Hi,
This is an exciting time to be a Birder.
I live on the Bay in Patchogue, Suffolk Co. Have seen many of the same species 
you are reporting over the past few days.

I haven't seen a report of a Brown Creeper sighting anywhere.
I had one feeding with White- Breasted Nuthatches this past Sat. It was quite a 
treat. He stayed around for a few hours. 
Bask in it!!!!
Lori

Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE Smartphone


------ Original message------
From: Andrew Baksh
Date: Tue, Oct 28, 2014 2:08 PM
To: Shaibal Mitra;
Cc: nysbird...@list.cornell.edu;
Subject:Re: [nysbirds-l] [nfc-l] Fwd: Interesting coastal flight happening now 
in the greater NYC metropolitan area

I apologize in advance to anyone who find this post of mine irrelevant to the 
list serve.

Normally, I never post about yard observations. However, like Shai, I was 
intrigued about Andrew's report last night and wanted to see if I was going to 
get the same result I got from the last time I tried a stationary count from my 
yard after reports of a good nocturnal flight the night before. Today's results 
are right on par with very little going on in my neck of the woods.  I have 
been doing stationary counts of my own in Queens, specifically from my yard and 
today was the slowest of the last three days.

Saturday, I opted to count from home for a bit and ended up at Breezy Point 
Queens, where I witnessed some of the same phenomenon reported by observers out 
east, in terms of the volume of birds migrating. Topping the list were 
Dark-eyed Juncos with a count of 1,270 just to provide a sample of how many 
birds were on the move.

Yesterday, a few hours of stationary counts from my yard also resulted in 
decent numbers for my area in comparison to today, where the numbers were much 
lower. One example I could cite, is the low numbers of Pine Siskins observed in 
2 and a half hours of counting today, with 18 compared to 119 from yesterday. 
Purple Finch numbers were also way down.

I find to be interesting the behavior of the Pine Siskins this fall. They are 
not staying at the feeders for any length of time;  most of the ones that come 
in, checkout the feeders or pine cones, feed for about 1 minute and then they 
all continue west. On the other hand, Purple Finches have been swarming the 
feeders and I have had as many as 27 at one time on various feeders.

For those of you into this sort of analysis, here are my checklists from the 
two days for comparison. Yesterday's checklist - 
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S20356531

Today's checklist - http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S20362474

It is a lot of fun trying to decipher the mysteries of migration regardless of 
season!

Cheers,



On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 8:46 AM, Shaibal Mitra <shaibal.mi...@csi.cuny.edu> 
wrote:
Andrew's heads up was followed this morning by a good morning flight in central 
Staten Island, which I viewed from the College of Staten Island from 7:25-8:25.

Highlights were 111 Purple Finches and a Rusty Blackbird among the east to west 
flow(which averages much higher here than on the outer beach), plus a Lincoln's 
Sparrow and a Common Yellowthroat in our small patch of quasi-natural 
vegetation by the biology department.

Complete Checklist:

http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S20360294

Shai Mitra
Bay Shore
 
From: bounce-118307434-49958...@list.cornell.edu 
[bounce-118307434-49958...@list.cornell.edu] on behalf of Andrew Farnsworth 
[andrew.farnswo...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, October 27, 2014 9:03 PM
To: New York Birds; NFC-L
Subject: [nfc-l] Fwd: Interesting coastal flight happening now in the greater 
NYC metropolitan area


Hello all,
For those in the greater New York metropolitan area, an interesting and large 
flight is happening now. Despite what would normally be marginal conditions for 
fall movements (mild temperatures and southerly winds), migrants apparently 
decided time of the season would trump those tonight, even if only in a limited 
geographic area (check your favorite local radar outlet for visuals). In lights 
of some of the taller buildings in east midtown Manhattan migrants can be seen 
passing now, and there is also a nice audible component to this movement 
(White-throated Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, and Hermit Thrush among some other 
species).

Good nocturnal birding,
Andrew


 
Celebrate Italian Heritage with a Special Broadway Benefit Concert by the 
World’s Longest Running Phantom in support of the CSI Italian Studies program>
--
NYSbirds-L List Info:
Welcome and Basics
Rules and Information
Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
Archives:
The Mail Archive
Surfbirds
BirdingOnThe.Net
Please submit your observations to eBird!
--



--
風 Swift as the wind
林 Quiet as the forest
火 Conquer like the fire
山 Steady as the mountain
Sun Tzu  The Art of War

(\__/)
(= '.'=)                                            
(") _ (")                                     

Andrew Baksh
www.birdingdude.blogspot.com
--
NYSbirds-L List Info:
Welcome and Basics
Rules and Information
Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
Archives:
The Mail Archive
Surfbirds
BirdingOnThe.Net
Please submit your observations to eBird!
--
--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

--

Reply via email to