With the helpful guidance of many of you who responded to my query, I was able
to bird Howland Island on Thursday, after a stop to see the prothonotary
warbler at Armitage Road (a lifer! Yay!). I did not see the same numbers of
warblers that had been reported a few days earlier (no Cape Mays, f
From: bounce-124645930-79436...@list.cornell.edu
on behalf of Robyn Bailey
Sent: Thursday, May 21, 2020 9:57:17 AM
To: Lanie Wilmarth ; Sandra Lynn Babcock
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: RE: [cayugabirds-l] Howland Island question
I’ve only been there once, but I
: [cayugabirds-l] Howland Island question
I, too, am interested in this location. If anyone is responding—please post to
the group.
On Wed, May 20, 2020 at 6:01 PM Sandra Lynn Babcock
mailto:slb...@cornell.edu>> wrote:
I’m contemplating a trip to Howland Island tomorrow, but have never been
If you park and cross the bridge at the south end (Howland Island Road),
follow the trail and take the right fork to Lost Pond. That area was
dripping with warblers on my first visit there many years ago with
Spring Field Ornithology. I think I got 4 or 5 life birds that day.
On Wed, May 20, 202
.edu/people/steering-committee
_
From: bounce-124644828-84019...@list.cornell.edu
[bounce-124644828-84019...@list.cornell.edu] on behalf of Sandra Lynn Babcock
[slb...@cornell.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, May 20, 2020 6:01 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Su
I sent this info to Sandra Babcock earlier
Donna Scott
Lansing
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Donna Lee Scott mailto:d...@cornell.edu>>
Date: May 20, 2020 at 6:24:19 PM EDT
To: Sandra Lynn Babcock mailto:slb...@cornell.edu>>
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ho
I, too, am interested in this location. If anyone is responding—please
post to the group.
On Wed, May 20, 2020 at 6:01 PM Sandra Lynn Babcock
wrote:
> I’m contemplating a trip to Howland Island tomorrow, but have never been
> before and am wondering if anyone has any tips. Are there specific r
I’m contemplating a trip to Howland Island tomorrow, but have never been before
and am wondering if anyone has any tips. Are there specific routes that are
better for birders? Do you recommend a driving loop or walking?
Thanks for any insights you can offer.
Best,
Sandra Babcock
Ithaca
--
Click on "events" & then to the right see the list including "Drone
Pics of Northern Montezuma". Aerial views are also included but the
drone pix are closer. I never dreamed so much water & land are there.
Fritzie.
On 10/29/2017 2:06 PM, bob mcguire wrote:
> The main reason for writing this u
I spent a delightful morning yesterday walking around Howland Island. Waterfowl
season was just beginning: there was a lot of gunshot and very few ducks in
evidence (in contract to the thousands in the MNWR main pool). Best birds were
a softly calling Hermit Thrush and a lone female Rusty Black
All,
Yesterday Livia and I finally got a chance to kayak around Howland Island
for the first time this summer. We got started a little later than planned
after being distracted looking at the continuing Black-necked Stilt, so
didn't make it onto the water at Carncross Road until a little after 8AM.
I spent the early morning walking around Howland Island, a short loop
from the iron bridge and back. Of particular note were 5 YELLOW-RUMPED
WARBLERS (4 at the beginning of "Warbler Way" and one farther on), 5
RED-BELLIED WOODPECKERS (what I thought was a rather large number), 60
AMERICAN R
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