Re: [cayugabirds-l] Blue Jay migration

2023-04-28 Thread Geo Kloppel
Yesterday noon my feeders were briefly mobbed by about 15 Blue Jays, which I 
took to be migrants, as the local Jays are already carrying nest material.

-Geo


> On Apr 28, 2023, at 2:38 PM, Dave Nutter  wrote:
> 
> Yesterday in the late afternoon I saw a small quiet flock of 8 Blue Jays 
> moving eastward into the treetops of the northeast part of Allan H Treman 
> State Marine Park, a similar path to the migrating Black-capped Chickadees I 
> reported recently going around the southeast end of Cayuga Lake. This morning 
> around 9:25am I saw a quiet flock of 32 Blue Jays flying north over the south 
> end of Cass Park, also clearly migrating. They were over a field approaching 
> a woodlot just above treetop level. 
> 
> Blue Jays migrate in the daytime, and they fly quietly in rather spread-out 
> flocks, each bird keeping a distance of a several feet to a few yards from 
> all of its neighbors. They flap constantly in what looks to me like weak 
> flight aimed at conserving energy. 
> 
> An interesting place to watch migrant Blue Jay flocks is around the Braddock 
> Bay banding station, where they must turn generally east in order to get 
> around Lake Ontario, but in that specific area must go southeast, leading so 
> some apparently confused and circuitous travel. 
> 
> Migration is made when the wind is from a helpful direction, like today and 
> the day I saw the Chickadee movement, generally from the south. 
> 
> In autumn I have watched Blue Jays fly south over the east end of Stewart 
> Park, presumably having been gathered and guided by Cayuga Lake’s diagonal 
> “east” shore, and over downtown Ithaca as well. 
> 
> To me, it’s a thrill to see the migration phenomenon played out.
> 
> - - Dave Nutter
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[cayugabirds-l] Blue Jay migration

2023-04-28 Thread Dave Nutter
Yesterday in the late afternoon I saw a small quiet flock of 8 Blue Jays moving 
eastward into the treetops of the northeast part of Allan H Treman State Marine 
Park, a similar path to the migrating Black-capped Chickadees I reported 
recently going around the southeast end of Cayuga Lake. This morning around 
9:25am I saw a quiet flock of 32 Blue Jays flying north over the south end of 
Cass Park, also clearly migrating. They were over a field approaching a woodlot 
just above treetop level. 

Blue Jays migrate in the daytime, and they fly quietly in rather spread-out 
flocks, each bird keeping a distance of a several feet to a few yards from all 
of its neighbors. They flap constantly in what looks to me like weak flight 
aimed at conserving energy. 

An interesting place to watch migrant Blue Jay flocks is around the Braddock 
Bay banding station, where they must turn generally east in order to get around 
Lake Ontario, but in that specific area must go southeast, leading so some 
apparently confused and circuitous travel. 

Migration is made when the wind is from a helpful direction, like today and the 
day I saw the Chickadee movement, generally from the south. 

In autumn I have watched Blue Jays fly south over the east end of Stewart Park, 
presumably having been gathered and guided by Cayuga Lake’s diagonal “east” 
shore, and over downtown Ithaca as well. 

To me, it’s a thrill to see the migration phenomenon played out.

- - Dave Nutter
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[cayugabirds-l] Blue Jay Migration

2009-09-16 Thread Meena Haribal
Hi all,
Since morning I have been seeing Blue Jays heading south in groups over my 
computer monitor (that is the part of window visible to me).

Meena

Meena Haribal
Cornell Lab Of Ornithology/BTI
Ithaca NY 14850
Phone: 607-254-2148, 607-254-4958
Fax: 607-254-2415, 607-254-2104
webpage:

http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/

http://www.geocities.com/asiootusloe/mothsofithaca.htmlhttp://haribal.wikispaces.com/space/showimage/wildwest+trip+August+2007+.pdf
 

Current Loc: 42o 25' 44.48 N, 76o 28' 16.90 W Elev 816 ft or 248.7 m
Formerly: 19o 0' 41,65 N, 72o 51' 13.02 E Elev 33 ft or 10m

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