[nysbirds-l] Manhattan, NYC Sunday 6/30 & Monday 7/1 (a few warblers, & etc.)

2019-07-02 Thread Tom Fiore
Manhattan, N.Y. City - Sunday, 30 June, & Monday, 1st of July, 2019

A fairly fast look all around Bryant Park on Sunday morn’ (30 June) as the park 
was opened officially ~7 am- revealed no warblers to me at all, but did provide 
ongoing (lingering) Gray Catbirds (at least 2), Song Sparrow (1 video’d. 
singing), and White-throated Sparrows (6+, several of them also singing) + the 
usual 3 urban-feral spp. (feral ‘rock’ pigeon, European or common starling, and 
house sparrow, all in numbers, plus a single Blue Jay & Mourning Dove to round 
out my fast-paced curcuit of the place.) It is still possible that one or more 
of the warblers, present a bit earlier in June, did linger there but evaded 
being seen on Sunday, or of course they may finally have moved on, or fallen 
prey to any number of typical or atypical risks.

Monday, 1st of July - on an actual “cold” front with good NW winds & following 
storms that affected all of the region on Sunday, some early wanderers or 
possible migrants came in; these at least including several (very very early, 
if returning) American Redstarts, and also a not-as-early Louisiana 
Waterthrush, along the edges of the Pond, in Central Park’s southeast corner. 
This latter warbler might well be a true south-bounder in migration presently.

Also ‘ongoing', at least from mid-late June, were a couple of N. Parulas, and 
at least one female Black-and-white Warbler, all in the Ramble of Central Park; 
these perhaps more like ‘floaters’, that is birds which may not have gone 
farther north & have lingered locally, perhaps wandering a bit in the same park 
or just a bit beyond. It is also possible they represent early non-breeders 
(not able to, or did not manage to in more expected locations & habitat). Of 
these species, Black-and-white does nest not far at all from northern N.Y. 
City, and it is also almost annual as a ‘floater’ type of visitor in summer, 
esp. for Central Park where there is slightly greater observation & more 
records in summer season. N. Parula is an exceedingly rare breeder in the local 
area of N.Y. City.

Central Park has at least 2 (singing male) Common Yellowthroats & there others 
ongoing on Manhattan island. There were some Yellow Warblers in locations from 
the south tip of Manhattan, to nearly the northern edges, & at least one was a 
female, possibly a first-year female, while several were males. 

Some Black Skimmers have appeared in NY County waters and there was also a 
fly-thru at Central Park on July 1st, after sunset at the Meer - first time 
I’ve been at that late an hour; the one bird seemed to appear coming from the 
NW & moved on & across to the SE but could have gone in another direction after 
being in view for a minute or less. This has been an occasional, mostly summer, 
visitor in Central Park in previous years.

A few Spotted Sandpipers have been seen on Manhattan in the past few days, 
including at least 1 in Central Park. A drake Wood Duck was continuing at the 
Pond in Central Park’s southeast.

Ongoing species in some other places in Manhattan island include Green Heron, 
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Great Crested Flyctacher, E. Wood-Pewee, E. Kingbird, 
Tree, Barn, and N. Rough-winged Swallows (the latter seen mostly from n. 
Manhattan, but close observations may reveal them elsewhere, as along the 3 
‘rivers’ or the estuaries of the area - Hudson, Harlem, and East River 
corridors & their associated small bays & inlets which Manhattan does have), 
Wood Thrush (at least 8 pairs scattered around Manhattan from at least Central 
Park & northwards; there are a minimum of 6 adult birds and at least 4 young in 
Central Park, total of ten birds at an absolute-observed minimum as of 7/1, and 
other parks likely have some nests with young or possibly fledged by now), 
Red-eyed & Warbling Vireos, Orchard & Baltimore (many) Orioles, Chipping, Song, 
& White-throated Sparrows (the latter summering, not breeding) and many other 
species, some visitors & some resident which include plenty of nesting species 
- along with the now more-scarce migrant-breeders as only partially noted above.


For butterflies, there continue to be a very good showing locally of American 
Snout, & while seeking that species can be good near where Hackberry trees are 
found (that is a host-plant to the Snout’s life-cycle), they’ve been showing up 
in a number of odd & unexpected sites too, in Manhattan & elsewhere in the 
area. Also turning up more than in some years are Common Buckeye,  Red Admiral, 
as well as Question Mark butterflies - and at least a dozen additonal species 
of butterflies in Manhattan, in just the past few days. Many many other insects 
are and have been out crawling, flying 

---
"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 

[nysbirds-l] Manhattan, NYC Sunday 6/30 & Monday 7/1 (a few warblers, & etc.)

2019-07-02 Thread Tom Fiore
Manhattan, N.Y. City - Sunday, 30 June, & Monday, 1st of July, 2019

A fairly fast look all around Bryant Park on Sunday morn’ (30 June) as the park 
was opened officially ~7 am- revealed no warblers to me at all, but did provide 
ongoing (lingering) Gray Catbirds (at least 2), Song Sparrow (1 video’d. 
singing), and White-throated Sparrows (6+, several of them also singing) + the 
usual 3 urban-feral spp. (feral ‘rock’ pigeon, European or common starling, and 
house sparrow, all in numbers, plus a single Blue Jay & Mourning Dove to round 
out my fast-paced curcuit of the place.) It is still possible that one or more 
of the warblers, present a bit earlier in June, did linger there but evaded 
being seen on Sunday, or of course they may finally have moved on, or fallen 
prey to any number of typical or atypical risks.

Monday, 1st of July - on an actual “cold” front with good NW winds & following 
storms that affected all of the region on Sunday, some early wanderers or 
possible migrants came in; these at least including several (very very early, 
if returning) American Redstarts, and also a not-as-early Louisiana 
Waterthrush, along the edges of the Pond, in Central Park’s southeast corner. 
This latter warbler might well be a true south-bounder in migration presently.

Also ‘ongoing', at least from mid-late June, were a couple of N. Parulas, and 
at least one female Black-and-white Warbler, all in the Ramble of Central Park; 
these perhaps more like ‘floaters’, that is birds which may not have gone 
farther north & have lingered locally, perhaps wandering a bit in the same park 
or just a bit beyond. It is also possible they represent early non-breeders 
(not able to, or did not manage to in more expected locations & habitat). Of 
these species, Black-and-white does nest not far at all from northern N.Y. 
City, and it is also almost annual as a ‘floater’ type of visitor in summer, 
esp. for Central Park where there is slightly greater observation & more 
records in summer season. N. Parula is an exceedingly rare breeder in the local 
area of N.Y. City.

Central Park has at least 2 (singing male) Common Yellowthroats & there others 
ongoing on Manhattan island. There were some Yellow Warblers in locations from 
the south tip of Manhattan, to nearly the northern edges, & at least one was a 
female, possibly a first-year female, while several were males. 

Some Black Skimmers have appeared in NY County waters and there was also a 
fly-thru at Central Park on July 1st, after sunset at the Meer - first time 
I’ve been at that late an hour; the one bird seemed to appear coming from the 
NW & moved on & across to the SE but could have gone in another direction after 
being in view for a minute or less. This has been an occasional, mostly summer, 
visitor in Central Park in previous years.

A few Spotted Sandpipers have been seen on Manhattan in the past few days, 
including at least 1 in Central Park. A drake Wood Duck was continuing at the 
Pond in Central Park’s southeast.

Ongoing species in some other places in Manhattan island include Green Heron, 
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Great Crested Flyctacher, E. Wood-Pewee, E. Kingbird, 
Tree, Barn, and N. Rough-winged Swallows (the latter seen mostly from n. 
Manhattan, but close observations may reveal them elsewhere, as along the 3 
‘rivers’ or the estuaries of the area - Hudson, Harlem, and East River 
corridors & their associated small bays & inlets which Manhattan does have), 
Wood Thrush (at least 8 pairs scattered around Manhattan from at least Central 
Park & northwards; there are a minimum of 6 adult birds and at least 4 young in 
Central Park, total of ten birds at an absolute-observed minimum as of 7/1, and 
other parks likely have some nests with young or possibly fledged by now), 
Red-eyed & Warbling Vireos, Orchard & Baltimore (many) Orioles, Chipping, Song, 
& White-throated Sparrows (the latter summering, not breeding) and many other 
species, some visitors & some resident which include plenty of nesting species 
- along with the now more-scarce migrant-breeders as only partially noted above.


For butterflies, there continue to be a very good showing locally of American 
Snout, & while seeking that species can be good near where Hackberry trees are 
found (that is a host-plant to the Snout’s life-cycle), they’ve been showing up 
in a number of odd & unexpected sites too, in Manhattan & elsewhere in the 
area. Also turning up more than in some years are Common Buckeye,  Red Admiral, 
as well as Question Mark butterflies - and at least a dozen additonal species 
of butterflies in Manhattan, in just the past few days. Many many other insects 
are and have been out crawling, flying 

---
"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 

Re:[nysbirds-l] Vulture predation habits

2019-07-02 Thread Glenn Quinn
FYI, I thought that I had stripped out the hyperlink to plain text in my prior 
post but I guess not.
If you're uncomfortable clicking on the link, just search the subject on your 
own, you'll quickly find a representative article.
GQ
--

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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Re:[nysbirds-l] Vulture predation habits

2019-07-02 Thread Glenn Quinn
FYI, I thought that I had stripped out the hyperlink to plain text in my prior 
post but I guess not.
If you're uncomfortable clicking on the link, just search the subject on your 
own, you'll quickly find a representative article.
GQ
--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES.htm
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://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

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

--

[nysbirds-l] Vulture predation habits

2019-07-02 Thread Glenn Quinn
I'm seeing a few Turkey Vultures with some regularity around the Sills Road, 
Medford area (Suffolk) in the past few days. This in itself is not particularly 
noteworthy but it does give me an opportunity to post the following link:

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/kentucky/articles/2019-06-28/black-vultures-are-roosting-and-eating-animals-alive

It's a gruesome article about vultures eating animals alive that you'll enjoy 
reading over lunch today or dinner this evening.
With our seemingly increasing Long Island population of Turkey Vultures, and 
Black Vultures also showing range expansion here, I often wonder how they find 
enough carrion to survive on the island...
I fear it won't be long before Newsday publishes some hysterical article about 
Turkey Vultures devouring people's pets alive right in their backyards.
Cheers,
Glenn







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ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
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] Vulture predation habits

2019-07-02 Thread Glenn Quinn
I'm seeing a few Turkey Vultures with some regularity around the Sills Road, 
Medford area (Suffolk) in the past few days. This in itself is not particularly 
noteworthy but it does give me an opportunity to post the following link:

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/kentucky/articles/2019-06-28/black-vultures-are-roosting-and-eating-animals-alive

It's a gruesome article about vultures eating animals alive that you'll enjoy 
reading over lunch today or dinner this evening.
With our seemingly increasing Long Island population of Turkey Vultures, and 
Black Vultures also showing range expansion here, I often wonder how they find 
enough carrion to survive on the island...
I fear it won't be long before Newsday publishes some hysterical article about 
Turkey Vultures devouring people's pets alive right in their backyards.
Cheers,
Glenn







--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES.htm
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://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

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

--