My guess (nothing more) is that this may be the same Snow Goose that was
walking about on the grass at Taughannock Point on the afternoon of March 16th.
That goose was pretty clearly unwilling to fly - it held one wing slightly
raised as if injured, and when it became wary of the attention it wa
First some updates & observations, then some thoughts.
Day before yesterday (31 March) the Snow Goose was grazing on the lawn between
the Cayuga Waterfront Trail and Cayuga Inlet still opposite Union Fields in the
morning. Through binoculars I watched from near the pavilion north of the
Childr
As I was walking home at 7:52pm (well after sunset) from Allan Treman on the
Cayuga Waterfront Trail next to Taughannock Boulevard past Cass Park I saw the
Snow Goose, still on the lawn between the trail and Cayuga Inlet. It has worked
its way farther north, opposite Union Fields, and at mid-day
As of 9:07am the Snow Goose is still/again grazing on the lawn between the
Cayuga Waterfront Trail and Cayuga Inlet next to the Children’s Garden and
Taughannock Boulevard (NYS-89). I did not get close, but through binoculars it
looked normal. Runners and walkers pass it without either being bot
Thanks, noted.
On Mar 29, 2023, at 18:39, Dave Nutter wrote:
I saw the Snow Goose a little before 2pm and a little after 6pm in the same
area. It has been grazing and looks alert and healthy. I agree it is unusual to
have a wild goose in such a busily populated place, but the rowing crews, t
I can walk over in the morning and see if it's still there.
Elaina
On Mar 29, 2023, at 18:20, marsha kardon wrote:
I'm wondering whether the bird should be brought to a wildlife rehabilitator or
Perhaps it has avian influenza? Or an injury that isn't visible when
it's standing or wal
I saw the Snow Goose a little before 2pm and a little after 6pm in the same
area. It has been grazing and looks alert and healthy. I agree it is unusual to
have a wild goose in such a busily populated place, but the rowing crews, the
drivers, and most of the pedestrians ignore it, so the bird is
I'm wondering whether the bird should be brought to a wildlife
rehabilitator or Perhaps it has avian influenza? Or an injury that
isn't visible when it's standing or walking? Marsha Kardon
On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 4:51 PM Lanie Wilmarth
wrote:
> I too, saw this bird roughly an hour ago in
I too, saw this bird roughly an hour ago in the exact same location, this
time just sitting.
On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 1:00 PM marsha kardon wrote:
> I just got back from Cass Park and saw the lone snow goose about 10
> minutes ago (and 1 3/4 hours ago in a similar location) in the grass on the
>
I just got back from Cass Park and saw the lone snow goose about 10 minutes
ago (and 1 3/4 hours ago in a similar location) in the grass on the inlet
side not far past the Childrens' Garden. I agree that it looks healthy and
is walking in the grass nibbling, but it seems odd to see it there alone
.cornell.edu
on behalf of Jane Leff
Sent: Sunday, March 13, 2022 6:03 PM
To: Peter Saracino
Cc: Cayuga birds ; eatonbirdingsoci...@groups.io
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Snow goose XU97
ATTENTION: This email came from an external source. Do not open attachments or
click on links from unknow
Monday, March 14, 2022 9:54 AM
To: Cayuga birds
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Snow goose XU97 Update
At least 32 Snow Geese with field-readable neck collars were in the mucklands
flock on Friday. Gregg Dashnau has a complete list in this checklist:
https://ebird.org/checklist/S104632206
With Pete&
At least 32 Snow Geese with field-readable neck collars were in the
mucklands flock on Friday. Gregg Dashnau has a complete list in this
checklist:
https://ebird.org/checklist/S104632206
With Pete's XU97 that makes 33 with others certainly lurking.
Dave Wheeler.
On Sun, Mar 13, 2022 at 9:18 PM Pe
http://pwrc.usgs.gov
North American Bird Banding Programing
Source: an old email of Alyssa Johnson’s that I entered into my contacts.
Janie Leff
On Sun, Mar 13, 2022 at 5:43 PM Peter Saracino
wrote:
> Watching feeding snow geese on Serven Rd. a bit east of Geneva NY. One has
> a yellow neck ring
Ken and I were a bit farther north, doing the waterfowl count at Knox/Marsellus
& Puddlers for the DEC/Refuge folks. Still a lot of ice, but the ducks were
beginning to fill in. There was a report from one of the counters of some
15,000 NOPI at West Loop Road!
Bob
> On Mar 5, 2020, at 8:32 PM,
I was a bit north of you enjoying the many Tundra / Trumpeter Swans along Lower
Lake Road and north of Cayuga Lake State Park.. That WAS an impressive raft of
Snows!
Marie
Marie Read Wildlife Photography
452 Ringwood Road
Freeville NY 13068 USA
e-mail m...@cornell.edu
Website: http://w
It was there again this morning.
Rachel
Sent from my iPhone
> On Aug 25, 2019, at 4:12 PM, Kevin J. McGowan wrote:
>
> I don’t know how long it has been there, but it was there on 21 July, molting
> all its primaries.
>
> Kevin
>
>
>
> From: bounce-123850035-3493...@list.cornell.edu
We saw a single snow goose at the Crane Unit (Van Dyne Spoor Road) for two
weeks in April, then not again until July 2. From late April until last week
we were not surveying around the unit, only from Van Dyne Spoor Road. It is a
large area and it is certainly possible that we just didn't see
I don’t know how long it has been there, but it was there on 21 July, molting
all its primaries.
Kevin
From: bounce-123850035-3493...@list.cornell.edu
On Behalf Of Donna Lee Scott
Sent: Sunday, August 25, 2019 1:50 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Snow goose
At VanDyne Spoor R
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Very cool. Google Maps' Distance Measurement Tool says 3386.87 km, or 2,104.5
miles. (Or 30,866 football fields; or 16,836 furlongs. Look under the Map Labs
link in the left column).
Kevin
From: bounce-50734-3493...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-50734-3493...@list.cornell.edu] On
The location Jeff mentions for the Sora is the same as where I heard one
about 2 weeks ago. Nice to know it may be staying around. The darn bird
did not respond to playbacks on my Big Day. It certainly is not a bird
that I am very fond of.
Cheers,
John
On 5/16/2013 10:50 AM, Jeff Gerbracht wr
On 9 March in the flock of Snow Geese estimated by Chris Wood et al at 123K at the north end of Cayuga Lake, viewed from Lower Lake Rd, Bridgeport, Town of Seneca Falls I noted several yellow neck collars with 4-digit letter/number combinations. I reported the info and learned that all were female
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