[nysbirds-l] Bohemian Waxwings/Golden Eagle/Snow Buntings/Evening Grosbeaks and more

2017-03-25 Thread Joan Collins
Flocks of Snow Buntings and Bohemian Waxwings have been moving around for
the past week.  Gray Jays are nesting and acting stealthy!  (Several people
have emailed about them being hard to find.  Gray Jays are more secretive in
March and April.)  Many Red-winged Blackbirds and Amer. Crows returned to
the central/northern Adirondacks during the unusually warm weather of
February - a month earlier than usual (and a record-early Killdeer at Crown
Point in Essex Co. on 2/23/17).  Winter returned with the large snowstorm on
3/14.  All in all, there was only about a 3-week stretch of appropriate
snowmobile conditions this winter/spring - down from 5 months or more 20
years ago.  (I might add that a record number of snowmobiles went through
the ice in the Adirondacks too.)  The Adirondack climate continues to
rapidly warm and "winter" is quickly disappearing.

 

March sightings from the past 2 weeks (& a few from late Feb.):

 

3/25/17 Long Lake (Hamilton Co.), Tupper Lake (Franklin Co.), and Massawepie
(St. Lawrence Co.)

 

David Buckley, Piercefield, and I decided to go birding in the Tupper Lake -
Massawepie area today.  On my drive to David's house, I found a Boreal
Chickadee along Route 30 in Long Lake, a Black-backed Woodpecker at the
Round Lake Trailhead on Sabattis Circle Road, 3 Gray Jays at Sabattis Bog,
and 3 flocks of Snow Buntings (2 flocks along Route 30 in Tupper Lake, and 1
flock along Route 3 in Piercefield).  We found a Bald Eagle, an Amer. Robin,
Red-winged Blackbirds, and Common Grackles in Tupper Lake.  At Massawepie
the lakes are still frozen.  We parked where plowing stops - about 1.5 miles
in, and we walked to the Mountaineer Trail on the groomed snowmobile trail.
The Mountaineer Trail had snow drifts so we opted to turn around!  I was
briefly in the Long Lake - Tupper Lake area on 3/24 and found similar
species plus 2 Pine Siskins vocalizing at a feeder in Tupper Lake.

 

3/23/17 Long Lake

 

Gray Jay - 6 (2 along Route 30, 2 at the Round Lake Trailhead along Sabattis
Circle Road, and 2 at Sabattis Bog)

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Route 30 (These 2 Boreal Chickadees are found
nearly every time I stop at this location to feed Gray Jays, Black-capped
Chickadees, and Red-breasted Nuthatches.  They appear to be flock mates of
the BCCH and RBNU and announce my presence when I get out of the car!)

 

3/22/17 Long Lake

 

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Route 30

 

3/21/17 Long Lake

 

Bald Eagle

Gray Jay - 10 (2 Rt. 30, 3 inlet area of Little Tupper Lake, 2 Rd. Lake
Trailhead, 3 Sabattis Bog)

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Rt. 30

Snow Bunting - 2 flocks

 

3/17/17 Long Lake and Tupper Lake

 

Bald Eagle

Gray Jay - 4 (2 Rt. 30, 2 Sabattis Bog)

Bohemian Waxwing - 105 in 2 flocks (1 flock of 25 in a fruit tree in Long
Lake at a house next to the school ballfield, and a flock of ~80 in Tupper
Lake just north of the Skyline Ice Cream stand)

Snow Bunting - 2 flocks in Long Lake

 

3/15/17 Long Lake

 

Golden Eagle - very loudly vocalizing Amer. Crows alerted me to its presence
perched along Sabattis Circle Road!  It took off and soared above the road
for a few minutes - I was even able to take a few flight shots.  The Amer.
Crows were relentless in chasing it away.

Gray Jay - 5 (2 Rt. 30, 3 at the Little Tupper Lake inlet along Sabattis
Circle Road)

Snow Bunting - 1 outside our house (it showed up after the storm and stayed
a few days to eat the cracked corn we put out for Wild Turkeys), and a flock
along Route 30

 

3/14/17 Long Lake (the big storm day - over 30 inches fell at our Long Lake
home)

 

I thought I could go out and back before the snow got bad, but I didn't make
it!  I found a flock of 8 Bohemian Waxwing in a fruit tree in front of the
Long Lake Library in near blizzard conditions.  My camera couldn't cope and
kept trying to focus on the snow!

 

3/13/17 Long Lake

 

Black-backed Woodpecker - female along the Northville-Placid Trail (S) in
Long Lake

Gray Jay - 10 (2 Rt. 30, 4 Round Lake Trailhead, and 4 at Sabattis Bog)

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Rt. 30

 

3/12/17 Long Lake & trip to Albany on the Northway

 

Turkey Vulture - 2 different birds observed as we headed south on the
Northway

Boreal Chickadee - 3 along Rt. 30

 

3/11/17 Newcomb

 

Evening Grosbeak - small flock at a feeder outside of Newcomb (I was heading
to a class in Plattsburgh early in the a.m.)

 

On a Feb. 18-19, 2017 tour with 2 birders (1 from NYC and 1 from Long
Island), we spent one day in boreal habitat and one day in the St. Lawrence
Valley.  Here are our sightings by day (40 species):

 

February 18, 2017 (21 species; Mostly boreal habitat areas of Newcomb,
Minerva, Long Lake, Tupper Lake, and Indian Lake)

Wild Turkey

Rock Pigeon

Mourning Dove

Hairy Woodpecker

Black-backed Woodpecker - 9 (2 viewed in Minerva (male & female) along
Route28N, 4 drumming along the Hudson River in Newcomb (Santanoni Dr.), 1
drumming by the golf course along Santanoni Dr. near Route 28N, 2 drumming
in 

[nysbirds-l] Bohemian Waxwings/Golden Eagle/Snow Buntings/Evening Grosbeaks and more

2017-03-25 Thread Joan Collins
Flocks of Snow Buntings and Bohemian Waxwings have been moving around for
the past week.  Gray Jays are nesting and acting stealthy!  (Several people
have emailed about them being hard to find.  Gray Jays are more secretive in
March and April.)  Many Red-winged Blackbirds and Amer. Crows returned to
the central/northern Adirondacks during the unusually warm weather of
February - a month earlier than usual (and a record-early Killdeer at Crown
Point in Essex Co. on 2/23/17).  Winter returned with the large snowstorm on
3/14.  All in all, there was only about a 3-week stretch of appropriate
snowmobile conditions this winter/spring - down from 5 months or more 20
years ago.  (I might add that a record number of snowmobiles went through
the ice in the Adirondacks too.)  The Adirondack climate continues to
rapidly warm and "winter" is quickly disappearing.

 

March sightings from the past 2 weeks (& a few from late Feb.):

 

3/25/17 Long Lake (Hamilton Co.), Tupper Lake (Franklin Co.), and Massawepie
(St. Lawrence Co.)

 

David Buckley, Piercefield, and I decided to go birding in the Tupper Lake -
Massawepie area today.  On my drive to David's house, I found a Boreal
Chickadee along Route 30 in Long Lake, a Black-backed Woodpecker at the
Round Lake Trailhead on Sabattis Circle Road, 3 Gray Jays at Sabattis Bog,
and 3 flocks of Snow Buntings (2 flocks along Route 30 in Tupper Lake, and 1
flock along Route 3 in Piercefield).  We found a Bald Eagle, an Amer. Robin,
Red-winged Blackbirds, and Common Grackles in Tupper Lake.  At Massawepie
the lakes are still frozen.  We parked where plowing stops - about 1.5 miles
in, and we walked to the Mountaineer Trail on the groomed snowmobile trail.
The Mountaineer Trail had snow drifts so we opted to turn around!  I was
briefly in the Long Lake - Tupper Lake area on 3/24 and found similar
species plus 2 Pine Siskins vocalizing at a feeder in Tupper Lake.

 

3/23/17 Long Lake

 

Gray Jay - 6 (2 along Route 30, 2 at the Round Lake Trailhead along Sabattis
Circle Road, and 2 at Sabattis Bog)

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Route 30 (These 2 Boreal Chickadees are found
nearly every time I stop at this location to feed Gray Jays, Black-capped
Chickadees, and Red-breasted Nuthatches.  They appear to be flock mates of
the BCCH and RBNU and announce my presence when I get out of the car!)

 

3/22/17 Long Lake

 

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Route 30

 

3/21/17 Long Lake

 

Bald Eagle

Gray Jay - 10 (2 Rt. 30, 3 inlet area of Little Tupper Lake, 2 Rd. Lake
Trailhead, 3 Sabattis Bog)

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Rt. 30

Snow Bunting - 2 flocks

 

3/17/17 Long Lake and Tupper Lake

 

Bald Eagle

Gray Jay - 4 (2 Rt. 30, 2 Sabattis Bog)

Bohemian Waxwing - 105 in 2 flocks (1 flock of 25 in a fruit tree in Long
Lake at a house next to the school ballfield, and a flock of ~80 in Tupper
Lake just north of the Skyline Ice Cream stand)

Snow Bunting - 2 flocks in Long Lake

 

3/15/17 Long Lake

 

Golden Eagle - very loudly vocalizing Amer. Crows alerted me to its presence
perched along Sabattis Circle Road!  It took off and soared above the road
for a few minutes - I was even able to take a few flight shots.  The Amer.
Crows were relentless in chasing it away.

Gray Jay - 5 (2 Rt. 30, 3 at the Little Tupper Lake inlet along Sabattis
Circle Road)

Snow Bunting - 1 outside our house (it showed up after the storm and stayed
a few days to eat the cracked corn we put out for Wild Turkeys), and a flock
along Route 30

 

3/14/17 Long Lake (the big storm day - over 30 inches fell at our Long Lake
home)

 

I thought I could go out and back before the snow got bad, but I didn't make
it!  I found a flock of 8 Bohemian Waxwing in a fruit tree in front of the
Long Lake Library in near blizzard conditions.  My camera couldn't cope and
kept trying to focus on the snow!

 

3/13/17 Long Lake

 

Black-backed Woodpecker - female along the Northville-Placid Trail (S) in
Long Lake

Gray Jay - 10 (2 Rt. 30, 4 Round Lake Trailhead, and 4 at Sabattis Bog)

Boreal Chickadee - 2 along Rt. 30

 

3/12/17 Long Lake & trip to Albany on the Northway

 

Turkey Vulture - 2 different birds observed as we headed south on the
Northway

Boreal Chickadee - 3 along Rt. 30

 

3/11/17 Newcomb

 

Evening Grosbeak - small flock at a feeder outside of Newcomb (I was heading
to a class in Plattsburgh early in the a.m.)

 

On a Feb. 18-19, 2017 tour with 2 birders (1 from NYC and 1 from Long
Island), we spent one day in boreal habitat and one day in the St. Lawrence
Valley.  Here are our sightings by day (40 species):

 

February 18, 2017 (21 species; Mostly boreal habitat areas of Newcomb,
Minerva, Long Lake, Tupper Lake, and Indian Lake)

Wild Turkey

Rock Pigeon

Mourning Dove

Hairy Woodpecker

Black-backed Woodpecker - 9 (2 viewed in Minerva (male & female) along
Route28N, 4 drumming along the Hudson River in Newcomb (Santanoni Dr.), 1
drumming by the golf course along Santanoni Dr. near Route 28N, 2 drumming
in