[cayugabirds-l] Possible White-eyed at Park Pres. this morning

2012-07-13 Thread Anne Marie Johnson
Tim and I checked the Park Preserve this morning. We were there from 8:30 
to 9:30 but only in the area where the vireo had been seen yesterday for 
the first and last 5 minutes of that hour. On our way in, we heard nothing 
that could be turned into a White-eyed Vireo, but we did have great looks 
at a silent Blue-winged Warbler foraging around the parking lot, and a 
Green Heron flew directly over the parking lot fairly low.


On our way out, we heard a song that may well have been the White-eyed 
Vireo. It sounded like an Indigo Bunting song with an extra flourish at the 
beginning and end of the song. As we approached the location of the song, a 
bird flushed from down low and disappeared, and the singing ended. We were 
left with a tiny, bouncing, bare branch at the bottom of a spruce, close to 
the trunk--not where I would expect to see an Indigo Bunting singing.


Anne Marie Johnson


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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Possible White-eyed at Park Pres. this morning

2012-07-13 Thread Jay McGowan
Jeff Gerbracht reported the White-eyed Vireo this evening, still singing
from the same area that we last saw it (behind the trailer on the west
side.)

On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 2:40 PM, Anne Marie Johnson 
annemariejohn...@frontiernet.net wrote:

 Tim and I checked the Park Preserve this morning. We were there from 8:30
 to 9:30 but only in the area where the vireo had been seen yesterday for
 the first and last 5 minutes of that hour. On our way in, we heard nothing
 that could be turned into a White-eyed Vireo, but we did have great looks
 at a silent Blue-winged Warbler foraging around the parking lot, and a
 Green Heron flew directly over the parking lot fairly low.

 On our way out, we heard a song that may well have been the White-eyed
 Vireo. It sounded like an Indigo Bunting song with an extra flourish at the
 beginning and end of the song. As we approached the location of the song, a
 bird flushed from down low and disappeared, and the singing ended. We were
 left with a tiny, bouncing, bare branch at the bottom of a spruce, close to
 the trunk--not where I would expect to see an Indigo Bunting singing.

 Anne Marie Johnson


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

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