[cayugabirds-l] Frontenac Island Cormorants

2019-05-13 Thread John and Fritzie Blizzard
It is with great alarm to report & dismay to have seen that hundreds of 
cormorants have taken up residence on the ground & in the trees of 
Frontenac Island, Cayuga Lake, Union Springs, NY.


The island is owned by the village of Union Springs & I seriously doubt 
the village fathers have any idea of what this invasion means. Just last 
mo. there was mention of what the village could do to enhance the 
condition & beauty of the island. THAT thought was BEFORE the cormorants 
descended.


Do any readers have knowledge of what the  village can do to try to get 
the invasives to leave or where to seek help?  Yrs. ago there was great 
concern, esp. by fishermen & fishing guides when the birds took up 
residence on the eastern islands of Lake Ontario, initially Little 
Galloo. Besides the fact that the birds eat great numbers of fish,  it's 
been reported that their fecal matter is so acidic that it kills any 
plant, above or below water that is lands on. On the little islands on 
Lake Ontario, wildlife specialists (?) & helpers were eventually given 
permission to cover the eggs with a soap solution (I believe) to prevent 
them from hatching.


My earlier hope that the cormorants were migrating through was 
thoroughly,  finally, dashed this evening just before dark when I went 
to the boat launch & saw the hundreds of birds there with more coming in 
to roost. I fear they will also invade the areas around Mud Lock & MNWR.


Fritzie B.,

Union Springs






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Re:[cayugabirds-l] cayugabirds-l digest: May 13, 2019

2019-05-13 Thread Laurie Rubin
Another first for south side. A male indigo bunting at my feeder off and on
all afternoon. Four sightings!

On Mon, May 13, 2019 at 12:03 AM Upstate NY Birding digest <
cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu> wrote:

> CAYUGABIRDS-L Digest for Monday, May 13, 2019.
>
> 1. first ever here
> 2. Crow relationship  Union Springs
>
> --
>
> Subject: first ever here
> From: "Judith W. Jones" 
> Date: Sun, 12 May 2019 12:56:58 +
> X-Message-Number: 1
>
> 2 male rose breasted grosbeaks at my downtown southside feeder gorging
> on sunflower seeds
>
>
> --
>
> Subject: Crow relationship  Union Springs
> From: John and Fritzie Blizzard 
> Date: Sun, 12 May 2019 23:14:54 -0400
> X-Message-Number: 2
>
> This Mother's Day a.m. I saw a crow in our choke cherry tree & assumed
> it was an adult from the nest in the nearby spruce trees.
>
> Here, let me say that only once in the last mo. have I heard any cawing
> from any crows so I presume they are quiet during nesting so as to not
> provoke any smaller birds into attacking them.
>
> Almost immediately,  another crow joined the first & they seemed to
> really snuggle closely together in the steady rain.  I noticed the one
> on the right seemed to be doing something to the head of the other. They
> both turned so they were sideways to me. The one on the right appeared
> to be grooming the feathers on the top of the head of the one on the
> left.  I could see, with binoculars, that the feathers were definitely
> being lifted up & then were smoothed back down as the grooming continued.
>
> This continued at least 5 min. & was quite interesting to watch. WHAT
> was going on???  Anyone have an answer? I have no idea if the birds were
> mates or family members since for many yrs.  a family of 3 to 7 has
> faithfully come to check out what compost I throw on the garden. Seems
> too soon for the eggs to have hatched & have a bird the size of an adult
> already.
>
> Just another mystery of Nature.
>
> Fritzie,
>
> Union Springs,  where it's wet & getting wetter!
>
>
>
>
> ---
>
> END OF DIGEST
>
>

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[cayugabirds-l] Syracuse RBA

2019-05-13 Thread Joseph Brin

RBA




*New York
   
   - Syracuse
   - May 06, 2019
   - NYSY 05. 06. 19

Hotline: Syracuse Area Rare Bird Alert

Dates: April 29 - May 06,  2019

To report by email: brinjoseph AT yahoo DOT com

Reporting upstate counties: Onondaga, Oswego, Madison, Oneida, Herkimer, 
Cayuga, Montezuma Wildlife Refuge and Montezuma Wetlands complex

compiled: May 06 AT 2:00 p.m. EDT

compiler: Joseph Brin

Onondaga Audubon Homepage: www.onondgaaudubon.org







Greetings: This is the Syracuse Area Rare Bird Alert for the week on April 29, 
2019




Highlights:




RED-THROATED LOON

RED-NECKED GREBE

LEAST BITTERN

SNOWY EGRET

BLACK SCOTER

GOLDEN EAGLE

SANDHILL CRANE

PIPING PLOVER

BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER

STILT SANDPIPER

UPLAND SANDPIPER

WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER

SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHER

WILSON’S PHALAROPE

LITTLE GULL

BLACK TERN

FORSTER’S TERN

WHIP-POOR-WILL

RED-HEADED WOODPECKER

SWAINSON’S THRUSH

CERULEAN WARBLER

ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER

FOX SPARROW

CLAY-COLORED SPARROW

GRASSHOPPER SPARROW

ORCHARD ORIOLE

EVENING GROSBEAK













Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge (MNWR) and and Montezuma Wetlands Complex 
(MWC)

   




     5/6: PROTHONOTARY WARBLERS continue at the forested area of Armitage Road. 
They have been seen entering nest boxes with nesting material.

     5/11: A WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER was see along the Wildlife Drive.  A SNOWY 
EGERT was seen also along the Wildlife Drive. It was relocated on the 13th. 2 
BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT HERONS were seen from Towpath Road. 2 SANDHILL CRANES were 
seen at Carncross Road. 6 Shorebird species including 2 SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHERS 
were seen at Carncross Road.

     5/12: 3 BLACK TERNS were seen at Mays Point Pond. 12 were seen at North 
Spring Pond. 8 Warbler species including CERULEAN were seen at VanDyne Spoor 
Road. 5 BLACK TERNS were also seen.

     5/13: A STILT SANDPIPER was seen along the Wildlife Drive. A WILSON’S 
PHALAROPE was found at the Visitor’s Center.







Cauyga County






     5/8: A GOLDEN EAGLE was seen from Farden Road near Rair Haven

     5/11: 2 RED-HEADED WOODPECKERS were seen at the camping area at Fair Haven 
State Park. A RED-THROATED LOON was seen at West Barrier Bar Park.







Derby Hill Bird Observatory






     Derby had a big day on 5/6 with 13,489 Hawks counted. 12,276 were 
BROAD-WINGED HAWKS. The rest of the week was rather dismal for Hawk counting 
with only three days with birds counted and a total of only 1,392 hawks 
recorded. Other highlights were 5 GOLDEN EAGLES, SANDHILL CRANE, RED-HEADED 
WOODPECKER, EVENING GROSBEAK and WHIP-POOR-WILL.







Oswego County






     5/7: A LITTLE GULL was seen at the Phillips Point Lake watch on Oneida 
Lake. Also seen were a BLACK SCOTER and 13 RED-NECKED GREBES. 7 EVENING 
GROSBEAKS were seen at a feeder in Constantia. A WHIP-POOR-WILL was heard at a 
traditional spot on Roosevelt Road north of Oneida Lake.

     5/8: A GRASSHOPPER SPARROW has returned to a traditional spot at Carley 
Mills south of Parrish.

     5/10: A late FOX SPARROW was see at Sunset Bay Park on Lake Ontario. Also 
seen there were a RED-HEADED WOODPECKER, a SWAINSON’S THRUSH and 14 species of 
Warbler.

     5/11: A RED-HEADED WOODPECKER was seen on Lake Street in Pulaski. A 
CERULEAN WARBLER was found at Phillips Point on Oneida Lake.

     5/13: A CLAY-COLORED SPARROW was seen on Lake Road near Sunset Bay Park on 
Lake Ontario.







Onondaga county






     5/6: 5 BLACK-TERNS were seen from the West Shore Trail on Onondaga Lake. A 
GRASSHOPPER SPARROW was see at Cedar Bay in Fayetteville.

     5/7: A WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER was seen aat the Gerber Topsoil Farm south 
of Bridgeport.

     5/10: A possible PROTHONOTARY WARBLER was heard on Bridge Street in East 
Syracuse.

     5/11: A LEAST BITTERN was heard at Dewitt Marsh on Fisher Road. A 
RED-HEADED WOODPECKER was seen on Citation Way in Pompey. An ORANGE-CROWNED 
WARBLER was seen at St. Mary”s Cemetery in Syracuse. 







Madison County






     5/11: A FORSTER’S TERN was seen and photographed on Woodman Pond north of 
Hamilton. An ORCHARD ORIOLE was seen on Ditchbank Road north of Canastota.







Oneida county






     5/9: A late FOX SPARROW was seen on Brown Tract Road near Forestport.

     5/10: 15 species of Warblers and a SWAINSON’S THRUSH were found at Spring 
Farm Nature Sanctuary south of Clinton.







Herkimer county






     EVENING GROSBEAKS are still hanging on at a residence on Military Road 
north of Dolgeville.

     5/8: A GRAY-CHEEKED THRUSH was seen near Butler Lake north of Hinckley. 
Another, or possibly the same one was see in the same location of 5/12.




        







  End Transcript












Joseph Brin

Region 5

Baldwinsville, NY, 13027, USA




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[cayugabirds-l] Lab of Ornithology's Monday Night Seminar next week (May 20th)

2019-05-13 Thread Sarah Wagner
Hello All,

Dr. Alan Poole will be giving next week's Monday Night Seminar. Please help
us spread the word and I hope to see you there!

These seminars are free and open to the public.

Sarah

*Monday Night Seminar*
May 20, 7:30 p.m.
Cornell Lab auditorium

*Speaker*: Dr. Alan Poole, Retired Editor: Birds of North America, Cornell
Lab of Ornithology

*Title*: Ospreys Across the Pond–A European Osprey Tour

*Description:* The extraordinary revival in Osprey numbers that we are
witnessing here in North America has not been restricted to our shores.
Nearly eliminated from most of Europe half a century ago, Ospreys are
staging a remarkable comeback there as well—from Scotland to Spain and from
France to Finland. Follow local Osprey expert Alan Poole as he leads us
along on a 3-week summer trip through Europe, visiting Osprey researchers
and gathering material for his recently published book: Ospreys: The
Revival of a Global Raptor. Part travelogue, part natural history—this
beautifully illustrated lecture will give us glimpses of Europe through an
Osprey lens. Come celebrate the revival of a global raptor! This event is
free and open to the public. Join us in person in the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology's auditorium, or watch online

.

After his presentation Alan will do a book signing for *Ospreys: The
Revival of a Global Raptor, *which will be available in our gift shop.

Sarah K Wagner, Ph.D.
Public Information Specialist
Cornell Lab Of Ornithology
sk...@cornell.edu
sarahkwagner.com

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] first ever here

2019-05-13 Thread AB Clark
HI all

I just want to note that 
a) I have had more males than usual but that means 3, plus several females- in 
a rural area- and 
b) Bluewing bird listers in Broome have sent out 3 or 4 messages about 
unusual/rare/first time visits from RB grosbeaks at their in-town feeders.

Hearing both lists with similar reports is like hearing echoes!

> On May 13, 2019, at 11:27 AM, Deborah Schmidle  wrote:
> 
> Although I don't live downtown, I live about 5 minutes from Cornell. I have 
> had a male at my feeder for over a week now. I think I have seen one maybe 
> three times in the past 15 years and then it was usually only for a day.  I 
> have never had one stay for so long. A real treat. 
> From: bounce-123609273-46471...@list.cornell.edu 
>  
>  > on behalf of Muhammad 
> Arif mailto:mna...@live.com>>
> Sent: Monday, May 13, 2019 11:04 AM
> To: Judith W. Jones; CAYUGABIRDS-L
> Subject: RE:[cayugabirds-l] first ever here
>  
> I had one male on Saturday morning at my fall creek home. He wasn’t eating 
> the seeds and just seemed to be resting. This is the second time I’ve seen a 
> rose-breasted grosbeak at my house in the last 5 years – so, they are 
> definitely rare in downtown areas.
>  
> --
> muhammad arif
> https://www.instagram.com/arif.photos/ 
> 
> http://facebook.com/m.arif.photos/ 
> https://mainetomiami.wordpress.com 
>  
> From: bounce-123606997-77717...@list.cornell.edu 
>  
>  > on behalf of Judith W. 
> Jones mailto:j...@cornell.edu>>
> Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2019 8:56:58 AM
> To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
> Subject: [cayugabirds-l] first ever here
>  
> 2 male rose breasted grosbeaks at my downtown southside feeder gorging 
> on sunflower seeds
> 
> 
> --
> 
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> 
> 3) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/CAYU.html 
> 
> 
> Please submit your observations to eBird:
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> --
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Re:[cayugabirds-l] first ever here

2019-05-13 Thread Deborah Schmidle
Although I don't live downtown, I live about 5 minutes from Cornell. I have had 
a male at my feeder for over a week now. I think I have seen one maybe three 
times in the past 15 years and then it was usually only for a day.  I have 
never had one stay for so long. A real treat.

From: bounce-123609273-46471...@list.cornell.edu 
 on behalf of Muhammad Arif 

Sent: Monday, May 13, 2019 11:04 AM
To: Judith W. Jones; CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: RE:[cayugabirds-l] first ever here


I had one male on Saturday morning at my fall creek home. He wasn’t eating the 
seeds and just seemed to be resting. This is the second time I’ve seen a 
rose-breasted grosbeak at my house in the last 5 years – so, they are 
definitely rare in downtown areas.



--
muhammad arif
https://www.instagram.com/arif.photos/

http://facebook.com/m.arif.photos/
https://mainetomiami.wordpress.com




From: bounce-123606997-77717...@list.cornell.edu 
 on behalf of Judith W. Jones 

Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2019 8:56:58 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] first ever here

2 male rose breasted grosbeaks at my downtown southside feeder gorging
on sunflower seeds


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RE:[cayugabirds-l] first ever here

2019-05-13 Thread Muhammad Arif
I had one male on Saturday morning at my fall creek home. He wasn’t eating the 
seeds and just seemed to be resting. This is the second time I’ve seen a 
rose-breasted grosbeak at my house in the last 5 years – so, they are 
definitely rare in downtown areas.



--
muhammad arif
https://www.instagram.com/arif.photos/

http://facebook.com/m.arif.photos/
https://mainetomiami.wordpress.com




From: bounce-123606997-77717...@list.cornell.edu 
 on behalf of Judith W. Jones 

Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2019 8:56:58 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] first ever here

2 male rose breasted grosbeaks at my downtown southside feeder gorging
on sunflower seeds


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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Crow relationship .... Union Springs

2019-05-13 Thread Suan Hsi Yong
Re allopreening: strangely I have only ever observed this among some
critically endangered Bali Myna at the Hong Kong Aviary:

  http://suan-yong.com/hong-kong.php?s=Aviary=21442

What I found more fascinating than the allopreening was that the bird on
the left had the muscular dexterity to lift those neck feathers in that way.

Suan

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RE: [cayugabirds-l] Crow relationship .... Union Springs

2019-05-13 Thread Kevin J. McGowan
It's called "allopreening," and it's common among crow family members. I have 
some photos and a little video of it at
https://get.google.com/albumarchive/101683745969614096883/album/AF1QipOTOn8uYT5okqlVFuupJF3oZ9GirfXeONgUKOYY

All members of the genus Corvus allopreen, so far as I know. Oddly, none of the 
jays do. When I worked on Florida Scrub-Jays I noticed that they could really 
have used allopreening. In the winter they would get ticks engorged on the back 
of their heads where an individual cannot groom. And, it appeared that the 
ticks carried important diseases, too. So they could have benefitted from 
allopreening.

Kevin


Kevin J. McGowan
Project Manager
Distance Learning in Bird Biology
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850
k...@cornell.edu
607-254-2452


 
Do you know about our other distance-learning opportunities? Visit Bird 
Academy, https://academy.allaboutbirds.org/courses/  to see our list of courses.




-Original Message-
From: bounce-123607715-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of John and Fritzie 
Blizzard
Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2019 11:15 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Crow relationship  Union Springs

This Mother's Day a.m. I saw a crow in our choke cherry tree & assumed it was 
an adult from the nest in the nearby spruce trees.

Here, let me say that only once in the last mo. have I heard any cawing from 
any crows so I presume they are quiet during nesting so as to not provoke any 
smaller birds into attacking them.

Almost immediately,  another crow joined the first & they seemed to really 
snuggle closely together in the steady rain.  I noticed the one on the right 
seemed to be doing something to the head of the other. They both turned so they 
were sideways to me. The one on the right appeared to be grooming the feathers 
on the top of the head of the one on the left.  I could see, with binoculars, 
that the feathers were definitely being lifted up & then were smoothed back 
down as the grooming continued.

This continued at least 5 min. & was quite interesting to watch. WHAT was going 
on???  Anyone have an answer? I have no idea if the birds were mates or family 
members since for many yrs.  a family of 3 to 7 has faithfully come to check 
out what compost I throw on the garden. Seems too soon for the eggs to have 
hatched & have a bird the size of an adult already.

Just another mystery of Nature.

Fritzie,

Union Springs,  where it's wet & getting wetter!


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