Hi Tami
There were two immature [presumably, or female] purple finches foraging in
an ash tree at Sucker Lake (Ramsey County) last evening. They stayed near
each other and flew off together.
-- Paul Lender
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Paul Lender
University of Minnesota Dept
as they do like the vegetation around trails
such as the Trout Creek Trail in Roseville and the Gateway Trail leading
out toward Stillwater. They can be quite common, and they'll sing into
August. Often from a well-exposed perch.
Happy birding, Joe.
-- Paul Lender
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with this?
-- Paul Lender, St. Paul
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Paul Lender
University of Minnesota Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
2512 So. 7th Street, Ste. R200
Minneapolis MN 55454
len...@umn.edu
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--
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Paul Lender
University of Minnesota Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
2512 So. 7th Street, Ste. R200
Minneapolis MN 55454
len.
ncern" in Minnesota?
Does this nesting pair have any "rights" from the State of Minnesota
being a relatively uncommon large raptor?
-- Paul Lender
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Paul Lender
University of Minnesota Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
successful.
I will contact the osprey lady.
-- Paul Lender
On 4/19/2017 12:31 PM, rm long wrote:
I don't know the answers to your questions, but the person who would is the
lady who runs the Twin Cities Metro Osprey Watch Facebook page.
Her e-mail is osprey...@att.net
Hope that helps.
Roslynn
in Minnesota "of concern?"
-- Paul Lender
On 4/18/2017 4:17 PM, Susanne Nevin wrote:
Just received a correction to my observations re: the ospreys in Central
Pk., Roseville. The birds are more likely still in the nest-building stage
and what the one had in its mouth was probably nest-buildin
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