I missed the Swainson's Thrush, Lincoln's Sparrow, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, and Philadelphia Vireo, as well as the Great Crested Flycatcher which I think Bob mentioned he & Stuart saw before I arrived. 

Other species Bob omitted or missed included: American Black Duck, 3 Pied-billed Grebes in lagoon & Belted Kingfisher nearby, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Tennessee Warbler, immature White-crowned Sparrow, White-throated Sparrow, Northern Cardinal, American Goldfinch, Rock Pigeon (regular flight of about 70, possibly commuting between Ithaca & Taughannock)

After Bob & Stuart left, I added Palm Warbler, Tufted Titmouse, White-breasted Nuthatch, Turkey Vulture, and a second Marsh Wren (in weedy field within mowed path, far from burr-reed slough by lagoon where first one was). 

--Dave Nutter

On Sep 29, 2012, at 01:28 PM, bob mcguire <bmcgu...@clarityconnect.com> wrote:

The north end of Cass Park/lake shore/Hog Hole was hopping this
morning! On the way in at 8 am I ran into Shai Mitra and his wife (I
think) who were just leaving. They mentioned seeing a LINCOLN'S
SPARROW, numerous Swamp Sparrows, and four NELSON'S SPARROWS. I was
joined shortly thereafter by Stu Krasnoff. As we walked in along the
western edge of the field, we came upon a feeding flock that
contained, in addition to a couple of Yellow-rumped Warblers, at least
one NASHVILLE and one MAGNOLIA WARBLER as well as a possible Bay-
breasted Warbler. A Carolina Wren and Northern Flickers were calling
in the background.

Dave Nutter arrived soon after that, and the three of us walked the
field to the right of the trail, flushing at least four, possibly five
NELSON'S SPARROWS, several Song and Swamp Sparrows, and Common
Yellowthroats.

We then turned our attention to the jetty where the usual mix of gulls
and cormorants were getting ready for the crew races (stretching,
preening, testing their calls). Among them were two CASPIAN TERNS and
a single COMMON TERN. The tern was molting, with the hint of a white
forehead and emerging carpal bar.

After that we slogged through the grass at Hog Hole, flushing Song and
Swamp Sparrows and one fresh-looking LINCOLN'S SPARROW. In the reeds
along the channel to the west was a calling MARSH WREN, and in the
water itself were numerous Mallards, 6 WOOD DUCKS, 3 GREEN-WING TEAL,
a Common Merganser, a Coot, and a (the) COMMON GALLINULE.

Heading back south through the woods we encountered a small flock with
chickadees, 2 Eastern Phoebes, several Yellow-rumped Warblers, a
Nashville Warbler (possible the same one Stu and I had earlier in the
same area), more Carolina Wrens, and a Red-bellied Woodpecker.

Finally, Dave and I walked east, past the marina and through the grove
of tall trees along the inlet. We found another feeding flock
containing: PHILADELPHIA VIREO, 2 RED-EYED VIREOS, 2 MAGNOLIA
WARBLERS, a RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET, numerous Yellow-rumped Warblers, and
(most surprising to me), a SWAINSON'S THRUSH.

Since I did not take notes and am writing this from memory, I hope
that Stu and Dave will chime in with additions/corrections. It was
certainly a great morning to be out!

Bob McGuire



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