Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hermit thrushes and insects

2015-04-17 Thread Sandie Doran

Thank you for the email. I too am going to order the book. I forwarded the link 
to colleagues at US Fish  and Wildlife too. 
Sandie Doran 


 On Apr 16, 2015, at 10:56 PM, Melanie Uhlir mela...@mwmu.com wrote:
 
 I was also astounded to see Odonates of various kinds when I visited 
 Sapsucker Woods on Monday to see the Great Egrets. In fact, I was so 
 surprised that I thought I was imagining them until several flew by at very 
 close range. I am going to purchase Meena's book!! I didn't even realize 
 Odonates were migratory!
 
 -Melanie
 
 On 4/16/2015 4:31 PM, Geo Kloppel wrote:
 Meena's wonderful book (link below) gives some info on migration of odonates 
 (page 117). Green Darner is one of the long distance migrants. Maybe these 
 darners that are showing up now hatched in the deep south, or even in 
 Veracruz, and came north on more-or-less the same timetable as the 
 Broad-winged Hawks.
 
 http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf
 
 -Geo
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[cayugabirds-l] Hermit thrushes and insects

2015-04-16 Thread Geo Kloppel
Hermit Thrushes seem quite numerous in my area today, belying the québécois 
name: Grive Solitaire.

I glimpsed a chocolate brown butterfly this morning that I presume was a 
Mourning Cloak.

At 3:00 this afternoon, as I was hauling rocks with the tractor, I was very 
surprised to see a big (3) darner fly by. Common Green Darner, I suppose...

-Geo Kloppel, West Danby
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hermit thrushes and insects

2015-04-16 Thread Geo Kloppel
Meena's wonderful book (link below) gives some info on migration of odonates 
(page 117). Green Darner is one of the long distance migrants. Maybe these 
darners that are showing up now hatched in the deep south, or even in Veracruz, 
and came north on more-or-less the same timetable as the Broad-winged Hawks.

http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf

-Geo 
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hermit thrushes and insects

2015-04-16 Thread Melanie Uhlir
I was also astounded to see Odonates of various kinds when I visited 
Sapsucker Woods on Monday to see the Great Egrets. In fact, I was so 
surprised that I thought I was imagining them until several flew by at 
very close range. I am going to purchase Meena's book!! I didn't even 
realize Odonates were migratory!


-Melanie

On 4/16/2015 4:31 PM, Geo Kloppel wrote:

Meena's wonderful book (link below) gives some info on migration of odonates 
(page 117). Green Darner is one of the long distance migrants. Maybe these 
darners that are showing up now hatched in the deep south, or even in Veracruz, 
and came north on more-or-less the same timetable as the Broad-winged Hawks.

http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf

-Geo
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