[cayugabirds-l] Gyrfalcom per Tim Lenz, 928am

2015-02-22 Thread Dave Nutter
gray GYRFALCON on pole, Stahl Rd off Seyboldt, Canoga, Fayette Township, 
Seneca County

--Dave Nutter
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Gyrfalcom per Tim Lenz, 928am

2015-02-22 Thread Meena Madhav Haribal
?For those who are not on RBA,


According to Dave Nutter Gyrfalcon flew from Stahl rd a couple of miles but 
dropped as if landingat 11.13 AM.  But in which direction I don't know.



Meena Haribal
Ithaca NY 14850
42.429007,-76.47111
http://www.haribal.org/
http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/
Ithaca area moths: https://plus.google.com/118047473426099383469/posts
Dragonfly book sample pages: http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf




From: bounce-118847349-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
bounce-118847349-3493...@list.cornell.edu on behalf of Dave Nutter 
nutter.d...@me.com
Sent: Sunday, February 22, 2015 9:36 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Gyrfalcom per Tim Lenz, 928am

gray GYRFALCON on pole, Stahl Rd off Seyboldt, Canoga, Fayette Township, Seneca 
County

--Dave Nutter

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[cayugabirds-l] gyrfalcon No:pheasants yes

2015-02-22 Thread M K Mannella
We did indeed scour Stahl/Seybolt/Martin road area this afternoon with no sign 
of the gyrfalcon. 
At the corner of Stahl and Seybolt we did see about nine male and female 
RINGNECKED PHEASANTS foraging in a field and close to the road. Somewhat 
unusual and surprising (is that a pheasant farm there?) but nonetheless 
beautiful to see a group of them.  

Michele
Ovid
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 On Feb 22, 2015, at 5:32 PM, Jay McGowan jw...@cornell.edu wrote:
 
 Stahl/Seybolt/Martin road area this afternoon with no sightings as

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[cayugabirds-l] Gyrfalcon west of Canoga this morning

2015-02-22 Thread Dave Nutter
When I turned from Seyboldt onto Stahl Rd at 10:46am, Tim Lenz was still there, 
recently joined by Garrett MacDonald and Rose Swift, and they had a scope aimed 
at the bird, which had moved from a roadside pole to a tree in the northern 
part of the farmyard, about 1/6 mile from us. The gray GYRFALCON was very 
cooperative, and sat quietly, looking around, bobbing its head, preening, and 
glaring at the occasional crow which had the nerve to fly close. After several 
minutes, and for no obvious reason, it flew NE about 1/3 mile, crossing 
Seyboldt Rd so low it had to swoop up to avoid a passing car, and then perched 
atop a utility pole, where it stayed a few more minutes. Then it flew NE then 
NW slowly climbing and occasionally circling until it was hard for me to 
discern through binoculars, but with directions I was able to refind it through 
Garrett's scope. After I handed off the scope, he said the bird stooped, then 
leveled off going westerly, and the last he saw, it appeared to possibly be 
about to land. This was far to our north, somewhere in the vicinity of the 
Fingerlakes Regional Airport, but when I drove around that area and near the 
Lott Farm I did not find it. Perhaps it found the gulls attractive at the 
Seneca Meadows landfill, but I did not go there. Or maybe it was on the ground 
eating a Ring-necked Pheasant, of which I saw 10 in the neighborhood.

This was a massive falcon, so broad in the body as to make the head appear 
small compared to its more familar congeners. The rounded tail was considerably 
longer than the sharply-pointed folded wingtips. The plumage was a lovely light 
gray all above, with numerous narrow white lines barring the tail. The back 
feathers also had very fine white edges or points on them. It had a complete 
helmet of similar pale gray, highlighted by the white throat and by a narrow 
bar of white just above the light-colored, black-tipped bill. There was also a 
narrow white horizontal mark on either side of the nape. The facial pattern was 
very subtle, but there was a a slightly darker gray vertical mark extending 
down in front of the eye and a narrow slightly darker line extending back from 
the eye. I never saw the underside completely but did see some narrow dark 
barring near the base of the undertail coverts and on the flanks which were 
otherwise white. When it flew away it showed a white flash from the underside 
of the primaries on the bottom of each downstroke, but this was well in from 
the wingtips.

This was only the second time I've seen a Gyrfalcon well enough to count it, 
and the first time in the Cayuga Lake Basin. Many thanks to Tim for getting the 
word out and to Garrett  Rose for sharing the scope (mine is off being 
repaired).

In addition to Tim (who left before the falcon did), Garrett,  Rose, there was 
also another couple who stayed in their car whom I did not recognize, and a 
fellow from downstate who was in Weedsport when he got the message on 
Cayugabirds-L and arrived in time to see the bird from Seyboldt or Cemetery 
Road. A car of Cornell students was also cruising around the Fingerlakes 
Regional Airport when I was, and later Ann Mitchell  Gary Kohlenberg went 
looking, but I assume by their silence that they did not share my good fortune.

By the way I DID say which way it flew (see below). I often find that 
re-reading text messages is helpful, as I have also overlooked information when 
relaying a text alert to the listserve.

--Dave Nutter

From Tim Lenz text to CayugaRBA, 9:28am:
Gray GYRFALCON perched on phone pole on Stahl rd (off of Seybolt rd) Seneca Co.

From me to CayugaBirds Listserve, 9:36am:
gray GYRFALCON on pole, Stahl Rd off Seyboldt, Canoga, Fayette Township, Seneca 
County

From me texted to CayugaRBA, 11:13am:
Gyrfalcon flew north from Stahl Rd a couple miles but dropped as if landing.


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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Tufted Duck, Ladoga Pt., Lansing

2015-02-22 Thread Jay McGowan
Chris Stanger reported the Tufted Duck to eBird in the same area this
afternoon:
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S22025808

Many observers scoured the Stahl/Seybolt/Martin road area this afternoon
with no sightings as far as a I am aware of the Gyrfalcon.

On Sat, Feb 21, 2015 at 8:40 AM, Jay McGowan jw...@cornell.edu wrote:

 An adult male TUFTED DUCK, undoubtedly the same seen several weeks ago at
 the south end, is sleeping in the Aythya flock looking east off of Ladoga
 Point just east of Myers Point in Lansing on Cayuga Lake.

 Jay




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Macaulay Library
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
jw...@cornell.edu

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[cayugabirds-l] today

2015-02-22 Thread joe Diana
Hi All,

It felt good to drive around today with the windows down and the sun shining. I 
thought I might let people know where there is some open water with some birds. 
Mud Lock is quite free of ice and a person with a scope had his eye on a 
Long-tailed Duck. There were a few Red-breasted Mergansers and an Eagle was in 
the tree near the nest.  I didn't stay as the driveway is not plowed, but there 
were other waterfowl as well. A later stop in the day had hardly any birds. 
Must be the Eagle is hunting there. The damn on the Clyde River off of Route 89 
had quite a few birds at the foot of the damn which is the only open water. 
There were Common Mergansers, Golden Eyes, Herring Gulls, Red-headed Ducks, 
Red-breasted Mergansers, and 4 Great-blue Herons that looked like they were 
enduring the cold. A Red-tail joined in when I was leaving. I passed a 
Rough-legged hawk on Route 89 near Tyre and found a beautiful dark morph on 
Armitage Rd. near the Eagle's nest. I think I saw an eagle there too, but I was 
concentrating  on the Rough leg. I came upon a small flock of Turkeys on Leader 
Rd. that were eating sumac. One was up in the trees shaking some down for the 
rest. I did not find the Gyrfalcon.

As much as today felt like a gift, I bet the wildlife was grateful for some 
sun. Here is a photo of the Rough-legged Hawk.

http://www.dianawhitingphotography.com/Galleries/Birds/Birds-of-Prey/13273665_3ptKMG#!i=3893769030k=TX2HMgF

Diana Whiting





























Diana Whiting 

http://www.dianawhitingphotography.com/


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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Gyrfalcon west of Canoga this morning

2015-02-22 Thread Meena Madhav Haribal
​Yes Dave you did mention north  in the message, it was my brain that missed 
reading that word. I read that when I re-read the message second time!

 I was going to mention that but I forgot as I was doing something else.


Meena



Meena Haribal
Ithaca NY 14850
42.429007,-76.47111
http://www.haribal.org/
http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/
Ithaca area moths: https://plus.google.com/118047473426099383469/posts
Dragonfly book sample pages: http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf




From: bounce-118848316-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
bounce-118848316-3493...@list.cornell.edu on behalf of Dave Nutter 
nutter.d...@mac.com
Sent: Sunday, February 22, 2015 6:46 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Gyrfalcon west of Canoga this morning

When I turned from Seyboldt onto Stahl Rd at 10:46am, Tim Lenz was still there, 
recently joined by Garrett MacDonald and Rose Swift, and they had a scope aimed 
at the bird, which had moved from a roadside pole to a tree in the northern 
part of the farmyard, about 1/6 mile from us. The gray GYRFALCON was very 
cooperative, and sat quietly, looking around, bobbing its head, preening, and 
glaring at the occasional crow which had the nerve to fly close. After several 
minutes, and for no obvious reason, it flew NE about 1/3 mile, crossing 
Seyboldt Rd so low it had to swoop up to avoid a passing car, and then perched 
atop a utility pole, where it stayed a few more minutes. Then it flew NE then 
NW slowly climbing and occasionally circling until it was hard for me to 
discern through binoculars, but with directions I was able to refind it through 
Garrett's scope. After I handed off the scope, he said the bird stooped, then 
leveled off going westerly, and the last he saw, it appeared to possibly be 
about to land. This was far to our north, somewhere in the vicinity of the 
Fingerlakes Regional Airport, but when I drove around that area and near the 
Lott Farm I did not find it. Perhaps it found the gulls attractive at the 
Seneca Meadows landfill, but I did not go there. Or maybe it was on the ground 
eating a Ring-necked Pheasant, of which I saw 10 in the neighborhood.

This was a massive falcon, so broad in the body as to make the head appear 
small compared to its more familar congeners. The rounded tail was considerably 
longer than the sharply-pointed folded wingtips. The plumage was a lovely light 
gray all above, with numerous narrow white lines barring the tail. The back 
feathers also had very fine white edges or points on them. It had a complete 
helmet of similar pale gray, highlighted by the white throat and by a narrow 
bar of white just above the light-colored, black-tipped bill. There was also a 
narrow white horizontal mark on either side of the nape. The facial pattern was 
very subtle, but there was a a slightly darker gray vertical mark extending 
down in front of the eye and a narrow slightly darker line extending back from 
the eye. I never saw the underside completely but did see some narrow dark 
barring near the base of the undertail coverts and on the flanks which were 
otherwise white. When it flew away it showed a white flash from the underside 
of the primaries on the bottom of each downstroke, but this was well in from 
the wingtips.

This was only the second time I've seen a Gyrfalcon well enough to count it, 
and the first time in the Cayuga Lake Basin. Many thanks to Tim for getting the 
word out and to Garrett  Rose for sharing the scope (mine is off being 
repaired).

In addition to Tim (who left before the falcon did), Garrett,  Rose, there was 
also another couple who stayed in their car whom I did not recognize, and a 
fellow from downstate who was in Weedsport when he got the message on 
Cayugabirds-L and arrived in time to see the bird from Seyboldt or Cemetery 
Road. A car of Cornell students was also cruising around the Fingerlakes 
Regional Airport when I was, and later Ann Mitchell  Gary Kohlenberg went 
looking, but I assume by their silence that they did not share my good fortune.

By the way I DID say which way it flew (see below). I often find that 
re-reading text messages is helpful, as I have also overlooked information when 
relaying a text alert to the listserve.

--Dave Nutter

From Tim Lenz text to CayugaRBA, 9:28am:
Gray GYRFALCON perched on phone pole on Stahl rd (off of Seybolt rd) Seneca Co.


From me to CayugaBirds Listserve, 9:36am:
gray GYRFALCON on pole, Stahl Rd off Seyboldt, Canoga, Fayette Township, Seneca 
County

From me texted to CayugaRBA, 11:13am:
Gyrfalcon flew north from Stahl Rd a couple miles but dropped as if landing.


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