Apologies for my garbled message yesterday about the female White-winged
Scoter at Myers. Not sure what happened-tried sending from my phone.
I was at Myers with the CC Bird Study Group (8:30 am) and we did observe
a female White-winged Scoter straight out from the point. It was
close-in for g
There is a close-in Red-necked Grebe just off Salt Point in Myers. I’m viewing
from the canoe rack under the pavilion to keep out of the rain. 4:15pm
Gary
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The last few days have been relatively slow lake-watching from Myers and
other areas. Yesterday's rain did not drop anything particularly noteworthy
down in the spots I was able to check. Highlights yesterday were two male
LONG-TAILED DUCKS flying north past Myers and a DUNLIN on the spit.
Yesterda
The spit at Myers Point hosted a few shorebirds this evening, including an
adult Sanderling, an adult Semipalmated Plover, 8 juvenile Least
Sandpipers, Killdeer, and a Solitary Sandpiper in the creek. The lake level
is dramatically down from where it was a week or two ago and lots of nice
shoreline
I've been visiting Myers Point occasionally in the mornings before work. I
haven't had anything rare so far, but I've had a few nice birds.
Last Friday in wind and sleet, including an early Lesser Yellowlegs
(subsequently seen by many over the weekend), Bank and Cliff swallows, and
five migrating
This afternoon I stopped by Myers Point to find a good flock of 100+ Tree
Swallows off the marina and Ladoge area, along with at least two NORTHERN
ROUGH-WINGED and one CLIFF SWALLOW. Two gorgeous but very distant alternate
adult RED-NECKED GREBES were on the lake out to the northwest of the point.
A gorgeous pair of BLACK SCOTERS are sitting on the lake off the Myers
marina, also just visible from Ladoga. Five WHITE-WINGED SCOTERS are nearby.
Ken and others report a late SCARLET TANAGER from Salt Point.
Jay
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A SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHER, 2 DUNLIN, and 1 SEMIPALMATED SANDPIPER were on the
spit at Myers Point, but all took off to the north before 6 am. It is worth
checking this spit as many times as possible during these last days of May.
Ken
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A winter RED-THROATED LOON is on the lake straight off Myers Point, as well
as two male WHITE-WINGED SCOTERS swimming north and five GREATER YELLOWLEGS
on the spit that flew over to Salt Point a few minutes ago.
Jay
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There are 2 juvenile Sanderlings and 2 Semi-palmated Plovers now.
Ann
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Fairly steady flight of gulls and terns up the lake so far.
Had a couple flocks of BONAPARTES GULLS, and 2 more COMMON TERNS. Also ring
billed gulls too heading up the lake.
Also PURPLE MARTINS hanging around. Are they nesting in the martin housing?
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We went there yesterday and the waterfowl spotted were the usual suspects. The
highlight for
me was seeing the heaved ice chunks particularly along Salmon Creek. Quite
spectacular.
~Barbara Eden
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I watched from Myers Point for an hour this morning. It was cold and calm
and a few bursts of birds kept things interesting, but overall not an
exceptional morning. Several groups of waterfowl were heading down the
lake, especially between 8:00 and 8:30 or so, including groups of scaup,
Ring-necked
No interesting terns or shorebirds so far this morning, but an immature
(2nd-summer?) BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERON is sitting on a log in the creek
mouth, and a MERLIN was hunting swallows out over the lake.
Jay
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The only bird of interest on a gorgeous but quiet morning at Myers Point
today was a molting female-type RED-BREASTED MERGANSER off the point. It
swam over and sat on the rocks by the lighthouse for a few minutes, then
continued over and sat on the marina point. Very strange bird here in the
summer
Solitary adult Mute Swan cruising majestically north, close to shore along
Elm Beach, Town of Romulus. Uninterested in local Mallards and two female
Common Mergansers onshore.
On Thu, May 23, 2013 at 8:05 PM, Tilden Chao wrote:
> Today, May 23, my dad and I went for an early morning
>
Today, May 23, my dad and I went for an early morning
before-school run to Myers Point. We saw Jay McGowan's post to the list,
and were hoping to find the Laughing Gull, etc. As soon as we arrived at
Myers, we were greeted with the sight of Ann Mitchell and Dave Nutter, who
helped us spo
I was at Myers Point for a couple hours this morning (7:20-9:40), and
although I didn't see anything particularly exciting, the difference in
waterfowl I saw compared to Ethan et al at the Loon Watch was interesting.
A fairly large flock of mixed diving ducks was on the lake straight off the
point
To all Cayugabirders,
Regarding Jay's post about the cutting on Salt Point (north side of the
creek across from Myers park):
Our newly elected Lansing town board member Katrina Binkewicz has found
out that the town highway dept has been directed to do extensive cutting
on Salt Point. We are
Myers was pretty cold and dull this morning, with very few waterfowl
migrating. Lots of gulls were on the spit but nothing out of the ordinary
(although on Tuesday I had a surprising *4* 1st-cycle Lesser Black-backed
Gulls with the other gulls on the spit!) The highlight today was a very
late juven
Myers Point was fairly quiet this morning, with very few waterfowl moving
(although lots of loons, as Ethan mentioned.) The female SURF SCOTER and
male LONG-TAILED DUCK continue to give great looks off the marina area, and
a RED-THROATED LOON appeared right off the spit when I moved over to Salt
Po
There were several of us at Myers Point this morning from before sunrise
until about 1:00pm when we went in different directions. A few folks
joining for an hour or two. It was certainly a fun day to be watching
Cayuga Lake
Below is a link to the complete list of birds that we saw at Myers. I
almo
Leach's S-P still working West shore across from Myers Point. Barely visible at
60x. Chris T-H
Myers Point Town Park,
Lansing, NY
East shore of Cayuga Lake
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I watched the lake at Myers Point for an hour this morning (7:10-8:10).
Nothing too exciting. The best bird was probably a SANDERLING that flew by
heading generally north, but flying very erratically, no I'm really sure
where it ended up. It didn't seem to have any interest in stopping on the
spit,
I spent about an hour and a half at Myers Point this morning starting
about 5:45. The biggest highlight was provided by a HORNED GREBE. This
would have been amazing enough given the bird's stunning breeding
plumage, and that it apparently furnishes the latest spring record for
Tompkins County in eB
ts, 4 Mallards, 4-5 Turkey Vultures, A. Crows, and lots of A. Robins
and blackbirds.
Two House Sparrows were taking over a couple Purple Martin houses.
Donna Scott
- Original Message -
From: Ann Mitchell
To: cayugabirds-l
Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2012 7:51 PM
Subject: [cayugabi
At Myers Point today were many PIPITS, TREE, BARN, ROUGH-WINGED, and 2 BANK
SWALLOWS, one RED-THROATED LOON, AND 2 COMMON LOONS. That was between 8:00
and 8:40 A.M.
Ann
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Jessie and I went to Myers for about an hour this morning. There were
a few birds moving up the lake including 2 Red-necked Grebes, 1 Horned
Grebe, a few Common Loons, 26 Red-breasted Mergansers and a few
cormorants and scattered bands of Tree Swallows.
The most unexpected bird was a first-year Ic
2 Western Griebs, one about 1/4 South and the other about 1/4 mile
North of Myers' Point. The one to the North seemed to not have it's neck
fully extended except when it dove. This one was also heard calling.
Also present were WW Scoter, Red-throated Loons and some Lesser Scoters.
Carl & Meg
-
With today's north winds, lots of loons were moving past Myers Point
this morning, mostly quite high. They started pretty much as soon as I
arrived at 7, but by 7:30 there wasn't a loon in the sky. I wasn't
able to pick out any Red-throated from the distant migrating birds,
but a nice adult RED-THR
I've done a lakewatch from Myers Point the last three mornings, but
with south winds I've had little to show for it. Yesterday the best
birds were four LONG-TAILED DUCKS (one female, a pair, and one male,
all flying south), and today a male LONG-TAILED DUCK and an adult
RED-THROATED LOON moving so
>From my morning lakewatch at Myers Point I saw a few birds moving with
the nice light north winds today from 7:00-8:30. Highlights included a
southbound flock of about 130 SNOW GEESE 35 TUNDRA SWANS moving south
down the lake fairly high, calling as they went; a surprising number
of small flocks (
Based on Jay's excellent photo, this bird is clearly different from the late
Baltimore Oriole that I reported from the same location in late October -- I
took my bird to be an adult female.
KEN
Ken Rosenberg
Conservation Science Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
607-254-2412
607-342-4594 (cel
Hi all,
I watched the lake from Myers Point again this morning, joined for a
time by Scott Haber and Kevin Ripka. The wind was from the northwest
and the conditions were much less pleasant than they have been
recently. Luckily, a few birds were around to make up for it. Lots of
loons were moving to
I forgot to mention that after Myers I checked Salt Point, where I found a
late immature male COMMON YELLOWTHROAT, a large flock of goldfinches, and
several American Tree Sparrows.
-Jay
On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 10:03 AM, Jay McGowan wrote:
> Myers Point was fairly quiet this morning. Despite see
Myers Point was fairly quiet this morning. Despite seemingly much better
migration conditions today than yesterday (very calm northwestish wind
instead of strong south), I saw VERY few birds moving, in contrast to
yesterday when dozens of loons and good numbers of geese were moving.
Stupid birds.
I watched the lake from the lighthouse at Myers Point for a couple of
hours this morning. Nothing too remarkable (else I would have posted
before now), but a few nice winter birds. The loon spectacle was
pretty impressive, even with strong south winds, with many birds
moving south (most low over th
After leaving Myers Pt. my last stop in town was East shore Park. My best birds
were two Black Scoters that flew in to feed almost directly across from the
pavilion. They were still there when I left around 11:30.
Gary
On Oct 28, 2011, at 10:08 AM, "Jay McGowan"
mailto:jw...@cornell.edu>> wr
Hi all,
This morning Myers Point had eight times the birders but about a tenth the
birds as yesterday. Before I arrived Bob McGuire had the Red-throated Loon
on the lake to the south of the spit, but we didn't relocated it after the
fog rolled in. He also had a flock of Brant, but no more moved by
://www.birds.cornell.edu/brp
-Original Message-
From: bounce-38202550-3488...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-38202550-3488...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Geo Kloppel
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2011 1:00 PM
To: Cayugabirds-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Myers Point - Black Scoters, Brant
On
On Oct 27, 2011, at 11:44 AM, Jay McGowan wrote:
The highlight was an incredible 2865 BRANT
Wow! I wonder if they just kept going? The cloud ceiling in West
Danby has hovered just a couple hundred feet obove the valley floor
all morning, but there doesn't seem to be any fallout...
--
I had a great morning at Myers Point, though I was disappointed that no one
else showed up to enjoy the spectacle with me. The highlight was an
incredible 2865 BRANT moving south in flocks of anywhere from 15 to over
600, starting a few minutes after I got there at 7:50 and continuing
(although som
A flock of 14 BLACK SCOTERS (mostly males with at least one female trailing)
just flew south low over the lake past Myers Point. A little earlier I had a
group of 23 GREATER YELLOWLEGS and 125 BRANT.
Jay McGowan
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I arrived at Myers about 6:30 AM to find The park closed -- high water
has covered the spit and parts of the marina, and apparently they were unable
to keep cars from driving off the roadways and ruining the lawns. May be closed
for the next few days at least. I got close to the shore and
Lots of birds at Myers Point too. The highlight is the staggering number of
HORNED GREBES. I have counted *237*, mostly in groups of 40 or so. Also 6
RED-NECKED GREBES, 5 PIED-BILLED GREBES, 38 LONG-TAILED DUCKS, 2
WHITE-WINGED SCOTERS, 6 NORTHERN SHOVELERS, 5 GREEN-WINGED TEAL, 4 AMERICAN
WIGEON,
I stopped at Myers Point mid-morning today, and birds were moving everywhere on
the still-warmish and cloudy north winds. It was hard to decide where to look,
and although I didn't see very large numbers, the variety was good. Every time
I looked back towards the east, I could see flocks of BLU
Hi all,
This morning was fairly quiet at Myers with few shorebirds (1 Killdeer). The
biggest highlight was a flock of 23 NORTHERN PINTAIL heading southeast over
the lake. There was also a fairly steady push of Blue Jays, mostly small
flocks totaling about 70 birds for the morning. The number of gu
Of course I can't say for sure what brought it in, but we had an unexpected
GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET this morning. Haven't seen any of these since spring
migration.
David McCartt
Tubbs Hill Rd.
Richford
--- On Thu, 8/5/10, Tom Johnson wrote:
From: Tom Johnson
Subject: [cayugabird
Cayugabirders,
I stopped by Myers Point on Cayuga Lake in Lansing early this morning.
A Pectoral Sandpiper and a Lesser Yellowlegs were feeding in the
puddles on the lawn and a Greater Yellowlegs flew by. It would be
interesting to know if anything stopped in with the passage of the
front.
Good b
Cayugabirders,
I poked around Myers Point for a while this morning before I became
thoroughly soaked, and ended up seeing a few birds despite (or perhaps
due in part to) the rain. Clear migrants included 3 Least Sandpipers
running nervously around on the spit and my first Cliff Swallow here
since
Cayugabirders,
I saw a few interesting birds at Myers Point in Lansing this morning.
A few shorebirds included Semipalmated Plover (2) and a flyby Dunlin.
The "one that got away" was a medium Sterna tern that *might* have
been an adult Arctic Tern that I watched pass from south to north
along the w
Cayugabirders,
I got to Myers Point in Lansing early this morning and stayed from
5:30-7:30 AM. Highlights among 58 species were single passing
Black-bellied Plover and White-rumped Sandpiper (this bird flew in and
stayed for half an hour with a few Least Sandpipers before heading out
to the north
Hi all,
I had a long day of birding today, apparently basking in the last of the
wintery weather. I started at Dryden Lake, about which I already posted: 18
Ruddy Ducks, 2 Long-tailed Ducks (m&f), 2 American Wigeon (m&f), 1
Bonaparte's Gull, 2 Bufflehead, 4 Wood Ducks, and no swallows.
Next Georg
At Myers Point this morning I have seen 2 Caspian Terns, 2 Red-necked
Grebes, 2 White-winged Scoters, many Tree, Barn, and Northern Rough-winged
Swallows, 2 Osprey, and 21 Bonaparte's Gulls flying north up the lake...so
far.
Jay McGowan
Dryden, NY
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Hi all,
I went to Myers earlier today and had quite a few birds. Here is my eBird
report. Note that the comments are mostly for my own use and those about
when birds were last reported are based on what people have reported to
eBird. It is very easy for anyone to go in and see high counts, dates
s
A quick stop at Myers and Salt points (0710-0810) this morning produced a
few interesting birds:
Canada Goose (800)
American Wigeon (16)
Northern Pintail (2)
Green-winged Teal (15)
BLACK SCOTER (6; 3 drakes, 3 female-plumaged birds; flying N up the lake)
Pied-billed Grebe (only 5)
Double-crested C
Location: Myers Point
Observation date: 10/13/09 (7:25 - 8:10am)
Notes: Certainly the best duck day yet of the fall with several
new fall arrivals for me in Tompkins county. OBSERVERS: Chris Wood,
Jessie Barry, and Jeff Gerbracht. WEATHER: Overcast. 43F. Calm. No
precipitation, but dri
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