Hawthorn Orchard Update: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns today?

2020-05-17 Thread Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
Hi Laura and everyone,

Yesterday morning, Scott Anthony and I spent a bunch of time there.

Birds were foraging mostly in the flowering pear trees and apple trees. Only a 
very few hawthorns (Crataegus sp.) were visible with blossom buds about to pop. 
Most are still in initial leaf-out stages. With the warm moist weather, we can 
see a burst of activity through the next 2-3 days.

Best birds were: 1 adult male Golden-winged Warbler, 2 Brewster’s Warblers 
(hybrids), 1 Wilson’s Warbler, 1 Yellow-billed Cuckoo (flyby), and a Lincoln’s 
Sparrow.

Also, any recent visits to the Hawthorn Orchard and East Ithaca Recreation Way 
can be found here:

https://ebird.org/hotspot/L122418/activity?yr=all&m=

Below is our eBird checklist from yesterday with some details noted.

Please conduct and submit an eBird checklist for the official eBird Hotspot 
"Hawthorn Orchard and East Ithaca Rec. Way” should you make a visit, and please 
attempt to submit a “complete checklist."

Hawthorn Orchard and East Ithaca Rec. Way, Tompkins, New York, US
May 16, 2020 9:17 AM - 1:27 PM
Protocol: Traveling
1.511 mile(s)
59 species (+2 other taxa)

Canada Goose  2
Mallard  2
Mourning Dove  2
Yellow-billed Cuckoo  1 Flyby in NE corner, by pear tree with mayapples 
growing around it. Bird was sleek, long-tailed, and long winged. Large white 
tail-tip spots, bordered by black interior edging to the outer tail feathers. 
Rust coloration on top of wings.
Killdeer  2
Turkey Vulture  3
Sharp-shinned Hawk  1 Adult. Carrying fresh kill, dropped into Hawthorn 
Orchard to eat.
Red-tailed Hawk  2
Red-bellied Woodpecker  1
Downy Woodpecker  1
Hairy Woodpecker  3
Pileated Woodpecker  1 Foraging and calling from dead log on ground along 
West side of fire hydrant clearing at the NW corner of the Hawthorn Orchard 
property.
Least Flycatcher  8
Great Crested Flycatcher  1
Eastern Kingbird  1
Red-eyed Vireo  1
Blue Jay  13
American Crow  2
Black-capped Chickadee  5
Tufted Titmouse  2
Tree Swallow  1
Barn Swallow  10
Ruby-crowned Kinglet  1
House Wren  2
Carolina Wren  3
European Starling  10
Gray Catbird  16
Wood Thrush  6
American Robin  8
House Sparrow  4
Purple Finch  1
American Goldfinch  6
White-crowned Sparrow  1
White-throated Sparrow  8
Savannah Sparrow  1
Song Sparrow  4
Lincoln's Sparrow  1 Central portion of Eastern edge, near NE corner, but 
in the Hawthorn Orchard. Dainty, crested-looking sparrow, with delicate 
streaking on buffy sides. Buff malar stripe. Gray face with tiny beady eye. 
Skulking behind branches about 15 feet up. Camera-shy...
Eastern Towhee  2
Bobolink  1
Baltimore Oriole  6
Red-winged Blackbird  6
Brown-headed Cowbird  4
Common Grackle  2
Ovenbird  2
Northern Waterthrush  1
Golden-winged Warbler  1 Adult male seen well, and poorly photographed, 
silently foraging in a blooming pear tree in the NW corner, just East of the 
small white pine grove that is East of the clearing with the fire hydrant. Gray 
body, black throat, black mask, gold-colored wing bars. Associating with clean 
male Blue-winged Warbler and Nashville Warbler.
Blue-winged Warbler  2
Brewster's Warbler (hybrid)  2 Two Brewster’s Warblers. One with a male 
Blue-winged Warbler near interior NW corner. Earlier there was a singing 
“winged” warbler doing a classic high, thin “bzee-dzzt-dzzt-dzzt” song three 
times, in the Northeast corner, moving East toward the hedgerow along the 
softball field outfield. Later, the singing “winged” warbler was heard again 
along the hedgerow and seen well as a Brewster’s Warbler.
Nashville Warbler  4
Common Yellowthroat  4
American Redstart  1
Magnolia Warbler  1
Blackburnian Warbler  1
Yellow Warbler  3
Chestnut-sided Warbler  1
Pine Warbler  1 Singing distantly from Cemetery white pines on other side 
of Mitchell St from Hawthorn Orchard property.
Black-throated Green Warbler  1
Wilson's Warbler  1 Male foraging low along Trail in Northeast corner. 
Non-vocal.
warbler sp. (Parulidae sp.)  8
Northern Cardinal  7
Rose-breasted Grosbeak  2

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/checklist/S69152895

Good birding!!


Sincerely,
Chris T-H


On May 16, 2020, at 8:39 PM, Laura Stenzler 
mailto:l...@cornell.edu>> wrote:

Did anyone bird the Hawthorn orchard today?

Laura

Laura Stenzler
l...@cornell.edu

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--
Chris Tessaglia-Hymes
PO Box 488
8 Etna Lane
Etna, NY 13062
607-351-5740


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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns today?

2020-05-16 Thread Laura Stenzler
Did anyone bird the Hawthorn orchard today?

Laura

Laura Stenzler
l...@cornell.edu

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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns - ID Guide

2019-05-20 Thread Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
This is indirectly related to birds, in that the insects the birds are feeding 
upon (such as leafrollers, or Tortricidae moth larvae, which may have irruptive 
cycles), may predominantly be found on the leaves of certain species of 
hawthorns. If one could identify the species of hawthorns in your back yard, 
neighborhood, town park, or birding patch, and if we had a better understanding 
of the insect ecology or lifecycle, or other external factors such as weather, 
we may better be able to predict which hawthorns may be a desirable foraging 
species for neotropical migratory birds on any given year.

On the topic of identifying different species of hawthorns, I recently stumbled 
upon an excellent reference guide to identifying hawthorn tree species. While 
visiting the Collectors’ Corner at the Friends of the Library Book Sale in 
Ithaca, I found and purchased a signed copy of Haws: A guide to Hawthorns of 
the Southeastern United States. This book is an amazingly detailed 518 page 
one-of-a-kind field guide with various dichotomous keys, tons of color 
photographs, full of species descriptions and the natural history of hawthorns. 
This book does wonders toward dispelling the myth and previous notion that 
hawthorns are only a complex mass of cross-bred and unidentifiable hybrids.

If interested, I found the author’s main site where you can obtain a hard copy: 
http://www.floramontivaga.com/about-us.html

E-books are available from various sites, including Amazon (Kindle): 
https://www.amazon.com/Guide-Hawthorns-Southeastern-United-States-ebook/dp/B00OPNWFEM

Hopefully this guide may be useful to those who wish to tease apart the 
hawthorn ID mystery, as it relates to neotropical migratory bird foraging 
strategies.

Good birding!

Sincerely,
Chris T-H

--
Chris Tessaglia-Hymes
PO Box 488
8 Etna Lane
Etna, NY 13062
607-351-5740


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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns and Ithaca street trees

2019-05-20 Thread Karen Edelstein
Dave...the city maintains an online database and interactive map of its
13,000+ trees. Hopefully this will be helpful in determining your hawthorn
variety (advance apologies. ..it does not seem optimized for mobile devices
so I can't absolutely verify).
https://www.cityofithaca.org/253/Tree-Inventory-GIS

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[cayugabirds-l] hawthorns today?

2019-05-16 Thread Laura Stenzler
Has anyone been to the Hawthorn orchard today (Thursday 5/16)? Our yard is 
hopping with migrants this morning so I wonder what's up at our local migrant 
trap?

Laura


Laura Stenzler
l...@cornell.edu

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns Today

2017-05-16 Thread Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
Bob, et. al.,

I didn’t arrive until later this morning, but the best birding was restricted 
to the oak trees along the North ravine edge. Most birds seem to be feeding 
among the oak leaf clusters. Very few birds were down in the hawthorns, as of 
yet. It was a cold start to the morning, too. I imagine that tomorrow will be 
the first real push of migrants into this area, with favorable conditions 
overnight tonight and possibly tomorrow night as well.

Below is my eBird checklist, with highlights being Philadelphia Vireos, Cliff 
Swallow, Cape May Warblers, Bay-breasted Warblers, Tennessee Warblers, and 
Canada Warbler.

Canada Goose  2
Great Blue Heron  1 Distant circling bird
Turkey Vulture  2
Red-tailed Hawk  2
Herring Gull  1
Mourning Dove  1
Chimney Swift  1
Red-bellied Woodpecker  2
Downy Woodpecker  1
Least Flycatcher  3
Great Crested Flycatcher  1
Philadelphia Vireo  3 Foraging in oak trees along North ravine edge.
Red-eyed Vireo  2 Foraging in oak trees along North ravine edge.
Blue Jay  9
American Crow  3
Tree Swallow  4
Barn Swallow  4
Cliff Swallow  1 This was a surprise sighting. Presumed migrant, flying 
well above treetop level, headed ENE.
Black-capped Chickadee  5
Tufted Titmouse  2
White-breasted Nuthatch  1
House Wren  1
Carolina Wren  1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet  1
Wood Thrush  2
American Robin  16
Gray Catbird  13
Northern Mockingbird  1
European Starling  11
Tennessee Warbler  3
Nashville Warbler  1
Common Yellowthroat  4
American Redstart  1
Cape May Warbler  2 Foraging in oak trees along North ravine edge. Both 
appeared to be females.
Magnolia Warbler  4
Bay-breasted Warbler  2 Foraging in oak trees along North ravine edge. Male 
birds.
Blackburnian Warbler  3
Yellow Warbler  4
Chestnut-sided Warbler  1 Probably a first year bird, plumage was 
predominantly "fall"-type, which was surprising.
Black-throated Blue Warbler  1 Foraging in oak trees along North ravine 
edge. Female.
Black-throated Green Warbler  1 Foraging in oak trees along North ravine 
edge. Male
Canada Warbler  1 Male singing low in hedgerow in Northeast corner.
Song Sparrow  2
Scarlet Tanager  2
Northern Cardinal  7
Rose-breasted Grosbeak  1
Indigo Bunting  1 Flyover migrant
Red-winged Blackbird  4
Common Grackle  2
Brown-headed Cowbird  3
Baltimore Oriole  8 Several foraging and singing birds around, including 
visible redetermined migration.
House Finch  2
American Goldfinch  5
House Sparrow  3

Good birding!

Sincerely,
Chris T-H



On May 16, 2017, at 9:51 AM, bob mcguire 
mailto:bmcgu...@clarityconnect.com>> wrote:

Most of the action in the Hawthorn Orchard this morning was in the NE corner - 
best observed from the edge of the softball field. Birds of most interest 
included:

Black-and-white Warbler 2
Nashville Warbler 2
Mourning Warbler (singing) 1
American Redstart 1
Magnolia Warbler 2
Blackburnian Warbler 1
Chestnut-sided Warbler 1
Black-throated Green Warbler 2
Canada Warbler (singing) 1
Yellow Warbler 4

In addition there were several Wood Thrushes (both calling and singing), Least 
Flycatchers, and a “traill’s” - type flycatcher which never vocalized for me.

As I was leaving I noticed Chris T-Hymes heading into the tangle and now 
eagerly await his report.

Bob McGuire
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Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes
Field Applications Engineer
Bioacoustics Research Program, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, New York 14850
W: 607-254-2418   M: 607-351-5740   F: 
607-254-1132
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/brp


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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns Today

2017-05-16 Thread bob mcguire
Most of the action in the Hawthorn Orchard this morning was in the NE corner - 
best observed from the edge of the softball field. Birds of most interest 
included:

Black-and-white Warbler 2
Nashville Warbler   2
Mourning Warbler (singing)  1
American Redstart   1
Magnolia Warbler2
Blackburnian Warbler1
Chestnut-sided Warbler  1
Black-throated Green Warbler 2
Canada Warbler (singing)1
Yellow Warbler  4

In addition there were several Wood Thrushes (both calling and singing), Least 
Flycatchers, and a “traill’s” - type flycatcher which never vocalized for me.

As I was leaving I noticed Chris T-Hymes heading into the tangle and now 
eagerly await his report.

Bob McGuire
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns?

2017-05-11 Thread Brad Walker
Jay and I were there for a bit this morning. Not a huge number of birds,
but migrants (including a/the Orange-crowned Warbler) were around. Here's
our list, with audio:

http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist/S36730992

- Brad

On Thu, May 11, 2017 at 8:23 PM Sandy Podulka  wrote:

> Did anyone go to Hawthorns today?  If so, how was it?  --Sandy
>
>
> --
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> --
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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns?

2017-05-11 Thread Sandy Podulka

Did anyone go to Hawthorns today?  If so, how was it?  --Sandy


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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns, Robins and Waxwings

2017-02-10 Thread Regi Teasley
Hi Folks,
 Do you need a reason to plant Hawthorn trees--apart from the fact that 
they grow fast and Woolly Mammoths won't eat them?
Today we've had a flock of Robins accompanied by a few Waxwings dining on 
the "haws"  or berries.  It makes this winter day much more pleasant.

Regi
"Love the animals, love the plants, love everything. If you love everything, 
you will perceive the divine mystery in things."  Dostoyevsky.


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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns and Neimi Road this morning

2013-05-21 Thread Anne Marie Johnson
The Hawthorns were quiet, but the MOURNING WARBLER was singing at the end 
of the ravine near the pond near the field with the fire hydrant when I 
arrived at 7:45. It stopped by 8:00. Aside from the usual breeders, there 
were two TENNESSEE WARBLERS singing and two BLACKPOLL WARBLERS, one singing 
but invisible moving along the ravine from northeast to southwest and then 
toward the recreation way. The other was very cooperative in the flowering 
trees in front of the tennis center.


Near the ponds on Neimi Road I heard both WILLOW FLYCATCHER (from the 
ponds) and ALDER FLYCATCHER (a little west of the ponds, from the other 
side of the road). An Eastern Bluebird perched on the fence along with the 
swallows.


Anne Marie Johnson


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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns

2012-05-02 Thread Jay McGowan
Just to clarify, the Orange-crowned Warbler in the Hawthorns this morning
was singing softly, which is what first alerted me to its presence, at the
edge of the Hawthorns at the corner of the ravine and the dirt track that
comes up from the pond near the Recreation Way off Mitchell Street (so, the
northwest corner of the Hawthorns.) Highlights were similar to Evan's, with
14 warbler species, including Nashville, Orange-crowned, Blue-winged,
Northern Waterthrush, Black-and-white, Norther Parula, Common Yellowthroat,
Blackburnian, Black-throated Blue, Chestnut-sided, Yellow, American
Redstart, Palm Warbler (10+!), and of course dozens and dozens of
Yellow-rumped. Least Flycatcher, Hermit Thrush, Eastern Towhee, Baltimore
Oriole, and Blue-headed Vireo were also around.

-Jay


On Wed, May 2, 2012 at 8:57 AM, Jay McGowan  wrote:

> Good stuff in the Hawthorns this morning including ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER
> near Mitchell St entrance along gorge, NORTHERN PARULA, and more.
>
> Jay
>



-- 
Jay McGowan
Macaulay Library
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
jw...@cornell.edu

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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns

2012-05-02 Thread Jay McGowan
Good stuff in the Hawthorns this morning including ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER
near Mitchell St entrance along gorge, NORTHERN PARULA, and more.

Jay

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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns Hopping now!

2012-05-01 Thread sbk1
BLACKBURNIAN, CHESTNUT-SIDED,  Black and white, 30 Rumpies, Nashville, 
Blue-winged, Yellow, Common Yellowthroat, ovenbird, Least Flycatcher, 
Blue-headed and Warbling Vireos. Arms tired... Stuart

Sent from my iPhone
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[cayugabirds-l] Hawthorns Sunday morning

2010-05-02 Thread Jay McGowan
The hawthorns are pretty active this morning from 7:50 on. Highlights
include 2+ NORTHERN PARULAS, 1+ TENNESSEE WARBLER, 8-10 Nashville Warblers,
Wilson's Warbler, Palm Warbler, Black-and-white Warbler, American Redstart,
Ovenbird, 20+ Yellow-rumped Warblers, Yellow Warbler, Ruby-crowned Kinglet,
Warbling Vireo, Least Flycatcher, Eastern Kingbird, Great Crested
Flycatcher, Brown Thrasher, and White-throated Sparrows.

Jay McGowan
Dryden, NY

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