Re: [cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorn Orchard: 12 May 2015 - Fantastic!

2015-05-13 Thread Asher Hockett
That it was close to the ground is another pretty typical Mourning clue.

On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 7:31 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:

> It sounded like typical Mourning Warbler to me, a low-pitched, burry
> "chorry-chorry-che-che-chew" repeatedly sung. I kept looking for the bird
> as it moved around, but apparently it stayed within 2 feet of the ground in
> thick vegetation. I briefly glimpsed the bird as it crossed the path, but
> got no details other than that it was large, dark, and plain for a warbler,
> very unlike Chestnut-sided. I did hear an odd-to-me rambling Chestnut-sided
> Warbler song several times and was able to repeatedly verify that singer.
>
> --Dave Nutter
>
>
> On May 12, 2015, at 07:00 PM, Brad Walker  wrote:
>
> Dave, was the Mourning Warbler singing a typical song? Scott and I had a
> Chestnut-sided we would have sworn was a Mourning until we got a look at it
> in that same area.
>
> - Brad
>
> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:50 PM Nancy Cusumano 
> wrote:
>
>> WE are going to try tomorrow morning before work. Will the cooler temp
>> (45) slow them down early?
>>
>> Cayuga Dog Rescue has saved more than 500! dogs since 2005!
>> Learn more at cayugadogrescue.org
>>
>> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:47 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
>>
>>> I stayed longer than other birders and got drenched by the shower, but
>>> afterward I heard a persistently singing (but hiding) MOURNING WARBLER low
>>> in the vegetation in the north central area. Earlier I may have also heard
>>> a NASHVILLE WARBLER north of the ravine, which others reported. Here's my
>>> warbler list:
>>>
>>> TENNESSEE WARBLER - many encounters & songs
>>> MOURNING WARBLER - 1 heard in north central area
>>> COMMON YELLOWTHROAT - several heard, none seen
>>> CAPE MAY WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
>>> MAGNOLIA WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male
>>> BAY-BREASTED WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
>>> BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER - 1 female
>>> YELLOW WARBLER - several heard & seen
>>> CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male - a rambling
>>> song lacking the emphatic tag
>>> BLACKPOLL WARBLER - several heard & males seen
>>> BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER - 1 male heard & seen
>>> YELLOW-RUMPED (MYRTLE) WARBLER - 1 female & 2 males, separate
>>> CANADA WARBLER - heard & seen in central area
>>>
>>> There were many RED-EYED VIREOS, but I missed the multiply-reported
>>> PHILADELPHIA VIREO. Over the large field to the SE a pair of EASTERN
>>> MEADOWLARKS had an extended pursuit, the lead bird being slightly smaller,
>>> which I interpreted as courtship. I had 2 silent EMPIDONAX encounters.
>>>
>>> --Dave Nutter
>>>
>>>
>>> On May 12, 2015, at 01:40 PM, "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" <
>>> c...@cornell.edu> wrote:
>>>
>>> I was delayed arriving here on such a great morning, but managed to bird
>>> here for a short while before needing to leave. I know I missed many good
>>> birds and numbers of birds that others have already posted about, or will
>>> be posting about. Most notable for me was the amazing quantity of CAPE MAY
>>> WARBLERS!!! I tallied at least 13 birds, but I suspect I was missing more.
>>> Of the 13+ there were 4+ females and 9+ males. There were also a solid 12+
>>> TENNESSEE WARBLERS singing in almost every section of habitat available.
>>>
>>> Here’s my eBird list:
>>>
>>> Comments: This was a fantastic morning, though I only wish I had
>>> been able to get here sooner and spend much longer here on such a great
>>> day. Today may possibly have yielded one of the highest number of Cape May
>>> Warblers I've tallied at this location. It was difficult, due to their
>>> silence at times. Many observed foraging on the same branches together at
>>> the same time. Due to my late arrival time, I know I missed lots of good
>>> birds. Others reported having seen a roving flock of Bay-breasted Warblers
>>> and Blackburnian Warbler, Canada Warblers, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, among
>>> others. Great day, following overnight rain storms. Given general
>>> North-type winds in the forecast, these guys may be returning to the
>>> Hawthorn Orchard to continue foraging over the next couple of days.
>>>
>>> Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.8
>>>
>>> 37 species (+1 other taxa)
>>>
>>> Turkey Vulture  2
>>> Killdeer  1
>>> Mourning Dove  2
>>> Alder/Willow Flycatcher (Traill's Flycatcher)  1 SE Corner; non-vocal
>>> Eastern Kingbird  4 Calling flyover group of four birds.
>>> Red-eyed Vireo  2
>>> Blue Jay  4
>>> American Crow  2
>>> Black-capped Chickadee  2
>>> House Wren  1
>>> Swainson's Thrush  1 Singing, middle North section
>>> Wood Thrush  1
>>> American Robin  2
>>> Gray Catbird  17 Several, actively foraging everywhere; I'm sure I'm
>>> underestimating.
>>> European Starling  2
>>>
>>> Black-and-white Warbler  2 1 male, 1 female (SE corner, NE corner)
>>> Tennessee Warbler  12 This may be an underestimate; actively singing
>>> from every spot. Males.

[cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorn Orchard: 12 May 2015 - Fantastic!

2015-05-12 Thread Dave Nutter
It sounded like typical Mourning Warbler to me, a low-pitched, burry 
"chorry-chorry-che-che-chew" repeatedly sung. I kept looking for the bird as it 
moved around, but apparently it stayed within 2 feet of the ground in thick 
vegetation. I briefly glimpsed the bird as it crossed the path, but got no 
details other than that it was large, dark, and plain for a warbler, very 
unlike Chestnut-sided. I did hear an odd-to-me rambling Chestnut-sided Warbler 
song several times and was able to repeatedly verify that singer. 

--Dave Nutter


On May 12, 2015, at 07:00 PM, Brad Walker  wrote:

> Dave, was the Mourning Warbler singing a typical song? Scott and I had a 
> Chestnut-sided we would have sworn was a Mourning until we got a look at it 
> in that same area.
>
> - Brad
>
> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:50 PM Nancy Cusumano  
> wrote:
>
> WE are going to try tomorrow morning before work. Will the cooler temp 
> (45) slow them down early?
>
> Cayuga Dog Rescue has saved more than 500! dogs since 2005!
> Learn more at cayugadogrescue.org
>
> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:47 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
>
> I stayed longer than other birders and got drenched by the shower, 
> but afterward I heard a persistently singing (but hiding) MOURNING WARBLER 
> low in the vegetation in the north central area. Earlier I may have also 
> heard a NASHVILLE WARBLER north of the ravine, which others reported. Here's 
> my warbler list:
>
> TENNESSEE WARBLER - many encounters & songs
> MOURNING WARBLER - 1 heard in north central area
> COMMON YELLOWTHROAT - several heard, none seen
> CAPE MAY WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
> MAGNOLIA WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male
> BAY-BREASTED WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
> BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER - 1 female
> YELLOW WARBLER - several heard & seen
> CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male - a 
> rambling song lacking the emphatic tag
> BLACKPOLL WARBLER - several heard & males seen
> BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER - 1 male heard & seen
> YELLOW-RUMPED (MYRTLE) WARBLER - 1 female & 2 males, separate
> CANADA WARBLER - heard & seen in central area
>
> There were many RED-EYED VIREOS, but I missed the multiply-reported 
> PHILADELPHIA VIREO. Over the large field to the SE a pair of EASTERN 
> MEADOWLARKS had an extended pursuit, the lead bird being slightly smaller, 
> which I interpreted as courtship. I had 2 silent EMPIDONAX encounters.
>
> --Dave Nutter
>
>
> On May 12, 2015, at 01:40 PM, "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" 
>  wrote:
>
>> I was delayed arriving here on such a great morning, but managed to 
>> bird here for a short while before needing to leave. I know I missed many 
>> good birds and numbers of birds that others have already posted about, or 
>> will be posting about. Most notable for me was the amazing quantity of CAPE 
>> MAY WARBLERS!!! I tallied at least 13 birds, but I suspect I was missing 
>> more. Of the 13+ there were 4+ females and 9+ males. There were also a solid 
>> 12+ TENNESSEE WARBLERS singing in almost every section of habitat available.
>>
>> Here’s my eBird list:
>>
>> Comments: This was a fantastic morning, though I only wish I had 
>> been able to get here sooner and spend much longer here on such a great day. 
>> Today may possibly have yielded one of the highest number of Cape May 
>> Warblers I've tallied at this location. It was difficult, due to their 
>> silence at times. Many observed foraging on the same branches together at 
>> the same time. Due to my late arrival time, I know I missed lots of good 
>> birds. Others reported having seen a roving flock of Bay-breasted Warblers 
>> and Blackburnian Warbler, Canada Warblers, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, among 
>> others. Great day, following overnight rain storms. Given general North-type 
>> winds in the forecast, these guys may be returning to the Hawthorn Orchard 
>> to continue foraging over the next couple of days.
>>
>> Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.8
>>
>> 37 species (+1 other taxa)
>>
>> Turkey Vulture  2
>> Killdeer  1
>> Mourning Dove  2
>> Alder/Willow Flycatcher (Traill's Flycatcher)  1 SE Corner; 
>> non-vocal
>> Eastern Kingbird  4 Calling flyover group of four birds.
>> Red-eyed Vireo  2
>> Blue Jay  4
>> American Crow  2
>> Black-capped Chickadee  2
>> House Wren  1
>> Swainson's Thrush  1 Singing, middle North section
>> Wood Thrush  1
>> American Robin  2
>> Gray Catbird  17 Several, actively foraging everywhere; I'm sure 
>> I'm underestimating.
>> European Starling  2
>>
>> Black-and-white Warbler  2 1 male, 1 female (SE corner, NE 
>> corner)
>> Tennessee War

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorn Orchard: 12 May 2015 - Fantastic!

2015-05-12 Thread Brad Walker
Dave, was the Mourning Warbler singing a typical song? Scott and I had a
Chestnut-sided we would have sworn was a Mourning until we got a look at it
in that same area.

- Brad

On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:50 PM Nancy Cusumano 
wrote:

> WE are going to try tomorrow morning before work. Will the cooler temp
> (45) slow them down early?
>
> Cayuga Dog Rescue has saved more than 500! dogs since 2005!
> Learn more at cayugadogrescue.org
>
> On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:47 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
>
>> I stayed longer than other birders and got drenched by the shower, but
>> afterward I heard a persistently singing (but hiding) MOURNING WARBLER low
>> in the vegetation in the north central area. Earlier I may have also heard
>> a NASHVILLE WARBLER north of the ravine, which others reported. Here's my
>> warbler list:
>>
>> TENNESSEE WARBLER - many encounters & songs
>> MOURNING WARBLER - 1 heard in north central area
>> COMMON YELLOWTHROAT - several heard, none seen
>> CAPE MAY WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
>> MAGNOLIA WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male
>> BAY-BREASTED WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
>> BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER - 1 female
>> YELLOW WARBLER - several heard & seen
>> CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male - a rambling
>> song lacking the emphatic tag
>> BLACKPOLL WARBLER - several heard & males seen
>> BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER - 1 male heard & seen
>> YELLOW-RUMPED (MYRTLE) WARBLER - 1 female & 2 males, separate
>> CANADA WARBLER - heard & seen in central area
>>
>> There were many RED-EYED VIREOS, but I missed the multiply-reported
>> PHILADELPHIA VIREO. Over the large field to the SE a pair of EASTERN
>> MEADOWLARKS had an extended pursuit, the lead bird being slightly smaller,
>> which I interpreted as courtship. I had 2 silent EMPIDONAX encounters.
>>
>> --Dave Nutter
>>
>>
>> On May 12, 2015, at 01:40 PM, "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" <
>> c...@cornell.edu> wrote:
>>
>> I was delayed arriving here on such a great morning, but managed to bird
>> here for a short while before needing to leave. I know I missed many good
>> birds and numbers of birds that others have already posted about, or will
>> be posting about. Most notable for me was the amazing quantity of CAPE MAY
>> WARBLERS!!! I tallied at least 13 birds, but I suspect I was missing more.
>> Of the 13+ there were 4+ females and 9+ males. There were also a solid 12+
>> TENNESSEE WARBLERS singing in almost every section of habitat available.
>>
>> Here’s my eBird list:
>>
>> Comments: This was a fantastic morning, though I only wish I had been
>> able to get here sooner and spend much longer here on such a great day.
>> Today may possibly have yielded one of the highest number of Cape May
>> Warblers I've tallied at this location. It was difficult, due to their
>> silence at times. Many observed foraging on the same branches together at
>> the same time. Due to my late arrival time, I know I missed lots of good
>> birds. Others reported having seen a roving flock of Bay-breasted Warblers
>> and Blackburnian Warbler, Canada Warblers, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, among
>> others. Great day, following overnight rain storms. Given general
>> North-type winds in the forecast, these guys may be returning to the
>> Hawthorn Orchard to continue foraging over the next couple of days.
>>
>> Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.8
>>
>> 37 species (+1 other taxa)
>>
>> Turkey Vulture  2
>> Killdeer  1
>> Mourning Dove  2
>> Alder/Willow Flycatcher (Traill's Flycatcher)  1 SE Corner; non-vocal
>> Eastern Kingbird  4 Calling flyover group of four birds.
>> Red-eyed Vireo  2
>> Blue Jay  4
>> American Crow  2
>> Black-capped Chickadee  2
>> House Wren  1
>> Swainson's Thrush  1 Singing, middle North section
>> Wood Thrush  1
>> American Robin  2
>> Gray Catbird  17 Several, actively foraging everywhere; I'm sure I'm
>> underestimating.
>> European Starling  2
>>
>> Black-and-white Warbler  2 1 male, 1 female (SE corner, NE corner)
>> Tennessee Warbler  12 This may be an underestimate; actively singing
>> from every spot. Males.
>> Common Yellowthroat  2
>> Cape May Warbler  13 This may be an underestimate; Most prevalent
>> just inside SE edge; middle Western section; Northeast area; 4+ females, 9+
>> males; males singing variety of songs-types; lots of regular flight notes
>> given ("seet")
>> Magnolia Warbler  6 All males; singing.
>> Yellow Warbler  3
>> Chestnut-sided Warbler  5 Singing variety of songs.
>> Blackpoll Warbler  2 Singing and silent.
>> Black-throated Blue Warbler  1 singing; middle Northern section
>> Yellow-rumped Warbler  2
>>
>> Song Sparrow  2
>> White-throated Sparrow  1 Middle Western section
>> White-crowned Sparrow  1 SE corner
>> Scarlet Tanager  1
>> Northern Cardinal  6
>> Rose-breasted Grosbeak  1
>> Indigo Bunting  2
>> Red-winged Blackbird  2
>> Common Grackle  2
>> Brown-headed Cowbird  1

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorn Orchard: 12 May 2015 - Fantastic!

2015-05-12 Thread Nancy Cusumano
WE are going to try tomorrow morning before work. Will the cooler temp (45)
slow them down early?

Cayuga Dog Rescue has saved more than 500! dogs since 2005!
Learn more at cayugadogrescue.org

On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 6:47 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:

> I stayed longer than other birders and got drenched by the shower, but
> afterward I heard a persistently singing (but hiding) MOURNING WARBLER low
> in the vegetation in the north central area. Earlier I may have also heard
> a NASHVILLE WARBLER north of the ravine, which others reported. Here's my
> warbler list:
>
> TENNESSEE WARBLER - many encounters & songs
> MOURNING WARBLER - 1 heard in north central area
> COMMON YELLOWTHROAT - several heard, none seen
> CAPE MAY WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
> MAGNOLIA WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male
> BAY-BREASTED WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
> BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER - 1 female
> YELLOW WARBLER - several heard & seen
> CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male - a rambling
> song lacking the emphatic tag
> BLACKPOLL WARBLER - several heard & males seen
> BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER - 1 male heard & seen
> YELLOW-RUMPED (MYRTLE) WARBLER - 1 female & 2 males, separate
> CANADA WARBLER - heard & seen in central area
>
> There were many RED-EYED VIREOS, but I missed the multiply-reported
> PHILADELPHIA VIREO. Over the large field to the SE a pair of EASTERN
> MEADOWLARKS had an extended pursuit, the lead bird being slightly smaller,
> which I interpreted as courtship. I had 2 silent EMPIDONAX encounters.
>
> --Dave Nutter
>
>
> On May 12, 2015, at 01:40 PM, "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" <
> c...@cornell.edu> wrote:
>
> I was delayed arriving here on such a great morning, but managed to bird
> here for a short while before needing to leave. I know I missed many good
> birds and numbers of birds that others have already posted about, or will
> be posting about. Most notable for me was the amazing quantity of CAPE MAY
> WARBLERS!!! I tallied at least 13 birds, but I suspect I was missing more.
> Of the 13+ there were 4+ females and 9+ males. There were also a solid 12+
> TENNESSEE WARBLERS singing in almost every section of habitat available.
>
> Here’s my eBird list:
>
> Comments: This was a fantastic morning, though I only wish I had been
> able to get here sooner and spend much longer here on such a great day.
> Today may possibly have yielded one of the highest number of Cape May
> Warblers I've tallied at this location. It was difficult, due to their
> silence at times. Many observed foraging on the same branches together at
> the same time. Due to my late arrival time, I know I missed lots of good
> birds. Others reported having seen a roving flock of Bay-breasted Warblers
> and Blackburnian Warbler, Canada Warblers, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, among
> others. Great day, following overnight rain storms. Given general
> North-type winds in the forecast, these guys may be returning to the
> Hawthorn Orchard to continue foraging over the next couple of days.
>
> Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.8
>
> 37 species (+1 other taxa)
>
> Turkey Vulture  2
> Killdeer  1
> Mourning Dove  2
> Alder/Willow Flycatcher (Traill's Flycatcher)  1 SE Corner; non-vocal
> Eastern Kingbird  4 Calling flyover group of four birds.
> Red-eyed Vireo  2
> Blue Jay  4
> American Crow  2
> Black-capped Chickadee  2
> House Wren  1
> Swainson's Thrush  1 Singing, middle North section
> Wood Thrush  1
> American Robin  2
> Gray Catbird  17 Several, actively foraging everywhere; I'm sure I'm
> underestimating.
> European Starling  2
>
> Black-and-white Warbler  2 1 male, 1 female (SE corner, NE corner)
> Tennessee Warbler  12 This may be an underestimate; actively singing
> from every spot. Males.
> Common Yellowthroat  2
> Cape May Warbler  13 This may be an underestimate; Most prevalent just
> inside SE edge; middle Western section; Northeast area; 4+ females, 9+
> males; males singing variety of songs-types; lots of regular flight notes
> given ("seet")
> Magnolia Warbler  6 All males; singing.
> Yellow Warbler  3
> Chestnut-sided Warbler  5 Singing variety of songs.
> Blackpoll Warbler  2 Singing and silent.
> Black-throated Blue Warbler  1 singing; middle Northern section
> Yellow-rumped Warbler  2
>
> Song Sparrow  2
> White-throated Sparrow  1 Middle Western section
> White-crowned Sparrow  1 SE corner
> Scarlet Tanager  1
> Northern Cardinal  6
> Rose-breasted Grosbeak  1
> Indigo Bunting  2
> Red-winged Blackbird  2
> Common Grackle  2
> Brown-headed Cowbird  1
> Baltimore Oriole  6
> House Finch  2
> American Goldfinch  4
>
> Sincerely,
> Chris T-H
>
> --
> 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.co

[cayugabirds-l] Re: [cayugabirds-l] Hawthorn Orchard: 12 May 2015 - Fantastic!

2015-05-12 Thread Dave Nutter
I stayed longer than other birders and got drenched by the shower, but 
afterward I heard a persistently singing (but hiding) MOURNING WARBLER low in 
the vegetation in the north central area. Earlier I may have also heard a 
NASHVILLE WARBLER north of the ravine, which others reported. Here's my warbler 
list:

TENNESSEE WARBLER - many encounters & songs
MOURNING WARBLER - 1 heard in north central area
COMMON YELLOWTHROAT - several heard, none seen
CAPE MAY WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
MAGNOLIA WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male
BAY-BREASTED WARBLER - many encounters with males, females & songs
BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER - 1 female
YELLOW WARBLER - several heard & seen
CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER - 3 encounters with a singing male - a rambling song 
lacking the emphatic tag
BLACKPOLL WARBLER - several heard & males seen
BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER - 1 male heard & seen
YELLOW-RUMPED (MYRTLE) WARBLER - 1 female & 2 males, separate
CANADA WARBLER - heard & seen in central area

There were many RED-EYED VIREOS, but I missed the multiply-reported 
PHILADELPHIA VIREO. Over the large field to the SE a pair of EASTERN 
MEADOWLARKS had an extended pursuit, the lead bird being slightly smaller, 
which I interpreted as courtship. I had 2 silent EMPIDONAX encounters.

--Dave Nutter


On May 12, 2015, at 01:40 PM, "Christopher T. Tessaglia-Hymes" 
 wrote:

> I was delayed arriving here on such a great morning, but managed to bird here 
> for a short while before needing to leave. I know I missed many good birds 
> and numbers of birds that others have already posted about, or will be 
> posting about. Most notable for me was the amazing quantity of CAPE MAY 
> WARBLERS!!! I tallied at least 13 birds, but I suspect I was missing more. Of 
> the 13+ there were 4+ females and 9+ males. There were also a solid 12+ 
> TENNESSEE WARBLERS singing in almost every section of habitat available.
>
> Here’s my eBird list:
>
> Comments: This was a fantastic morning, though I only wish I had been 
> able to get here sooner and spend much longer here on such a great day. Today 
> may possibly have yielded one of the highest number of Cape May Warblers I've 
> tallied at this location. It was difficult, due to their silence at times. 
> Many observed foraging on the same branches together at the same time. Due to 
> my late arrival time, I know I missed lots of good birds. Others reported 
> having seen a roving flock of Bay-breasted Warblers and Blackburnian Warbler, 
> Canada Warblers, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, among others. Great day, 
> following overnight rain storms. Given general North-type winds in the 
> forecast, these guys may be returning to the Hawthorn Orchard to continue 
> foraging over the next couple of days.
>
> Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.8
>
> 37 species (+1 other taxa)
>
> Turkey Vulture  2
> Killdeer  1
> Mourning Dove  2
> Alder/Willow Flycatcher (Traill's Flycatcher)  1 SE Corner; non-vocal
> Eastern Kingbird  4 Calling flyover group of four birds.
> Red-eyed Vireo  2
> Blue Jay  4
> American Crow  2
> Black-capped Chickadee  2
> House Wren  1
> Swainson's Thrush  1 Singing, middle North section
> Wood Thrush  1
> American Robin  2
> Gray Catbird  17 Several, actively foraging everywhere; I'm sure I'm 
> underestimating.
> European Starling  2
>
> Black-and-white Warbler  2 1 male, 1 female (SE corner, NE corner)
> Tennessee Warbler  12 This may be an underestimate; actively singing from 
> every spot. Males.
> Common Yellowthroat  2
> Cape May Warbler  13 This may be an underestimate; Most prevalent just 
> inside SE edge; middle Western section; Northeast area; 4+ females, 9+ males; 
> males singing variety of songs-types; lots of regular flight notes given 
> ("seet")
> Magnolia Warbler  6 All males; singing.
> Yellow Warbler  3
> Chestnut-sided Warbler  5 Singing variety of songs.
> Blackpoll Warbler  2 Singing and silent.
> Black-throated Blue Warbler  1 singing; middle Northern section
> Yellow-rumped Warbler  2
>
> Song Sparrow  2
> White-throated Sparrow  1 Middle Western section
> White-crowned Sparrow  1 SE corner
> Scarlet Tanager  1
> Northern Cardinal  6
> Rose-breasted Grosbeak  1
> Indigo Bunting  2
> Red-winged Blackbird  2
> Common Grackle  2
> Brown-headed Cowbird  1
> Baltimore Oriole  6
> House Finch  2
> American Goldfinch  4
>
> Sincerely,
> Chris T-H
>
> --
> 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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