hill







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[nysbirds-l] Where is the Franklin's gull visible from

2021-12-21 Thread Andrew Block
Anyone know where the Franklin's gull in Newburgh is visible from?  I take it 
the landfill is not accessible. 
Andrew

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[nysbirds-l] Fly at her location

2021-12-21 Thread Andrew Block
Anyone know where exactly in Rockwood hall section of Rockefeller preserve the 
ash-throted flycatcher was?  Thanks.
Andrew

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[nysbirds-l] Manhattan, NYC: Mon., 12/20- 2 W. Tanagers, Y.-br. Chat, Dickcissel (& some info. on Steller's Sea Eagle...)

2021-12-21 Thread Tom Fiore
Manhattan, N.Y. City - Monday, Dec. 20th:

Two Western Tanagers were again seen, the one at Carl Schurz Park - visiting 
the feeder array there &, for some, also seen in that vicinity moving and 
perching beyond the feeders, at East End Ave. near E. 85-86th St. - the park 
also may be entered at the park’s southwest corner at E. 84th St., from that 
entrance, walk immediately to the left (north) on that path just inside and 
parallel with East End Ave., & you will arrive to the feeder-area shortly, as 
the gate to the “Catbird Playground” also becomes visible on the opposite side 
of same path.  The other Western Tanager which had been discovered a bit 
more-recently (the Carl Schurz Park bird had been known of this season from 
around the Thanksgiving holiday) was seen at Clinton Community Garden again, 
and in the street trees just outside the gate (the garden itself is open to 
key-holders only, but it is possible to view much from the street) on West 48th 
St. a bit east of Tenth Ave. - it may also be worth checking at the Hell’s 
Kitchen Park on the nearby corner at Tenth Ave. and also in any of the nearby 
street trees and shrubberies. Please be considerate of all who live in the 
areas & who may use these neighborhood parks, including Covid-19-safe 
sensibilities. (thanks again to A. Burke for his find of the Clinton-garden W. 
Tanager, and to all who’ve offered updates on that, & others of the species in 
Manhattan this month!)

A Yellow-breasted Chat was still at Bella Abzug Park, a part of the Hudson 
Yards development, in the area between Tenth Ave. and Eleventh Ave., and in the 
streets from West 35th St. & south - that Chat can be tricky to see, as with 
any of that species in winter, but it can pop up at any moment; better chances 
may be with the more time spent seeking, but luck & patience both also have a 
role. A variety of other species are also lingering in Bella Abzug Park & 
include at least Ovenbird, and probably also still at least 1 Common 
Yellowthroat. The area is adjacent to the northern portion of the High Line, 
but it seems that B. Abzug Park’s small areas of habitat have sheltered the 
more-diverse & poss. more-numerous set of native non-feral birds of that area. 
Keep in mind that the sun, at this season, is a bit limited in reaching a lot 
of that area and mid-day thru early afternoon can have slightly brighter sun; 
on the other hand, activity may also be found as usual as early as daylight 
begins. (thanks again to Alan Drogin, & others who have been observing at the 
Hudson Yards site and elsewhere.)

A Dickcissel was also continuing on Monday 12/20, at the Dyckman Fields area of 
Inwood Hill Park; it may be seen associating with House Sparrows, & it (and 
that flock) might wander a bit around edges of those fields, all of which are 
just north of the western terminus of Dyckman Street, in northern Manhattan. 
Many other birds seen on the day of the Manhattan & New York County [section] 
of the C.B.C. were also continuing in various respective areas of the county, 
but some of the rarer species may or may not have been found on Monday, if even 
sought then.

- - - -

with obvious interest in the rare-in-North America sea-eagle that had 
most-recently been to visit New England:

Here (below) are 4 articles, written and posted before the news that the 
Steller’s Sea Eagle had landed along the Taunton River around Dighton, 
Massachusetts; the Smithsonian article also references some other articles 
including the one that many may have previously read, from the N.Y. Times 
Science page.  The 2020 (‘arrival?') of that Sea Eagle on Alaska’s Denali 
highway, which was covered by many bird-sightings lists & by local-state and 
regional news at that time, has been less-noted of recent.  This Sea Eagle is 
quite the traveler, it seems.   This species is large, but wingspread is fairly 
similar (as to the largest individuals of each) in that regard with our Bald 
Eagle. (A somewhat larger eagle species that’s native to a larger mainly-arctic 
(and sub-arctic) region is White-tailed Sea Eagle. (And then there are a number 
of other large eagle species currently classified with these, in the same 
genus…)

These birds are all in the genus Haliaeetus - shared by a number of large 
eagles, and so in that sense, our Bald Eagle is also a “sea-eagle” in that it 
shares the same genera of the Steller’s.  There is a supposition that this 
group of eagles may be *among the oldest of living genera of birds*, in part 
from a discovery made in Egypt.  (See-Rasmussen, D., Tab, O., Storrs, L., & 
Simons, E. L. (1987). Fossil Birds from the Oligocene Jebel Qatrani Formation, 
Fayum Province, Egypt. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology 62: 1-20 -for 
some more on that.)  

There are at least ten species now considered to be in Haliaeetus, worldwide, 
and the genus is thought to have possibly derived and evolved from the region 
of what is presently known as the Bay of Bengal.  The bill on Ste