Re: [nysbirds-l] Leucistic Starling -- Robin this time

2010-05-17 Thread Steve Walter
In response to my previous post, Jim Osterlund brought to my attention the 
presence of leucistic type robins in Alley Park (close to where I live). I 
visited that section of the park today, mainly to check on the presence of a 
territorial Yellow-throated Vireo (new breeding species for Queens). I think 
the vireo sang briefly, but my attention quickly shifted to this robin. How 
could it not? It's another cool looker. Picture is at 
http://www.hmana.org/steve/robin.htm  Are there more of these on the way? I 
followed this guy's activities to a nest.

Steve Walter

  - Original Message - 
  From: Steve Walter 
  To: NYSBIRDS_L 
  Sent: Friday, May 07, 2010 7:43 PM
  Subject: [nysbirds-l] Leucistic Starling


  What has this list come to with someone posting about a starling? Considering 
some of what I've seen lately, I guess anything goes. But this is a really cool 
looking bird, one that I'd actually describe as partially leucistic. If anyone 
wants to have a look, the picture is at http://www.hmana.org/steve/starling.htm 
. 

  This was across the street from my house in northeastern Queens. I had stuck 
my head out the window to listen for migrants and this bird sure got my 
attention. I had to run out to try and get a picture. I could use better than 
this one taken in the early morning lack of light. That puts me in the peculiar 
position of trying to figure out how one goes about looking for an individual 
starling in a suburban setting.

  The rest of this story is that heading out the door, I noticed a Mourning 
Dove nest at eye level in the tree in front of the house. This is another 
species that maybe shouldn't be mentioned here. But by most accounts -- well, 
my neighbors said so -- the doves are really cute. So it needs to be mentioned.


  Steve Walter
  Baysdie, NY
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Leucistic Starling

2010-05-07 Thread Arthur W. Green
On Fri, May 7, 2010 Steve Walter  wrote:
> What has this list come to with someone posting about a starling?
> Considering some of what I've seen lately, I guess anything goes. But this
> is a really cool looking bird, one that I'd actually describe as partially
> leucistic. If anyone wants to have a look, the picture is at
> http://www.hmana.org/steve/starling.htm .

Steve, this is terrific.  I'm not sure every FOS needs to be posted to
this list, but I often wish more attention was paid to the common
species.  Most birds are interesting when studied closely enough. . .

Kind Regards,
\\ Arthur

-- 
Arthur W. Green 
Chestnut Ridge Hawkwatch, Bedford, NY
http://www.bedfordaudubon.org/hawkwatch.html
http://www.hawkcount.org/siteinfo.php?rsite=534

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[nysbirds-l] Leucistic Starling

2010-05-07 Thread Steve Walter
What has this list come to with someone posting about a starling? Considering 
some of what I've seen lately, I guess anything goes. But this is a really cool 
looking bird, one that I'd actually describe as partially leucistic. If anyone 
wants to have a look, the picture is at http://www.hmana.org/steve/starling.htm 
. 

This was across the street from my house in northeastern Queens. I had stuck my 
head out the window to listen for migrants and this bird sure got my attention. 
I had to run out to try and get a picture. I could use better than this one 
taken in the early morning lack of light. That puts me in the peculiar position 
of trying to figure out how one goes about looking for an individual starling 
in a suburban setting.

The rest of this story is that heading out the door, I noticed a Mourning Dove 
nest at eye level in the tree in front of the house. This is another species 
that maybe shouldn't be mentioned here. But by most accounts -- well, my 
neighbors said so -- the doves are really cute. So it needs to be mentioned.


Steve Walter
Baysdie, NY
--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L

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

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