[nysbirds-l] Central Park & etc. NYC 4/18-20

2015-04-20 Thread Thomas Fiore
Sat.-Sun.-Monday, 18 - 19 - & 20 April, 2015 (no rarities)

Central Park (& other sites noted), Manhattan, N.Y. City

Monday, partly a rain-out, but before the main rain of the day, a  
modest no. of migrants, esp. warblers, were in small flocks  
particularly around the edges of the Lake (& esp. on the Ramble side),  
with about half as many Pine (12+) as Myrtle/Yellow-rumped (25+),  
along with some Palm, and also as fly-overs in the mist, another 40+++  
of warblers, of which the ones I could hear or make out were all, or  
almost all, Yellow-rumped as well. The larger arrival of that warbler  
species is imminent, and with them are likely to be an assortment of  
other migrants. I'd bet that a fair number of migrants were passing  
all morning and even into the p.m., with perhaps some just stopping in  
to feed & moving on again in the fog & drizzle. A rather soggy male  
Cooper's Hawk at the "oven" will be interesting if it is around many  
more days. There was a glossy breeding-plumaged calling male Rusty  
Blackbird at the Loch in the morning.   At least for a short while  
there was a modest concentration of swallows around (over) Turtle  
Pond, with just the 3 most-regular spp. in CP seen, Tree, N. Rough- 
winged, & Barn, totaling about 50 individuals in all (I looked here  
and along the lake edges again much later in the day, and was unable  
to find these numbers again). At the reservoir, very few swallows when  
I passed by; some ducks continued, such as N. Shovelers, Buffleheads  
and a couple of Ruddys, & at least 1 Wood Duck. The gull numbers which  
seemed good as the really heavy rain was starting were down to very  
few by later in the day. A single Spotted Sandpiper was the only  
shorebird I noted, along the Lake.

I had a look in some of the midtown Manhattan (smaller) parks on  
Sunday, & found a mix of migrants in 2: Madison Square, & Union  
Square, but apart from the long-staying Chuck-will's-widow at Bryant,  
it seemed relatively more quiet (other than a few migrants). I also  
had a look in some other smallish green-spaces farther west, & found  
scattered smatterings of some of the most-common migrants. I didn't  
get to the river to seek out what could be moving on or right by the  
water...

At Central Park on the weekend, the going seemed moderately slow for  
fresh migrants, yet I found a few that were new at least to me for the  
year - an Ovenbird, Saturday a.m. near the Mineral Springs pavilion  
(south of Falconer's Hill), & on Sunday at the Loch (a.k.a. the  
Ravine), a singing Yellow Warbler, (which also was likely the same at  
the Meer, a bit earlier the same morning).   Of other warbler species  
I found, the no's. were not all that great other than perhaps for  
["yellow"] Palm Warbler, & to a lesser extent, Pine Warbler. A good  
no. of E. Towhees have been in the past few days & there seemed a  
fresh influx of sparrows as well as Dark-eyed Junco by the weekend.  
Also new, at least to me, a couple of Rose-breasted Grosbeaks on both  
days at the Great Hill which has somewhat regularly been a good spot  
to find them in the early part of the season, yet I did not come up  
with them at all later either day. Also still present were Louisiana  
Waterthrush, a couple of Black-and-white Warblers, & on Sat. at least,  
a male Common Yellowthroat at The Pool (near W. 103 St.)  I failed to  
find a loon on the reservoir as of Sunday, while I did see 1 Common  
Loon there Sat. a.m.

good birding,

Tom Fiore
Manhattan
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[nysbirds-l] Central Park etc. NYC 4/18-20

2015-04-20 Thread Thomas Fiore
Sat.-Sun.-Monday, 18 - 19 -  20 April, 2015 (no rarities)

Central Park ( other sites noted), Manhattan, N.Y. City

Monday, partly a rain-out, but before the main rain of the day, a  
modest no. of migrants, esp. warblers, were in small flocks  
particularly around the edges of the Lake ( esp. on the Ramble side),  
with about half as many Pine (12+) as Myrtle/Yellow-rumped (25+),  
along with some Palm, and also as fly-overs in the mist, another 40+++  
of warblers, of which the ones I could hear or make out were all, or  
almost all, Yellow-rumped as well. The larger arrival of that warbler  
species is imminent, and with them are likely to be an assortment of  
other migrants. I'd bet that a fair number of migrants were passing  
all morning and even into the p.m., with perhaps some just stopping in  
to feed  moving on again in the fog  drizzle. A rather soggy male  
Cooper's Hawk at the oven will be interesting if it is around many  
more days. There was a glossy breeding-plumaged calling male Rusty  
Blackbird at the Loch in the morning.   At least for a short while  
there was a modest concentration of swallows around (over) Turtle  
Pond, with just the 3 most-regular spp. in CP seen, Tree, N. Rough- 
winged,  Barn, totaling about 50 individuals in all (I looked here  
and along the lake edges again much later in the day, and was unable  
to find these numbers again). At the reservoir, very few swallows when  
I passed by; some ducks continued, such as N. Shovelers, Buffleheads  
and a couple of Ruddys,  at least 1 Wood Duck. The gull numbers which  
seemed good as the really heavy rain was starting were down to very  
few by later in the day. A single Spotted Sandpiper was the only  
shorebird I noted, along the Lake.

I had a look in some of the midtown Manhattan (smaller) parks on  
Sunday,  found a mix of migrants in 2: Madison Square,  Union  
Square, but apart from the long-staying Chuck-will's-widow at Bryant,  
it seemed relatively more quiet (other than a few migrants). I also  
had a look in some other smallish green-spaces farther west,  found  
scattered smatterings of some of the most-common migrants. I didn't  
get to the river to seek out what could be moving on or right by the  
water...

At Central Park on the weekend, the going seemed moderately slow for  
fresh migrants, yet I found a few that were new at least to me for the  
year - an Ovenbird, Saturday a.m. near the Mineral Springs pavilion  
(south of Falconer's Hill),  on Sunday at the Loch (a.k.a. the  
Ravine), a singing Yellow Warbler, (which also was likely the same at  
the Meer, a bit earlier the same morning).   Of other warbler species  
I found, the no's. were not all that great other than perhaps for  
[yellow] Palm Warbler,  to a lesser extent, Pine Warbler. A good  
no. of E. Towhees have been in the past few days  there seemed a  
fresh influx of sparrows as well as Dark-eyed Junco by the weekend.  
Also new, at least to me, a couple of Rose-breasted Grosbeaks on both  
days at the Great Hill which has somewhat regularly been a good spot  
to find them in the early part of the season, yet I did not come up  
with them at all later either day. Also still present were Louisiana  
Waterthrush, a couple of Black-and-white Warblers,  on Sat. at least,  
a male Common Yellowthroat at The Pool (near W. 103 St.)  I failed to  
find a loon on the reservoir as of Sunday, while I did see 1 Common  
Loon there Sat. a.m.

good birding,

Tom Fiore
Manhattan
--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES
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://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html

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

--