In the Lindsay-Parsons Biodiversity Preserve on Wednesday morning at about
7:30 AM, Annie Wexler and Tony Gaenslen found a bird that we all believe
was a YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT. Annie provided the following details to me by
phone.
The bird was in the island of brush and trees at the bottom of
Thought this AM would be heavier, after viewing the radar loop, but in
addition to the more common species we had our first Eastern Wood Pewee
and Alder Flycatcher at around 7 followed by a very loud Scarlet
Tanager. New warblers were nil.
--
John and Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel
Heard a Pewee up on West Hill in the city.
Welcome!
Regi
"Love the animals, love the plants, love everything. If you love everything,
you will perceive the divine mystery in things." Dostoyevsky.
--
Cayugabirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsWELCOME
Just photographed a low close silently foraging swainson's thrush in the
hawthorn orchard's "crossroad piazza" along the north trail. It was moving
south.
Earlier had an uncooperative singing hooded which I think I saw fly away into
the distance, and I can hear tennessee, alder flycatcher,
First for me this year, several EASTERN WOOD-PEWEE singing on Hoyt-Pileated.
Also saw NASHVILLE at power line cut, NORTHERN WATERTHRUSH(es) at Woodleton,
heard singing BROWN CREEPER (still), numerous Common Yellowthroat and Ovenbird.
Followed HAIRY WOODPECKER to the underside of a large high
I'm an unskilled bird watcher but I listened to the Internet and discovered
a black billed cuckoo calling next to my garden this AM
On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 7:35 AM, Mark Chao wrote:
> Birding has been very slow for me in Sapsucker Woods so far on Wednesday.
> Despite my usual
Sorry for not catching the annoying auto-correct in my last message -- I
meant Yellow-rumped Warblers, not more interesting yellow-billed birds.
It is still beautiful here, with several singing Scarlet Tanagers, more
Veeries than I've found previously, and my first Eastern Wood-Pewee of the
Birding has been very slow for me in Sapsucker Woods so far on Wednesday.
Despite my usual rather wide coverage, I've found about one-tenth of the
volume and diversity of yesterday's passage migrants --today, only one
Rusty Blackbird, a couple of Yellow-billed Warblers, a female
Black-throated
Join the Montezuma Audubon Center this Saturday, May 20 from 1:30 p.m.– 4:00
p.m. for a relaxing 2-mile paddle to explore the Seneca River around Howland’s
Island. The water is up and the weather is warming which should make for
perfect conditions to explore the largest population of breeding