1. We had a screaming NOGO in the SW corner of the basis this morning! We
had one quick visual and a good fifteen minutes of " audio". Nothing quite
like a mouthy Gos!
2. Our sector of the Watkins CBC on Saturday was the worse in the 37 years
we have done it. This year also Marked our 50th year
Just north of the village of Aurora; one quick sighting; one clear sighting.
One hen and one rooster down. When I scared it off the rooster, it flew east;
it might be worth looking for it on Sands Road. Both birds were killed in the
afternoon, right in the east side of my open shed. I will
Heartly concur John. Count me as a bander who has both noted this and had
research
muddled by such exact descriptions.
john
--
John and Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel Haven Avian Migration Observatory
5373 Fitzgerald Road
Burdett,NY 14818-9626
N 42 26.611' W 76 45.492'
Website:
Hopefully this is not taking this outside the interest of many on the list but:
I am curious to know the evidence on reduced nesting success in goshawks, in
part because it is really important to know what such evidence would look like.
John, can you direct those of us who might want to follow
As a follow-up to Anne's request, I'd also love to hear about any evidence
showing that Goshawks are on territory in January, and that flushing
from low cover is a typical behavior of a Goshawk on territory and
susceptible to disturbance.
-Scott
On Fri, Jan 16, 2015 at 2:17 PM, Anne Clark
I'm just suggesting that an overdoes of caution for the sake of a
species that is known to be adverse to human disturbance is worth
considering. The evidence for goshawk nest abandonment that I know about
is limited but real. I doubt that at this time of year that there would
be any impact on
John C.,
I'm still trying to figure out how we know Goshawks to be adverse to
human disturbance. Anecdotal evidence is nice, as is your research on
Golden-winged Warblers, but actual cited research on Northern Goshawks
reports the following:
*Disturbances associated with research are usually of
-- Forwarded message --
From: Joshua Snodgrass cedarsh...@gmail.com
Date: Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 11:24 AM
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Northern Goshawk Fingerlakes National Forest,
Schuyler Co.
To: Donna Scott dls...@me.com
Heading west on Searsburg rd (Co. rd. 1), turn left
Foster Pond is a small parking lot on the left Side Of Potomac Rd going north
from
227. It is not in the CLB but in the SLB.
--
John and Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel Haven Avian Migration Observatory
5373 Fitzgerald Road
Burdett,NY 14818-9626
N 42 26.611' W 76 45.492'
Website:
[mailto:bounce-118706019-3493...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Donna Scott
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2015 11:15 AM
To: Joshua Snodgrass
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Northern Goshawk Fingerlakes National Forest,
Schuyler Co.
Where is Foster Pond, please?
Sent from my iPhone
Donna
Where is Foster Pond, please?
Sent from my iPhone
Donna Scott
On Jan 14, 2015, at 6:19 PM, Joshua Snodgrass cedarsh...@gmail.com wrote:
I went birding at Foster Pond this afternoon, because high twenties feels
like spring compared to the last few days. Past the frozen pond and down
Of Donna Scott
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2015 11:15 AM
To: Joshua Snodgrass
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Northern Goshawk Fingerlakes National Forest,
Schuyler Co.
Where is Foster Pond, please?
Sent from my iPhone
Donna Scott
On Jan 14, 2015, at 6:19 PM, Joshua Snodgrass
cedarsh
:* CAYUGABIRDS-L
*Subject:* Re: [cayugabirds-l] Northern Goshawk Fingerlakes National
Forest, Schuyler Co.
HI Folks,
The barn door is open or the cat is out of the bag, BUT I HAVE A
CONCERN ABOUT DESCRIBING LOCATIONS OF N GOSHAWK WHEN THEY ACT SOMEWHAT AS
IF THEY HAD A TERRITORY. Northern
HI Folks,
The barn door is open or the cat is out of the bag, BUT I HAVE A
CONCERN ABOUT DESCRIBING LOCATIONS OF N GOSHAWK WHEN THEY ACT SOMEWHAT
AS IF THEY HAD A TERRITORY. Northern Goshawk are known among banders who
climb to hawk nests to frequently abandon a nest, especially early in
I went birding at Foster Pond this afternoon, because high twenties feels
like spring compared to the last few days. Past the frozen pond and down
Backbone trail I ventured into the brushy field to get a better look at
some waxwings when I flushed a Northern Goshawk from low cover. Life Bird!
She
We birded Lindsay-Parsons this morning, and watched the Clay-colored
Sparrow for quite a while, which was singing cooperatively from an open
perch next to the blue trail at NE corner of field, as described by
others.
We met Gary K. as we were leaving, and he suggested that the bog area on
Bald
Nice !
A while after you guys left I was birding the brush just before the RR woods
and got a quick glimpse of what I first thought might be a Buteo, but the tail
was too long so I put it down as Accipiter sp. gliding toward the Pinnacles.
This would have been about the right time to coincide
Hi All,
I went to Summer Hill in hopes of seeing Evening Grosbeaks, but no luck. I
turned onto Dresser Road from Salt Road. (Dave Nutter and I saw a deer
carcass there a week ago.) When I drove by it, the deer looked pretty well
picked clean. There were no birds around. Hmmm. I drove down the
At 12:30 a Northern Goshawk was soaring north from the Hammond Hill area. It
was an adult.
Ann Mitchell
--
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