Geo and all,
I did recently drove around slowly along some of the locations you mention
including Eric's recently but have not been successful. I do remember the
Grasshoppers sparrows and Bobolinks on Nelson road.
Today after dropping off my brother and family at Pyramid mall for shopping, I
worked on my Freese Road garden for couple of hours and most of the time I
worked, an ORCHARD ORIOLE sang from the grove in front of garden parking lot
entrance. Initially I ignored it thinking that it was a Purple Finch, but then
realised that it sounded like my mail alert. So I left the work halfway to
check out. I found a young male singing his heart out to attract a female.
While eh was singing the Baltimore Oriole kept reminding me that my feet are
still dirty or sometimes my feet are silvery. He has been singing this
phrase over more than four years now.
Yesterday on the way back from Canada, I stopped at Montezuma to look for the
HUGO. But was not lucky to see him. But I did see a Pergrine from the deck of
Skylon restaurant.
Cheers
Meena
Meena Haribal
Ithaca NY 14850
http://haribal.org/
From: bounce-6022086-3493...@list.cornell.edu
[bounce-6022086-3493...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf of Geo Kloppel
[geoklop...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2010 5:58 PM
To: cayugabirds-l L
Subject: Re:[cayugabirds-l] Grasshopper Sparrow in Danby
Hi Eric,
It's great to hear that Grasshopper Sparrows are still possible in
Danby. Throughout the Ithaca June Count years, and up until about
2000, we used to find them in what could be called the greater Jersey
Hill area (Town of Danby, west of Comfort Road). I particularly
remember locations along the west side of Townline Road a few
thousand feet south of Blakesly Hill, also east of the FLT between
there and Bruce Hill Road, and in the highland fields where Hilltop
Road, Bruce Hill Road, Jersey Hill Road and Gunderman Road come
together. I wonder if anybody has looked for Grasshopper Sparrows in
that area lately?
-Geo
On Jun 8, 2010, at 8:21 AM, Eric Banford wrote:
Yesterday morning I stepped outside to check the weather and the
first thing I heard was a tick tick BZZZ. Psyched, my second
Grasshopper Sparrow ever. I put on my muck boots and grabbed my
bins and was able to watch him sing from a bush for a few minutes.
Other breeders singing at the time: Willow Flycatcher, Great
Crested Flycatcher, Blue Jay, American Crow, Tree Swallow, Barn
Swallow, Black-capped Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, Wood Thrush, Blue-
winged Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, Savannah Sparrow, Grasshopper
Sparrow, Song Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, Northern Cardinal, Rose-
breasted Grosbeak, Bobolink (lots), Red-winged Blackbird, Eastern
Meadowlark, Baltimore Oriole, American Goldfinch
This morning I parked off the edge of Cornell campus, and as I
started walking I heard an interesting, rising warbler song. Four
slower, steady notes, followed by three quick ones and then a held
bu at the end. This great page on All About Birds made it easy
for me to go through potential songsters and figure out it was a
Cerulean Warbler:http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/browse_tax.aspx?
family=40
Bird!
Eric
Geo Kloppel
Bowmaker Restorer
227 Tupper Road
Spencer NY 14883
607 564 7026
g...@cornell.edu
geoklop...@gmail.com
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