Pat Rice and I were there about 9am Sunday, and the three Gray-crowned Rosy-finches arrived ( right on schedule ) at 9:55. They came in high over the building, then dropped down under a parked car and worked their way up to the flower pot.They stayed about 10 minutes and flew away across the street.
After that we drove the Hedbom road were it was pretty quiet, but we did see some White-winged Crossbills, and one Black-backed Woodpecker. We heard another but did not see that one. Road conditions were very good as of Sunday afternoon. Jeanie Joppru Pennington County > -----Original Message----- > From: mou-net-ad...@cbs.umn.edu > [mailto:mou-net-ad...@cbs.umn.edu] On Behalf Of Mike Hendrickson > Sent: Monday, February 12, 2007 12:05 AM > To: Derek Bakken; Birding; Birding > Subject: Re: [mou] Northern Hawk Owl in Duluth / No GC Rosy Finches > > > Derek and all: > > The Gray-crowned Rosy Finches are most likely still around > because as many > birders found out when they came to see the finches there are > no feeders. > > The finches fed on top of the green flower pot, picked at the > old sunflower > plants and also on seeds that were tossed on the ground. > Also, when you come > to see the finches and they are not there when you arrive, > well you might > have to wait anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour. > > Michael Hendrickson > Duluth, Minnesota > http://webpages.charter.net/mmhendrickson/ > > _______________________________________________ > mou-net mailing list > mou-...@cbs.umn.edu > http://cbs.umn.edu/mailman/listinfo/mou-net >