RE:[cayugabirds-l] three swans a-swimming

2010-12-22 Thread Kevin J. McGowan
Looks like a family of Tundra Swans.  Everyone has prominent eyes and rather 
short, kind of up-turned bills.  The dark neck and face indicates a young of 
the year.

Kevin


-Original Message-
From: bounce-7597918-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
[mailto:bounce-7597918-3493...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Elaina McCartney
Sent: Wednesday, December 22, 2010 6:13 PM
To: Cayugabirds
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] three swans a-swimming

I'm curious about the ID and/or age of the swan with the bluish-gray neck on
the left in this picture (taken from pretty far away, north of Hog Hole).

http://www.flickr.com/photos/emccartney/5283349692/


Elaina






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[cayugabirds-l] OT Great Chickadee Challenge-Ithaca Christmas Bird Count

2010-12-22 Thread Linda Orkin
*Christmas Bird Count Ithaca Update-January 1 Count Date*


Great Chickadee Challenge


*Black-capped chickadees!!*  We are looking for as many as we can find. Our
tally last year of 3,334 was good enough to place us first in the US, but
Edmonton, AB beat us with 4,683. Our high tally was 3,962 recorded on
1Jan2007. *Let’s see if we can repeat our US high and go for the North
American record this year.*


Let’s get as many people as possible out this year counting. Find Chickadees
and the other species will follow!! For people that are comfortable with
playback, several of our area’s  most excellent birders recommend this as a
technique that will bring chickadees (and associates) in from everywhere.


We are providing an iTunes audio file that can be downloaded and then played
back from your iPod, iPhone or iTouch. Playing this 5-minute recording of
chickadees mobbing an Eastern Screech-owl is guaranteed to increase your
counts of chickadees and many other species and help to get a more accurate
count of what is really out there.


Just email me with a request for the file. It will be sent back to you as an
attachment and plays on Quicktime and if you download, opens in iTunes.


All we ask is that you use this tool judiciously and ask for instruction if
you need to. This is being offered with the realization that many people may
have some hesitation or distaste for this method of birding.  In the context
of a count such as this, it can be very useful.


*If you have been unsure about volunteering, now is the time.  *Just get in
touch as per the information below.


You will be starting your New Year off with a new commitment to the birds
and the totality of the wonderful natural world that surrounds us and is
ours to protect and cherish.


Thanks in advance,


Linda


Information follows:


A reminder, we need all hands on deck for our annual Christmas Bird Count
held, as has become traditional, on Jan.1.   *Please consider becoming a
part of this. * Here is the link to the information included last week
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/cayugabirdclub/christmasbirdcount.htm

We need you and we want you.  If you are intimidated by any aspect of this
count, please get in touch with me, Linda,  so I can  reassure you. You do
not need to count all night, or all day. You can cover any assigned
territory in a way that is convenient and fun for you  You do not need to be
an expert, although some familiarity with resident winter birds may make you
feel more confident. I am currently trying to line up experienced counters
who may be willing to have you along so that you are primed and ready to do
this on your own next year.  Let me hear from you.

Here is a link to our Ithaca count from last year.
http://audubon2.org/cbchist/count_table.html  Can we do better? More
people?  More birds? More areas covered? Join in!!!

Link to full text of article:
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/cayugabirdclub/christmasbirdcount.htm


Here is a brief description of the areas. If you live in or near any of
them, or if you have some special fondness for the place,  take some part
of it on. Make it your own.  All of the areas can use counters.  Some areas
are more in need than others.  But no one will be turned away. Let me know
where you want to go, I'll get you in touch with the area leader.  It's
easy!!!



Area I

West Dryden, Hile School Road area. Open fields, secondary growth fields,
and woodlots. Possible Merlin, White-winged Crossbills, blackbirds, and
sparrows.

Area II

Fall Creek area, Mount Pleasant. Woodlands and fields. Good for turkeys,
hawks, and herons.

Area III

The linear park in Dryden, Beam Hill, and Yellow Barn Road. Pine and spruce
forests, good for winter finches.

Area IV

Ellis Hollow area, Snyder Hill, Ringwood. Woodlands and fields. Good for
hawks, turkeys, bluebirds, sparrows, owls, and finches.

Area V

Six Mile Creek gorge, Brooktondale area. Our largest area, good birding and
hiking. Possible turkey and grouse.

Area VI

Danby area, Finger Lakes Trail, and Buttermilk Falls. Noted for wintering
bluebirds and robins.

Area VII

West side of Cayuga Lake, Bostwick Road, Mecklenberg Road. Good for
waterfowl, including all three species of merganser.

Area VIII

Cornell campus, Cayuga Heights, and Stewart Park. Good for rare birds, Fish
Crows, and gulls.

Area IX

East side of Cayuga Lake, Lansing area. Fields, woodlots. Waterfowl and
field birds, including Northern Shrike and Short-eared Owl.

Call me, 279-4253, email me, wingmagi...@gmail.com.  I am waiting to hear
from you and the area leaders are looking forward to your wonderful help.

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[cayugabirds-l] Fwd: [Ontbirds] Redpolls Are Coming

2010-12-22 Thread joe Diana
Thought this might be of interest. No Redpolls at my feeder yet!  Diana

Begin forwarded message:

 From: Jean Iron jeani...@sympatico.ca
 Date: December 22, 2010 2:29:49 PM EST
 To: birdal...@ontbirds.ca
 Subject: [Ontbirds] Redpolls Are Coming
 
 I've had recent questions asking, When are the redpolls coming to
 southern Ontario? In the Winter Finch Forecast posted on 23 September
 2010, I reported that this would be an irruption winter for redpolls.
 See link below.
 
 At noon today there were three Common Redpolls calling in the trees
 above Jean Iron's feeders at 9 Lichen Place in Toronto. They eventually
 joined the goldfinches at the nyger feeders. Redpolls haven't come south
 for several winters so they have a learning curve about using feeders.
 Some older birds remember feeders.
 
 Redpolls are arriving later this winter compared to the previous
 irruption in 2007-8 when they arrived in numbers in October and
 November, feeding first in weedy fields because there was no birch seed.
 This winter the birch seed crop is better than in 2007-8 but it's not
 great, so redpolls have been slower in moving south as seed supplies
 diminish in the north. Gert Trudel of Gowganda said she had their first
 Common Redpoll at their feeders on 27 November and had seen a few on the
 roads before that, but within the next 10 days flocks increased around
 Gowganda. On the 15 December on their way home from Sudbury, they saw
 hundreds on the road after a big storm. Redpolls are increasing in
 southern Ontario as shown by recent Christmas Bird Counts. More are
 coming. Watch for Greater Common Redpolls (larger darker subspecies
 rostrata) and Hoary Redpolls.
 
 Evening Grosbeaks are moving south in larger numbers than I expected
 this winter. Because of their scarcity in the last 2-3 decades, I know a
 top young birder who has never seen one. This is the winter. Evening
 Grosbeaks are eye popping birds.
 
 Winter Finch Forecast 2010-2011
 http://www.ofo.ca/reportsandarticles/winterfinches.php
 
 Ron Pittaway
 Minden, Ontario
 
 
 ___
 ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial 
 birding organization.
 Send bird reports to birdal...@ontbirds.ca
 For information about ONTBIRDS visit http://www.ofo.ca/
 


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