Friday, 30 December, 2011 -

RUFOUS Hummingbird still around - at the flower plantings, especially  
in & around the shrubs with very small greenish flowers, by the entry  
to the American Museum of Natural History, in the small park bordered  
by West 81 Street and with Columbus Avenue & Central Park West on  
either side.  This Rufous Hummingbird may be rather inconspicuous when  
feeding slowly among these shrubs, & also may be found perching  
quietly in or among these or other plants, including (in sun &/or  
milder temp's) on a tree's smaller branches or a shrub with no leaves.  
It could be best to allow up to one hour or more for a better chance  
of having a sighting, although the little hummer can sometimes be  
quite apparent when active. I would hazard a guess this bird may still  
be seen on the first day of 2012 and perhaps after that, too...

Red-headed Woodpecker continuing (young bird, lacking real red on  
head, although in photos, any young 'Red-headed' may begin to show  
this before brighter plumage develops in late winter) - in Central  
Park, near or within the north or northwest side of Hallet Sanctuary  
(fenced and no one allowed inside), regularly viewable from pedestrian  
paths on the outside by the fence, just above, or north of, the  
western-most edge of The Pond which is located in the southeast  
portion of Central, not far from Central Park South (also known as  
60th Street, away from the park).
-    -    -    -    -
Thru (at least) Thursday, 29 December -

Lincoln's Sparrow, still in Bryant Park, mid-town Manhattan near 42  
St. - this can sometimes take time to locate. It is a very unusual  
winter lingerer to this region, particularly the longer it is still to  
be found in the area (in the northeast of N. America, in general - but  
then, this has been a nearly-unique December for late-lingering birds  
of a wide variety of species. It is almost as though we are in a much  
more southern state, as judged just by the sheer variety and number of  
birds of late-lingering status, not only in NY state but all through  
New England states and in eastern Canada. This has been a very widely- 
noted phenomenon this fall and now, winter... but there are likely a  
variety of complex mechanisms of arrival and departure that (are and)  
have occurred with this situation & it would surely be fascinating to  
know from whence many of the various species came & also what their  
varied routes may have been before arriving...)

Indigo Bunting (brownish non-breeding plumage) in Central Park's north  
end, Wildflower Meadow & vicinity. While quite uncommon or nearly rare  
in winter, Indigos have overwintered occasionally in Central Park  
(including those that had feeders near their favored areas), & more so  
in the wider region. (A good idea to look closely at any such for the  
rarer possibility of Lazuli and even for any other, more remote,  
possibilities of bunting spp.) - this is an Indigo that's in Central  
now, however. The wildflower meadow is mid-park, at about "latitude"  
103 St.

At least 4 species of warbler continuing (including 3 of the warbler  
spp. in midtown): [2] Yellow-breasted Chat[s], Common Yellowthroats,  
and Ovenbirds - plus Gray Catbirds, Eastern Towhee, Hermit Thrush, and  
other species all in Bryant Park in Manhattan (Fifth to Sixth Avenues,  
& 40th to 42nd Streets) - and elsewhere:

a lingering Orange-crowned Warbler that has been in & around the  
Lasker rink & the far NE edge of the Loch, as well as other parts of  
the N. end of Central Park for many weeks - assuming, as seems likely,  
the same individual, returning to various favored sites. (This is  
hardly a comprehensive list of warbler sightings of the island of  
Manhattan alone in the past week or more, and while some may have  
moved on, or vanished from the local scene, there is a possibility  
that a number of additional species, as well as more individuals, are  
extant even as the end of December is just about here - perhaps  
unprecedented in any records kept.)

There are some additional lingerers seen this week which may well  
still be around, including Baltimore Oriole (Central Park) and E.  
Phoebe (also Central Park), & some considered "half-hardy" which are  
reasonably likely to continue such as Brown Thrasher, & also more of  
the more-often found Gray Catbirds, Hermit Thrushes, & perhaps Ruby- 
crowned Kinglets, along with such very typical Manhattan winterers (in  
contemporary terms) as Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Brown Creeper, Winter  
Wren, Swamp Sparrow & some others. As snow has freshly fallen again in  
some far-northern and higher-elevation parts of the northeast, it will  
be interesting to see if a very late and not-so-readily detected  
"push" of extremely late "migrants" moves south into the south-most  
sections of NY state.

Good birding - for the remainder of this and all of next year, 2012!

Tom Fiore,
Manhattan
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