Could someone more learned than I - which is just about anyone -
interpret what is happening on radar right now & what it might mean for
tomorrow morning? I'm hoping good things ...
Thanks!
Alicia
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My House Wren has returned, singing up a storm. It must be quite disappointed
to see his normal home occupied by the House Sparrows. I put up a new house by
an evergreen it favors. Hope it will take.
Diana
Diana Whiting
dianawhitingphotography.com
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Easy come, easy go!! Sunday night droves of WHITE-THROATED SPARROW
migrated in, to the point that we had 50+ in our yard. Last night they
decided it was time to move on. This morning I counted only a single
bird!! Such a sudden turnaround is enough to make one's head spin!!!
We also had 3
FOY American Redstart male on Lansing Station Road in place I saw them last
year. also, Field sparrow up above in the big meadow/thicket area. Lone Barn
Swallow zipping from around tall trees then over lake shore.
Earlier a female Wild Turkey pecking bird seed in front yard; I don't usually
ha
Hummingbird reported down "here" in Castle Creek yesterday, on Broome listserv
On May 1, 2013, at 8:48 AM, Laura Stenzler wrote:
> Hi all,
> On Sunday, Braam Bezuidenhout had a hummingbird coming to his feeders, as
> well as an Oriole. This is in the Ellis Highlands, east of Ithaca and off
>
HI everyone,
While photographing in the Cornell Plantations Arboretum this morning, I came
across a leucistic Chipping Sparrow in essentially the same spot where I'd seen
it last fall (when it was part of a flock). The bird gives the appearance of
being almost all white at first sight, but it h
Jay wrote:
> Migrants seem very slow today
Yeah, the satellite last night showed mass movements here and west of
here and southwest (all the way to Georgia and Texas), but almost
nothing due south of us -- i.e., many birds left us to go north, but
few from south of us came up.
I'd been looking at
This morning I made fairly quick stops at Myers Point and Stewart Park.
Highlights at Myers included a Dunlin, Lesser Yellowlegs, Least Sandpiper,
Green Heron, Nashville Warbler, Palm Warbler and a flock of Bonaparte's Gulls
heading north. The full checklist is here:
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/
Not much new around my place in West Danby either. One BLACK-THROATED BLUE
WARBLER, one NASHVILLE WARBLER, a lone HOUSE FINCH...
OVENBIRDS are more numerous, a WINTER WREN continues to sing down where my
property adjoins the L-P Preserve, lots of PURPLE FINCHES are about, and a
SHARP-SHINNED HA
Hi all,
On Sunday, Braam Bezuidenhout had a hummingbird coming to his feeders, as well
as an Oriole. This is in the Ellis Highlands, east of Ithaca and off Ellis
Hollow Rd.
I just learned of this, therefore the late posting.
Laura
Laura Stenzler
Lab Manager
Fuller Evolutionary Biology Progra
Migrants seem very slow today (Hawthorns were all but dead and Sapsucker
Woods isn't much better), but Livia and I just had nice looks at a BARRED
OWL with a mouse up on the Severinghaus Trail between the Wilson Trail
intersection and the trailhead on the road. It was up in the canopy on the
west s
I was holding out hope that the lingering Common Redpolls at our feeders
would last into May, and although they haven't yet put in an appearance
today, a small flock of six Pine Siskins was a nice consolation prize,
along with a female Rose-breasted Grosbeak.
-Scott
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