[cayugabirds-l] FOY Black-and-white Warbler

2019-04-21 Thread Dave Nutter
On Sunday afternoon (21 April), while checking for Blue-gray Gnatcatchers 
(they’re back!) along the Cayuga Waterfront Trail at the end of Pier Rd between 
Fall Creek and Newman Golf Course by the parking mud for anglers, I also 
encountered a male Black-and-white Warbler working the vine-covered trunk of a 
tree at the south end of the channel on the west side. 

- - Dave Nutter
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[cayugabirds-l] Field Trip Report: Monkey Run South (April 20)

2019-04-21 Thread Liisa S. Mobley
Ten people joined me Saturday morning at Monkey Run.  The downpours from Friday 
night and early Saturday morning had cleared out, and we ended up with no rain, 
but a cold, damp day.  We headed first to look at a winter wren singing near 
the parking lot, plus a yellow-bellied sapsucker drumming on a telephone pole.  
Then we went to look for the ruffed grouse we heard nearby -  Suan had sent me 
a video clip of the ruffed grouse drumming, with instructions to find it on a 
bright green, moss-covered log near the parking area.  We found the log, not 
the bird.
We continued on our way upstream, and found that some of the trails were now 
tiny streams, and some of the creeks were a bit high from the rains the night 
before.  We saw several ruby-crowned kinglets, and a large flock (40) of cedar 
waxwings.  We were able to make good progress until about a half mile up we 
reached a usually easy-to-cross creek that was now 3-4 feet deep!  Lacking a 
bridge or a boat, we headed back the way we came, then continued to follow the 
path downstream, noting Canada geese, wood ducks, and common mergansers.
Now veering away from Fall Creek, we headed slowly up the muddy, 
tree-root-covered hill towards a pine grove - lots of action here - a 
blue-headed vireo, a pine warbler, a yellow-rumped warbler, a ragged-looking 
raven flying close overhead, and at least three people heard a black-throated 
green warbler.  At the top of the hill, we encountered another winter wren 
foraging under and over logs near a small creek, and heard brown creepers 
singing; we then curved around to head back through the woods, and entered 
woodpecker territory - we saw multiple yellow-bellied sapsuckers and northern 
flickers.  We made our way back to the parking area, but stopped to see if we 
could locate the ruffed grouse - no luck, again!  Overall, we saw 30 species in 
2 hours, 45 minutes, according to the eBird list that Diane entered.  All in 
all, I think everyone had fun, despite the mud and high water!
eBird list here: https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S55166828

-Liisa


Liisa Mobley


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[cayugabirds-l] FOY green heron

2019-04-21 Thread anneb . clark
In the Hile School Rd wetland today. 

Sent from my iPhone

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[cayugabirds-l] Fwd: Yellow Throated Warbler at South End of Lake Trail at Sampson SP, Seneca Cty

2019-04-21 Thread Alicia
Dave Kennedy reports that at 8:40 this morning, there was a 
yellow-throated warbler feeding just inside the gate to the Sampson 
Lakeshore Trail next to the parking lot just north of Willard Town Park. 
8:40 a.m. cayugaBirds rejected his email so he asked me to post it, but 
unfortunately, I just got that message, which he sent to me at 9:30 - 
apologies to all for the delay.


I'm a little confused actually about what happened when Dave sent the 
message to CayugaBirds.  It showed up in my email so I went over to the 
Lakeshore Trail and hunted for the YT Warbler between 9:20-10:20. Didn't 
conclusively refind it although got a tantalizing glimpse of a warbler 
that had a gray back and white on its wing (did not see the head or 
breast), and what seemed like an appropriate chip note, just opposite 
the southernmost bench at ~10:10.  I had been chasing the chip sounds 
for a few minutes but it flew east before I got more than that glimpse.  
At 10:20 Jay McGowan & Livia Santana were looking, perhaps they'll have 
an update?


Alicia



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[cayugabirds-l] Brown Thrasher

2019-04-21 Thread Donna Lee Scott
FOY BROWN THRASHER singing in tree on Benson Rd in Lansing.
South of  house #128.

Donna Scott
Lansing
Sent from my iPhone

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[cayugabirds-l] American Bittern Wildlife Drive Sunday morning

2019-04-21 Thread John VanNiel
American Bittern at the last bit of water before exiting the MNWR Wildlife 
Drive just now.

Dr. John Van Niel
Professor of Environmental Conservation
Director, East Hill Campus
Finger Lakes Community College 
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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Undeliverable: Yellow-throated warbler

2019-04-21 Thread Dave K


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From: Dave K 
To: Cayugabirds 
Subject: Yellow-throated warbler
Thread-Topic: Yellow-throated warbler
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[cayugabirds-l] Towhees

2019-04-21 Thread W Larry Hymes
We had 3 TOWHEES this morning.

Larry

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[cayugabirds-l] Evening Grosbeaks and other observations

2019-04-21 Thread Andrew David Miller
This morning while running along Midline Rd there was a small flock of Evening 
Grosbeaks feeding in small fruit trees about 1/10th of a mile past Hunt Hill Rd 
as you head towards Irish Settlement on the left side of the road.  There were 
at least 10 females and 2 stunning males.

Other birds heard or seen in the area of Ringwood and Midline this morning were 
numerous Ruby crowned kinglets, eastern towhees, field sparrows, house wrens 
(new arrivals last night), two pileated woodpeckers, and the usual assortment 
of common birds.

At least three Pine siskens continue to visit our feeders along with our usual 
families of purple finches and goldfinches.  A single red breasted nuthatch 
also remains a constant visitor.  Fox, song, chipping, and white-throated 
sparrows are numerous in numbers at the feeder area.

Cheers-
Andrew Miller



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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Common yellowthroat, Salmon Creek

2019-04-21 Thread Karen Edelstein
Bob McGuire has gently corrected me that after I shared a recording with
him, it truly was a Carolina wren. Dang. Sorry about that false alarm. What
a stinker...

On Sat, Apr 20, 2019, 6:49 PM Karen Edelstein  wrote:

> This morning, and for 3-4 days prior, I've been hearing common
> yellowthroats singing in the woods behind my house (Salmon Creek Valley,
> Lansing). In past years, they've also arrived on the early side, yet
> hearing one singing by (or before) April 20th seemed a little odd. But this
> morning, the bird was right outside my bedroom window, and very loud. I
> checked it against the song on eBird (first recording on the list) and it
> was identical--basically counter-singing to what was outside. I'm 100% sure
> on this one.
>

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