We had great looks at a very vocal BARRED OWL, 8:40 p.m.
Severinghaus trail, approaching Sapsucker Woods Road.
Diane Morton
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I spent a looonnngg time at Lindsay-Parsons today, first an hour before sunrise on the west side of 34/96 by Sylvan Dr, then almost 7 hours on the east side, hiking south from Station Rd, then descending and walking the trails. I never heard any Worm-eating Warblers, but the highlight of the day wa
I downloaded the owl sounds and the only two that pop are Eastern Screech and
Long-Eared.
The Eastern Screech’s descending call was higher pitched than I recall and more
tremulous and I don’t recall the whinny.
The Long-Eared had the right pitch but had none of the descent.
Granted, I only hear
Last night, there was a slight push of migrants over Etna, NY, following the
strong storm system that passed through the region earlier in the evening. Not
super high numbers, but a nice mix.
Between 9:40pm-4:15am. I was recording and listening the entire night (well,
most of the listening was
I’m new to the group. My name is Rose, I live in rural upstate New York,
Chenango County.
This morning, approximately 3:15 a.m., I heard what I believe is an owl.
I heard a series of single descending hoots, each lasting no more than a
second, separated by about 2-3 seconds before the next si