Central Park NYC
Wednesday May 18, 2016
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, m.ob. on bird walk starting from the dock on Turtle
Pond at 9am.
Twenty species of Wood Warblers this morning, including a late Palm Warbler.
The List includes some birds seen by Bob at the Reservoir and Bridle Path
before the
Take a trip to the top of Slide Montain in the next few weeks. Guaranteed
Bicknell's
Paul Sweet | Department of Ornithology | American Museum of Natural History |
Central Park West @ 79th St | NY 10023 | Tel 212 769 5780 | Mob 718 757 5941
> On May 18, 2016, at 12:32 PM, Pat Palladino wrote:
>
Probable Bicknell's I should say. A single bird was present which directly
matched the photographs of others who heard it sing; however, there was no song
while I was there. There were at least seven other Gray-cheeks there as well.
As such, I'm still searching for my life Bicknell's Thrush.
Pa
In Central Park (Manhattan, N.Y. City) on early Tuesday a.m. (17 May),
a tern I'd seen as a fast fly-by and in low light was a *possible*
Forster's, & goes into my own notes simply as "Sterna" [genus] "sp."
All terns are rare in Central Park at least in modern times, despite
the above-noted
Cold Spring Harbor
Reported on ebird yesterday, seen around 11:30 on the south side of the
main field
Rob in Massapequa
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Raphael Campos redoing the Mourning Warbler shortly before noon. It is in the
same area where the Least Bittern was seen a few days ago south of the Rose
Garden in an "Aurelia Grove" behind a transformer "tombstone" near a huge tulip
tree and willow Oak.
Rob Bate
Brooklyn
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A young male Summer Tanager is present along with a Yellow-bellied
Flycatcher for the third day, a Yellow-billed Cuckoo and a good variety of
warblers at Rye Nature Center in Westchester County this morning.
Tom Burke, Gail Benson & Bob Shriber
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The Olive-sided Flycatcher is at the site described yesterday by Patricia
Lindsay: immediately north of the path that runs E-W along the south side of
the pond, on the western side. Showing white tufts as it preens.
Doug Futuyma
Sent from my iPhone
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A Bicknell's Thrush found yesterday by Rob Jett was still present and
singing this morning in Prospect Park, on the lefthand paved path of the
peninsula, about halfway between the pink beach and where the paths
converge.
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Tuesday, 17 May, 2016
Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City
A very good new arrival of migrants, with a much richer variety of
flycatchers, as well as additional thrushes, vireos, warblers,
tanagers and more, all coming in from Monday night to Tuesday. One
bird I saw which was by far the grea
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