RE: [nfc-l] NFCs in Caroline

2009-08-12 Thread Jeff Wells
Glad to see you guys out west are catching up with us. ;.)

 

I remember the nocturnal field trips Bill Evans used to do in Ithaca
back in the 1990's..though Ithaca has always been an anomaly
everywhere!

 

The crickets are in high gear around here in Maine making use of
automatic detectors pretty tough.

 

Jeff

 

From: bounce-4165846-9874...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-4165846-9874...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Ted Floyd
Sent: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 1:30 PM
To: Michael Lanzone; Steve Kelling
Cc: nfc-l@cornell.edu
Subject: RE: [nfc-l] NFCs in Caroline

 

And last night was just about our *slowest* thus far this season...  :-(

 

Eight field trip participants (yes, we really do nocturnal migration
field trips in Colorado...) heard no migrants at all between 4:15 and
5:00 a.m. MDT, Wednesday, 12 August 2009. Location: Greenlee Preserve,
Boulder County, Colorado. (A little flock of Chipping Sparrows pulsed
over at 5:22; not sure if they were wrapping up overnight migration, or
just getting going in the dawn's early light, or what.) A south wind
overnight was surely to blame. Nice meteors, by the way, despite the
moon. Brief trip report at
http://www.birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/COLO.html#1250080203

 

The "day" before, Tuesday, 11 August 2009, was a little better, with no
wind to speak of overnight. Along with Chipping Sparrows, there was one
of those birds that I think is a Brewer's Sparrow. Despite what I might
have expected a few years ago, Brewer's Sparrow flight calls are
distinct from those of Chipping Sparrows. See attached, 2 sonograms.
Note the distinct "double banding," even triple-banding, plus a
less-symmetrical "upward arch" (sensu Evans & O'Brien); there's more of
a terminal upslur and an introductory downslur. (Sonograms by Nathan
Pieplow, recorded in Colorado.)

 

Back on Sunday, 9 August, my son and I were down in southeastern
Colorado, and "several" (might have been more like "a lot of"--hard to
know) Upland Sandpipers migrated over La Junta, Otero County, in the
middle of the night. The species is considered to be unexpected there,
but maybe migrants are missed. After all, they are expected in fall
migration SSW of La Junta, in New Mexico (or at least they were, when I
lived there 15 years ago), and La Junta lies on a line between there and
the breeding grounds. For additional context, winds were out of the
northeast, with lowering clouds.

 

Meanwhile, south winds are forecast to continue here indefinitely. Well,
when they finally relent, I imagine we'll have a fine few nights of
listening.

 

Best,

Ted

 

 

 



From: bounce-4164608-9667...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-4164608-9667...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Michael
Lanzone

Hi Steve and others,

Last night I think was the best we have had here yet this season, at
least one of our mics was recording 5-10 calls per minute. Early not a
lot though as we had some showers in the area, it picked up later around
11:30pm or so. I am anxious to check our ridge station (on Laurel Mtn)
as radar was ~25dBz there and that often gets a lot more activity than
here with these conditions. It will have to wait till I get back from
AOU though :(


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RE: [nfc-l] NFCs in Caroline

2009-08-12 Thread Ted Floyd
And last night was just about our *slowest* thus far this season...  :-(
 
Eight field trip participants (yes, we really do nocturnal migration
field trips in Colorado...) heard no migrants at all between 4:15 and
5:00 a.m. MDT, Wednesday, 12 August 2009. Location: Greenlee Preserve,
Boulder County, Colorado. (A little flock of Chipping Sparrows pulsed
over at 5:22; not sure if they were wrapping up overnight migration, or
just getting going in the dawn's early light, or what.) A south wind
overnight was surely to blame. Nice meteors, by the way, despite the
moon. Brief trip report at 
http://www.birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/COLO.html#1250080203
 
The "day" before, Tuesday, 11 August 2009, was a little better, with no
wind to speak of overnight. Along with Chipping Sparrows, there was one
of those birds that I think is a Brewer's Sparrow. Despite what I might
have expected a few years ago, Brewer's Sparrow flight calls are
distinct from those of Chipping Sparrows. See attached, 2 sonograms.
Note the distinct "double banding," even triple-banding, plus a
less-symmetrical "upward arch" (sensu Evans & O'Brien); there's more of
a terminal upslur and an introductory downslur. (Sonograms by Nathan
Pieplow, recorded in Colorado.)
 
Back on Sunday, 9 August, my son and I were down in southeastern
Colorado, and "several" (might have been more like "a lot of"--hard to
know) Upland Sandpipers migrated over La Junta, Otero County, in the
middle of the night. The species is considered to be unexpected there,
but maybe migrants are missed. After all, they are expected in fall
migration SSW of La Junta, in New Mexico (or at least they were, when I
lived there 15 years ago), and La Junta lies on a line between there and
the breeding grounds. For additional context, winds were out of the
northeast, with lowering clouds.
 
Meanwhile, south winds are forecast to continue here indefinitely. Well,
when they finally relent, I imagine we'll have a fine few nights of
listening.
 
Best,
Ted
 
 



From: bounce-4164608-9667...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-4164608-9667...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Michael
Lanzone

Hi Steve and others,

Last night I think was the best we have had here yet this season, at
least one of our mics was recording 5-10 calls per minute. Early not a
lot though as we had some showers in the area, it picked up later around
11:30pm or so. I am anxious to check our ridge station (on Laurel Mtn)
as radar was ~25dBz there and that often gets a lot more activity than
here with these conditions. It will have to wait till I get back from
AOU though :(


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Re: [nfc-l] NFCs in Caroline

2009-08-12 Thread Andrew Farnsworth
Good morning all,
Manhattan had a nice flight last night as well, including Veery,
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, American Redstart, and Canada Warbler.  I'll see
what the recordings hold. . .

All my listening and recording is on the east side of Manhattan Island, at
54th St.
Best to all,
Andrew

On Wed, Aug 12, 2009 at 09:00, Michael Lanzone  wrote:

> Hi Steve and others,
>
> Last night I think was the best we have had here yet this season, at least
> one of our mics was recording 5-10 calls per minute. Early not a lot though
> as we had some showers in the area, it picked up later around 11:30pm or so.
> I am anxious to check our ridge station (on Laurel Mtn) as radar was ~25dBz
> there and that often gets a lot more activity than here with these
> conditions. It will have to wait till I get back from AOU though :(
>
> Best,
> Mike
>
> Michael Lanzone
> Biotechnology and Biomonitoring Lab Supervisor
> Carnegie Museum of Natural History
> Powdermill Avian Research Center
> 1847 Route 381
> Rector, PA 15677
> 724.593.5521 Office
> mlanz...@gmail.com
>
>
>
> On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 9:44 PM, Steve Kelling  wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>> I've been listening for the past 30 minutes and am hearing a steady stream
>> of Veerys passing over. I've heard around 100 Veery calls. I've also heard
>>  what I believe were Yellow Warbler type, Chestnut-sided Warbler type,
>> Ovenbird, Savannah Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, and Rose-breasted Grosbeak, as
>> well as many unidentifiable calls. I also heard a Eastern Screech Owl
>> whinny.
>>
>> I started listening around 2110 on Tuesday 11 August 2009
>> I'm listening to the output of a microphone within a parabolic reflector
>> pointed at the night sky.
>> I'm located in the town of Caroline about 12 miles SE of Ithaca NY.
>>
>> Steve Kelling
>>
>>
>> --
>> NFC-L List Info:
>> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_WELCOME
>> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_RULES
>> --
>>
>
>

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Re: [nfc-l] NFCs in Caroline

2009-08-12 Thread Michael Lanzone
Hi Steve and others,

Last night I think was the best we have had here yet this season, at least
one of our mics was recording 5-10 calls per minute. Early not a lot though
as we had some showers in the area, it picked up later around 11:30pm or so.
I am anxious to check our ridge station (on Laurel Mtn) as radar was ~25dBz
there and that often gets a lot more activity than here with these
conditions. It will have to wait till I get back from AOU though :(

Best,
Mike

Michael Lanzone
Biotechnology and Biomonitoring Lab Supervisor
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Powdermill Avian Research Center
1847 Route 381
Rector, PA 15677
724.593.5521 Office
mlanz...@gmail.com


On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 9:44 PM, Steve Kelling  wrote:

> Hello,
> I've been listening for the past 30 minutes and am hearing a steady stream
> of Veerys passing over. I've heard around 100 Veery calls. I've also heard
>  what I believe were Yellow Warbler type, Chestnut-sided Warbler type,
> Ovenbird, Savannah Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, and Rose-breasted Grosbeak, as
> well as many unidentifiable calls. I also heard a Eastern Screech Owl
> whinny.
>
> I started listening around 2110 on Tuesday 11 August 2009
> I'm listening to the output of a microphone within a parabolic reflector
> pointed at the night sky.
> I'm located in the town of Caroline about 12 miles SE of Ithaca NY.
>
> Steve Kelling
>
>
> --
> NFC-L List Info:
> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_WELCOME
> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_RULES
> --
>

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