[nysbirds-l] "A Tale of Many Penguins" - North Shore Audubon Meeting this Tuesday, May 28, 2019

2019-05-24 Thread Nancy Tognan
The North Shore Audubon Society will hold its monthly program on Tuesday, May 
28, 2019, from 7pm to 9pm, at the Manhasset Public Library, 30 Onderdonk 
Avenue, Manhasset NY 11030.  All are invited, free of charge.

Public transit users:  This location is a half-mile walk from the Manhasset 
LIRR station.

 Ardith Bondi will present “A Tale of Many Penguins”.

 Penguins are definitely not one size fits all.  Although they mostly live 
in the southern hemisphere and none can fly, they live in varied habitats on 
diverse continents and have varied lifestyles.  Dr. Bondi's’ photo presentation 
will show and discuss the different types of penguins she has visited, how they 
live and what it took to photograph them in the wild.
 Ardith Bondi lives in Manhattan. She earned a PhD in pharmacology from 
Columbia University and then continued doing medical research at NYU Medical 
Center and at the Rockefeller University before leaving research to perform as 
a flutist.  After years of performing and teaching, she still plays in the 
Centre Symphony in Manhattan and photographs birds near her home and in many 
other interesting places.

For more information on NSAS programs and weekly walks, see 
www.northshoreaudubon.org  

Nancy Tognan
Publicity volunteer, North Shore Audubon Society
nancy.tog...@gmail.com 
--

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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--

[nysbirds-l] "A Tale of Many Penguins" - North Shore Audubon Meeting this Tuesday, May 28, 2019

2019-05-24 Thread Nancy Tognan
The North Shore Audubon Society will hold its monthly program on Tuesday, May 
28, 2019, from 7pm to 9pm, at the Manhasset Public Library, 30 Onderdonk 
Avenue, Manhasset NY 11030.  All are invited, free of charge.

Public transit users:  This location is a half-mile walk from the Manhasset 
LIRR station.

 Ardith Bondi will present “A Tale of Many Penguins”.

 Penguins are definitely not one size fits all.  Although they mostly live 
in the southern hemisphere and none can fly, they live in varied habitats on 
diverse continents and have varied lifestyles.  Dr. Bondi's’ photo presentation 
will show and discuss the different types of penguins she has visited, how they 
live and what it took to photograph them in the wild.
 Ardith Bondi lives in Manhattan. She earned a PhD in pharmacology from 
Columbia University and then continued doing medical research at NYU Medical 
Center and at the Rockefeller University before leaving research to perform as 
a flutist.  After years of performing and teaching, she still plays in the 
Centre Symphony in Manhattan and photographs birds near her home and in many 
other interesting places.

For more information on NSAS programs and weekly walks, see 
www.northshoreaudubon.org  

Nancy Tognan
Publicity volunteer, North Shore Audubon Society
nancy.tog...@gmail.com 
--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--

[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC - Fri. May 24, 2019 - Black-billed Cuckoo, 14 species of Wood Warblers incl. Mourning Warbler

2019-05-24 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park - North End, NYC
Friday, May 24, 2019
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.


Highlights: Black-billed Cuckoo, 14 species of Wood Warblers including 
Mourning, Tennessee, Blackburnian, and Bay-breasted. 


Canada Goose - at least 20 Harlem Meer
Mallard - 10
Mourning Dove - 3 or 4
Black-billed Cuckoo - 2 or 3 (2 Loch (Beck Kramer) & 1 Meer Island)
Chimney Swift - 3
Solitary Sandpiper - Loch (seen earlier at Compost Area (David Barrett))
Herring Gull - 6 Reservoir
Double-crested Cormorant - 8
Great Egret - 1 Meer Island & 4 flyovers
Snowy Egret - 2 flyovers
Red-tailed Hawk - flyover
Red-bellied Woodpecker - male Blockhouse
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 4
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher - Loch (Bob - early)
Blue-headed Vireo - east end of Loch (David Barrett)
Warbling Vireo - 5
Red-eyed Vireo - 12
Blue Jay - 5
Crow - unidentified silent flyover Conservatory Garden
Barn Swallow - 2 over Harlem Meer
Veery - singing east side of Loch (Bob - early)
Swainson's Thrush - 2
American Robin
Gray Catbird - 3
Cedar Waxwing - 15-20 Great Hill, 15-20 Conservatory Garden (Elizabeth 
Millard-Whitman)
Song Sparrow - singing & probably nesting Conservatory Garden
White-throated Sparrow - Blockhouse
Baltimore Oriole - 6 or 7
Red-winged Blackbird - 5 (4 male, 1 female) Harlem Meer
Common Grackle - 5 Loch
Ovenbird - east side of Reservoir (Bob - early)
Northern Waterthrush - 2
Black-and-white Warbler - 2 (male & female) Loch
Tennessee Warbler - heard west side Meer (David Barrett, then m.ob.)
Mourning Warbler - 2 males, first-spring bird singing, Loch (confirmed by 
others)
Common Yellowthroat - 2 (female Loch, male Meer Island)
American Redstart - 25
Northern Parula - 3
Magnolia Warbler - 8 (mostly female)
Bay-breasted Warbler - male east side of Loch (Bob - early)
Blackburnian Warbler - male east side of Loch (Bob - early)
Chestnut-sided Warbler - 2 (Lasker Pool & Loch)
Blackpoll Warbler - a dozen
Canada Warbler - 4 including 1 female
Northern Cardinal - nesting pair

If you have a recording of a singing Mourning Warbler from this spring, Jay 
Pitocchelli is doing a study, so please pass it along. His email: 
jpito...@anselm.edu

Cheer-cheer-cheer-up & enjoy the weekend, 

Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter @BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC


--

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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--


[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC - Fri. May 24, 2019 - Black-billed Cuckoo, 14 species of Wood Warblers incl. Mourning Warbler

2019-05-24 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park - North End, NYC
Friday, May 24, 2019
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob.


Highlights: Black-billed Cuckoo, 14 species of Wood Warblers including 
Mourning, Tennessee, Blackburnian, and Bay-breasted. 


Canada Goose - at least 20 Harlem Meer
Mallard - 10
Mourning Dove - 3 or 4
Black-billed Cuckoo - 2 or 3 (2 Loch (Beck Kramer) & 1 Meer Island)
Chimney Swift - 3
Solitary Sandpiper - Loch (seen earlier at Compost Area (David Barrett))
Herring Gull - 6 Reservoir
Double-crested Cormorant - 8
Great Egret - 1 Meer Island & 4 flyovers
Snowy Egret - 2 flyovers
Red-tailed Hawk - flyover
Red-bellied Woodpecker - male Blockhouse
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 4
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher - Loch (Bob - early)
Blue-headed Vireo - east end of Loch (David Barrett)
Warbling Vireo - 5
Red-eyed Vireo - 12
Blue Jay - 5
Crow - unidentified silent flyover Conservatory Garden
Barn Swallow - 2 over Harlem Meer
Veery - singing east side of Loch (Bob - early)
Swainson's Thrush - 2
American Robin
Gray Catbird - 3
Cedar Waxwing - 15-20 Great Hill, 15-20 Conservatory Garden (Elizabeth 
Millard-Whitman)
Song Sparrow - singing & probably nesting Conservatory Garden
White-throated Sparrow - Blockhouse
Baltimore Oriole - 6 or 7
Red-winged Blackbird - 5 (4 male, 1 female) Harlem Meer
Common Grackle - 5 Loch
Ovenbird - east side of Reservoir (Bob - early)
Northern Waterthrush - 2
Black-and-white Warbler - 2 (male & female) Loch
Tennessee Warbler - heard west side Meer (David Barrett, then m.ob.)
Mourning Warbler - 2 males, first-spring bird singing, Loch (confirmed by 
others)
Common Yellowthroat - 2 (female Loch, male Meer Island)
American Redstart - 25
Northern Parula - 3
Magnolia Warbler - 8 (mostly female)
Bay-breasted Warbler - male east side of Loch (Bob - early)
Blackburnian Warbler - male east side of Loch (Bob - early)
Chestnut-sided Warbler - 2 (Lasker Pool & Loch)
Blackpoll Warbler - a dozen
Canada Warbler - 4 including 1 female
Northern Cardinal - nesting pair

If you have a recording of a singing Mourning Warbler from this spring, Jay 
Pitocchelli is doing a study, so please pass it along. His email: 
jpito...@anselm.edu

Cheer-cheer-cheer-up & enjoy the weekend, 

Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter @BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC


--

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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--


[nysbirds-l] Fahnestock St. Park putnam County

2019-05-24 Thread Larry Trachtenberg
Around 11 am today in campground area just off Rte 301/Taconic. Area known as 
Marty McGuire Woods, Max Kogut and I flushed two ruffed grouse. My first in the 
county in five + years. 

L. Trachtenberg 
Ossining 

Sent from my iPhone
--

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[nysbirds-l] Fahnestock St. Park putnam County

2019-05-24 Thread Larry Trachtenberg
Around 11 am today in campground area just off Rte 301/Taconic. Area known as 
Marty McGuire Woods, Max Kogut and I flushed two ruffed grouse. My first in the 
county in five + years. 

L. Trachtenberg 
Ossining 

Sent from my iPhone
--

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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--



[nysbirds-l] Marine Nature Study Area, Oceanside

2019-05-24 Thread Sy Schiff
Very windy, gusts to 21 mph. No Sparrows seen or heard in the marsh. A 
WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER posed next to a SEMIPALMATED (nice size comparison in 
the photo), first for me as all the prior reports have come from later in the 
day after I left. All together 11 species of shorebirds. CLAPPER RAILS were 
much subdued but one managed to walk around in the open whale a few others 
called. The MARSH WREN continues singing in the reeds next to the west side of 
the pond., singing  three feet away, burroughed in and I couldn’t find it.

A WILLOW FLYCATCHER continues and can be heard at the end of the boardwalk on 
the golf course side.

The Thunderbirds are practicing for this weekend’s holiday show and flew over 
so I could take their picture. Hey, they’re birds.
Sy Schiff

Sent from Mail for Windows 10


--

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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--

[nysbirds-l] Marine Nature Study Area, Oceanside

2019-05-24 Thread Sy Schiff
Very windy, gusts to 21 mph. No Sparrows seen or heard in the marsh. A 
WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER posed next to a SEMIPALMATED (nice size comparison in 
the photo), first for me as all the prior reports have come from later in the 
day after I left. All together 11 species of shorebirds. CLAPPER RAILS were 
much subdued but one managed to walk around in the open whale a few others 
called. The MARSH WREN continues singing in the reeds next to the west side of 
the pond., singing  three feet away, burroughed in and I couldn’t find it.

A WILLOW FLYCATCHER continues and can be heard at the end of the boardwalk on 
the golf course side.

The Thunderbirds are practicing for this weekend’s holiday show and flew over 
so I could take their picture. Hey, they’re birds.
Sy Schiff

Sent from Mail for Windows 10


--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--

[nysbirds-l] Mourning & other warblers, Manhattan, NYC 5/23

2019-05-24 Thread Thomas Fiore
Keeping up its rep. for rare & all sorts of birds, expected or not, Cape May 
Point (at the southern tip of New Jersey) on Thursday (5/23) produced a 
Yellow-green Vireo, a species that is mostly found in Mexico & Central & South 
America, & is uncommon at best in some parts of the U.S.-Mexico border areas 
with rather scant records to the north of there.

---
Thursday, 22 May, 2019 - Manhattan, N.Y. City -

A minimum of 5 male Mourning Warblers were present on Manhattan on Thursday; of 
these, 2 were seen by a number of observers, one of the 2 found & reported 
quite early in the day by Tom Perlman, at the n. end of Central Park. A bit 
later, it was realized that 2 male Mournings were in the same area on the 
western edge of the Great Hill.  Yet another male in Central Park was on Summit 
Rock, a mile or so south of those. Much later in the day & both before & after 
a late-day brief downpour, I found a male Mourning just inside Riverside Park, 
near W. 118th St. - not too far south of ‘goatpenn’, an experimental fenced 
area of invasive-plant-removal by semi-professional goats - this story has been 
in the local news… & had been done before in N.Y. City, in Brooklyn’s Prospect 
Park for the same purpose.  A 5th Mourning Warbler was found at a somewhat 
obscure park, barely-visited by birders, along Edgecomb Ave. in northern 
Manhattan.  It is likely that some additional Mournings were present on the 
day, in Manhattan. A number of this species were also detected in other areas 
of the region for the day & still more are sure to pass through in the coming 
days. (This is not a very rare, or even rare warbler, it is simply a usually 
shy and skulking species but is even moderately common when at the peak times 
of the species’ migrations.)

There were at least 20 species of warblers in Manhattan on Thursday, with just 
a few in good numbers, including Blackpoll, American Redstart, Magnolia, 
Canada, & Yellow, as well as Common Yellowthroat.  However, a fair number of 
other species were also found into at least low double-digits, including 
Bay-breasted, Tennessee, and Ovenbird.  One species might have been represented 
by just a single individual - a female-plumaged Hooded Warbler was in the area 
north of Strawberry Fields in Central Park, near the west perimeter wall of the 
park.

Both Cuckoo species were seen, in fairly modest numbers, with Yellow-billed the 
more-common. A good diversity of the genus Empidonax were also seen & some 
heard singing or (more often) calling, including Least, Willow, Yellow-bellied, 
& Acadian Flycatchers. There were also a number of “traill’s” type (being 
either Alder or Willow, but totally silent). Many E. Kingbirds were seen, 
including at least some on the move very early in the day (before a morning 
shower).  Catharus [genus] thrushes still had a bit of variety with a few Veery 
lingering, as well as Wood Thrush (which attempt nesting in some locations in 
Manhattan) and greater numbers of Swainson’s & Gray-cheeked (type) Thrushes, 
with some of the latter also singing typical Gray-cheeked songs both early & 
very late in the day.  Multiple Indigo Buntings were seen (of both sexes) and 
the same was so for Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks and both Orchard 
& (much more common) Baltimore Orioles. Vireos were mostly either Warbling or 
Red-eyed, but a somewhat late Blue-headed was reported as was Yellow-throated 
Vireo, the latter a scarce nester in Manhattan both historically & in modern 
times.  Sparrows included Lincoln’s, White-throated (still in numbers in a few 
places, but much reduced overall), Song & Chipping (each of which nest in 
Manhattan).  At least a few Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers were still around, even 
in the larger parks. 

A few Common Nighthawks were seen from several locations in Central Park, & 
also from near the western edge of the Hudson river, north of 125th Street, 
after late-day showers passed. 

——
Some recent bird-news from the birdiest nation on the planet:
https://www.audubon.org/news/a-miraculous-discovery-near-medellin-yields-insight-mysterious-songbird
 


---
"Once upon a time, when women were birds, there was the simple understanding 
that to sing at dawn and to sing at dusk was to heal the world through joy. The 
birds still remember what we have forgotten, that the world is meant to be 
celebrated.” - Terry Tempest Williams (contemporary activist, and author of 
many books)

good -& safe- Memorial-Day-weekend birding to all,

Tom Fiore
manhattan





--

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http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
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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) 

[nysbirds-l] Mourning & other warblers, Manhattan, NYC 5/23

2019-05-24 Thread Thomas Fiore
Keeping up its rep. for rare & all sorts of birds, expected or not, Cape May 
Point (at the southern tip of New Jersey) on Thursday (5/23) produced a 
Yellow-green Vireo, a species that is mostly found in Mexico & Central & South 
America, & is uncommon at best in some parts of the U.S.-Mexico border areas 
with rather scant records to the north of there.

---
Thursday, 22 May, 2019 - Manhattan, N.Y. City -

A minimum of 5 male Mourning Warblers were present on Manhattan on Thursday; of 
these, 2 were seen by a number of observers, one of the 2 found & reported 
quite early in the day by Tom Perlman, at the n. end of Central Park. A bit 
later, it was realized that 2 male Mournings were in the same area on the 
western edge of the Great Hill.  Yet another male in Central Park was on Summit 
Rock, a mile or so south of those. Much later in the day & both before & after 
a late-day brief downpour, I found a male Mourning just inside Riverside Park, 
near W. 118th St. - not too far south of ‘goatpenn’, an experimental fenced 
area of invasive-plant-removal by semi-professional goats - this story has been 
in the local news… & had been done before in N.Y. City, in Brooklyn’s Prospect 
Park for the same purpose.  A 5th Mourning Warbler was found at a somewhat 
obscure park, barely-visited by birders, along Edgecomb Ave. in northern 
Manhattan.  It is likely that some additional Mournings were present on the 
day, in Manhattan. A number of this species were also detected in other areas 
of the region for the day & still more are sure to pass through in the coming 
days. (This is not a very rare, or even rare warbler, it is simply a usually 
shy and skulking species but is even moderately common when at the peak times 
of the species’ migrations.)

There were at least 20 species of warblers in Manhattan on Thursday, with just 
a few in good numbers, including Blackpoll, American Redstart, Magnolia, 
Canada, & Yellow, as well as Common Yellowthroat.  However, a fair number of 
other species were also found into at least low double-digits, including 
Bay-breasted, Tennessee, and Ovenbird.  One species might have been represented 
by just a single individual - a female-plumaged Hooded Warbler was in the area 
north of Strawberry Fields in Central Park, near the west perimeter wall of the 
park.

Both Cuckoo species were seen, in fairly modest numbers, with Yellow-billed the 
more-common. A good diversity of the genus Empidonax were also seen & some 
heard singing or (more often) calling, including Least, Willow, Yellow-bellied, 
& Acadian Flycatchers. There were also a number of “traill’s” type (being 
either Alder or Willow, but totally silent). Many E. Kingbirds were seen, 
including at least some on the move very early in the day (before a morning 
shower).  Catharus [genus] thrushes still had a bit of variety with a few Veery 
lingering, as well as Wood Thrush (which attempt nesting in some locations in 
Manhattan) and greater numbers of Swainson’s & Gray-cheeked (type) Thrushes, 
with some of the latter also singing typical Gray-cheeked songs both early & 
very late in the day.  Multiple Indigo Buntings were seen (of both sexes) and 
the same was so for Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks and both Orchard 
& (much more common) Baltimore Orioles. Vireos were mostly either Warbling or 
Red-eyed, but a somewhat late Blue-headed was reported as was Yellow-throated 
Vireo, the latter a scarce nester in Manhattan both historically & in modern 
times.  Sparrows included Lincoln’s, White-throated (still in numbers in a few 
places, but much reduced overall), Song & Chipping (each of which nest in 
Manhattan).  At least a few Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers were still around, even 
in the larger parks. 

A few Common Nighthawks were seen from several locations in Central Park, & 
also from near the western edge of the Hudson river, north of 125th Street, 
after late-day showers passed. 

——
Some recent bird-news from the birdiest nation on the planet:
https://www.audubon.org/news/a-miraculous-discovery-near-medellin-yields-insight-mysterious-songbird
 


---
"Once upon a time, when women were birds, there was the simple understanding 
that to sing at dawn and to sing at dusk was to heal the world through joy. The 
birds still remember what we have forgotten, that the world is meant to be 
celebrated.” - Terry Tempest Williams (contemporary activist, and author of 
many books)

good -& safe- Memorial-Day-weekend birding to all,

Tom Fiore
manhattan





--

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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) 

[nysbirds-l] Nickerson Beach

2019-05-24 Thread Robert Lewis
Anyone been to Nickerson Beach (Nassau County) recently?  How are the terns?  
Are they collecting parking fees yet?
Bob LewisSleepy Hollow NY

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--

[nysbirds-l] Nickerson Beach

2019-05-24 Thread Robert Lewis
Anyone been to Nickerson Beach (Nassau County) recently?  How are the terns?  
Are they collecting parking fees yet?
Bob LewisSleepy Hollow NY

--

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3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
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--