[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC, Thu. Oct. 19, 2023: Ruddy Duck, Black-billed Cuckoo, Yellow-breasted Chat, Orange-crowned Warbler

2023-10-19 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park NYC
Thursday October 19, 2023
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.

Highlights: Ruddy Duck, Black-billed Cuckoo, Chimney Swift, Ruby-throated 
Hummingbird, Yellow-breasted Chat, Orange-crowned and Cape May Warblers, 
American Redstart.


Northern Shoveler - 2 Reservoir (Deb - after lunch)
Gadwall - 2 males Reservoir (Deb - after lunch)
Mallard - around 20
Ruddy Duck - 9 (thanks to Wolfgang Demisch)
Mourning Dove - 25-35
Black-billed Cuckoo - 1 hatch-year east of Azalea Pond (Paul Curtis)*
Chimney Swift - 2 or 3
Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 3 Shakespeare Garden
American Coot - 2 Reservoir (Deb - after lunch)
Herring Gull - around 20 flyovers
Double-crested Cormorant - 3
Great Blue Heron - 1 low flyover Shakespeare Garden (m.ob.)
Cooper's Hawk - 1 flyover
Red-tailed Hawk - 1 flyover
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 3 or 4
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker - 10-15
Downy Woodpecker - 1 male Top of Oven (Bob - early)
Northern Flicker - 6-8
American Kestrel - 1 perched on backstop east side of Great Lawn
Blue Jay - 12-16
American Crow - 15-20
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - 30-40
Golden-crowned Kinglet - 15-20
Cedar Waxwing - 7-10 (Alexandra Wang)
Carolina Wren - 3 or 4
House Wren - 2 (Sparrow Rock & Shakespeare Garden)
Winter Wren - 1 Shakespeare Garden
Gray Catbird - 5-7
Brown Thrasher - 1 Maintenance Field
Hermit Thrush - 8-10
American Robin - 30-40
House Finch - 1 male Cedar Hill (Deb - after lunch)
Chipping Sparrow - 1 Pinetum
Dark-eyed Junco - 3 or 4
White-throated Sparrow - 40-50
Song Sparrow - 2 or 3
Swamp Sparrow - 1 Cedar Hill (Deb - after lunch)
Eastern Towhee - 4-6
Yellow-breasted Chat - 2 (upper and lower Shakespeare Garden)**
Common Grackle - 11-13
Orange-crowned Warbler - 2 Shakespeare Garden (one dull, one bright)
American Redstart - 1 northwest Great Lawn
Cape May Warbler - 2 Shakespeare Garden
Black-throated Blue Warbler - 3 (female Shakespeare Garden, male & female 
Winterdale Arch)
Pine Warbler - 2 (1 King of Poland (Paul Curtis), 1 Cedar Hill (Deb))
Yellow-rumped Warbler - 8-10
Northern Cardinal - 4-6

--
*The Black-billed Cuckoo ate 3 Spotted Lanternflies in the space of around 15 
minutes.

**One of the Yellow-breasted Chats has strong black in the lore bordered by 
white above, the other has a duller lore bordered by white below, and also has 
less extensive white above the lore and a paler bill.
--

Deb Allen


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[nysbirds-l] N. Wheatear CPP

2023-10-19 Thread Trachlar
I located a Northern Wheatear along the east side landfill path at Croton Point 
Park around 10 this am. Was w pipits so unfortunately I did not immediately ID 
until pics were posted (on Ebird) and others did. Stay on main paths if you 
try. 

L. Trachtenberg 
Ossining 

Sent from my iPhone
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[nysbirds-l] N.Y. County, NYC - thru Wed., 10/18 - many migrants and lingerers

2023-10-19 Thread Tom Fiore
A non-adult Purple Gallinule was still being seen in Prospect Park, Brooklyn - 
Kings County, N.Y. City, thru the day on Wednesday, Oct. 18th.
_ _

New York County, including Manhattan, Randalls Island, Governors Island and the 
skies and waters adjacent -
thru Wednesday, Oct. 18th -

A lingering Yellow-breasted Chat has by now had hundreds of observers and many 
dozens of photographers near the Belvedere Castle / Shakespeare Garden / 
Swedish Cottage section of Central Park, with sightings having become more 
frequent in that area. An Orange-crowned Warbler has been in that area, also 
seen by many, not the first nor second of this season for Central, and by now 
into a modest number of that species for the county.

There were up to at least 16 additional warbler species in Central Park thru at 
least Tues., 10/16 and many species have been lingering at least a bit later 
than expected. Black-and-white Warblers had been showing in a wide variety of 
locations in recent days, thru the county, and some Yellow Warblers had been 
widespread as well. The many smaller parks and green-spaces of Manhattan also 
have continued to show a variety of warbler species.

Both Black-billed and Yellow-billed Cuckoos have continued at Central Park to 
at least 10/18, and some of the latter species also were showing elsewhere 
recently, such as at Governors Island. Red Fox Sparrow made a slightly-early 
first appearance at Central Park this week, with more expected as chillier 
weather starts to come along.

Ruby-throated Hummingbirds were still around and represented by more than 
just-one bird that could be lingering after a rehab-release at the Shakespeare 
Garden of Central Park; in some county locations the flowers available have 
however been diminished, and numbers certainly dropped off, as expected in the 
county and thru the region, over the past week. Check hummingbirds seen from 
now on, as other hummingbird species can be as-likely as the autumn moves well 
along.

>From Randalls Island, Clay-colored and Nelsons Sparrow sightings continued 
>into Wed., 10/18, with several of the latter seen there. A female-plumaged 
>Blue Grosbeak was again seen at least to Tuesday, 10/17 at Randalls, and there 
>is a chance that bird was still lingering. Also ongoing there were at least 
>several E. Meadowlarks in whats been a good recent influx of the species to 
>the county, and American Pipit was also still being seen there thru at least 
>10/18. As is fairly typical, also ongoing at Randalls was Yellow-crowned 
>Night-Heron. Many species have been seen on that island and flying over in 
>recent days, including a nice variety of sparrows, raptors, and some vultures. 
>Laughing Gull was still being seen there into Wed., 10/18, and a Pied-billed 
>Grebe also was ongoing. Marsh Wren was present there at least thru 10/17.

Pine Siskins have shown in fair to good numbers around the county, and while 
many have been seen mostly as fly-by flocks, there were incursions into such 
locations as parts of Central Park where many observers were able to see and 
photograph them - more can be anticipated as the irruption of that species is 
widespread lately. Far more than a dozen Siskin, which number were seen by many 
in the Strawberry Fields area of Central Park on Tuesday, were around in that 
park alone on that day, and also in other sites in the county, as for other 
days in the past week or more. Some Purple Finches also have been moving thru, 
in what seem to be lower numbers lately than the siskins. Also continuing but 
in low number are Red-breasted Nuthatch, perhaps only some lingerers in certain 
locations.

White-eyed Vireo, a species that has -rarely- overwintered in N.Y. City more 
than once was seen at Trinity Cemetery in northern Manhattan -A. Kramer- to 
Wed., 10/18; also still being found was Red-eyed Vireo for a few locations, 
while Blue-headed Vireo continued as is not unexpected for now. Also among the 
sightings at Trinity cemetery was a Swainsons Thrush, which had been seen 
elsewhere recently along with very-late Veery, and Gray-cheeked Thrush; a small 
number of Wood Thrush were also still in a few locations, including at Central 
Park thru 10/18. The default thrush in the genus Catharus of course being 
Hermit thru the later part of autumn, and in N.Y. City on into winter for some.

A modest number of Baltimore Orioles, Indigo Buntings, late-running Scarlet 
Tanagers, and a few Rose-breasted Grosbeaks were still around the county this 
week including some thru Wed., 10/18. The waterfowl arrivals into the county 
were still rather minimal. although such species as Atlantic Brant had come in, 
and the N. Pintail number doubled - with Wood Duck a long-lingering species as 
well as Green-winged Teal still at Central Park. Some Common Loons have shown 
as fly-overs in the past week, across the county. Common Raven was a species 
continuing to be found in a variety of locations, including in Manhattan. A 
fairly stron