Hello all,

Re adult male Pine Grosbeaks: I've heard this same argument by many throughout 
the northeast this year, but it is not at all uncommon to have the vast 
majority of Pine Grosbeaks in invasions like this to be immatures and females. 
In the 97-98 and 2001-02 invasion the same thing happened. This is only the 4th 
large invasion of this species in the state in the last 15 years  (97-98, 
01-02, 07-08 and 12-13). There were a decent number of adult males in the  
2007-08....many more than in the 3 other major invasions.  Yes, it's a tad 
unusual to not a have few more adult males, but females and immatures always  
outnumber (usually by a far amount) adult males in the larger invasions. I 
traveled into the ADKS and throughout central NY in 2002, and I saw a total of 
4 adult male Pine Grosbeaks.....and I saw a few hundred Pine Grosbeaks that 
year. 

cheers,
Matt
________________________________________
From: [email protected] 
[[email protected]] on behalf of Joan E. Collins 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2013 7:28 PM
To: NYSBIRDS-L; [email protected]
Subject: [nysbirds-l] NYSOA St. Lawrence Valley Field Trip

1/13/13 St. Lawrence County locations (7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.)

On Sunday, eighteen people attended the NYS Ornithological Association’s field 
trip held in the St. Lawrence Valley to view winter bird visitors.  St. 
Lawrence County had record-breaking warm temperatures on Saturday and came 
close to breaking records on Sunday.  The Sunday temperatures, both low and 
high for the day, were over 30 degrees higher than average!  It was in the high 
50s.  We had some rain in the morning and then thick fog over the snow and open 
water around the county.  The St. Lawrence River is mostly open water.  
Normally, at this time of year, waterfowl and gulls can be found congregated at 
the open water near Moses-Saunders Dam (Massena), viewed from Hawkins Point, 
but with the river mostly open, waterfowl and gulls are scattered.

The field trip was a car-birding excursion across the northern section of St. 
Lawrence County.  We formed a train of 5 cars and drove a circuit from Canton 
to Rensselaer Falls to Ogdensburg to Lisbon to Madrid to Waddington to Massena 
to Winthrop to Potsdam and back to Canton!  The birding itinerary took us 
through villages, shrubby habitat, open farm country (which ended up being 
“fog” country on Sunday!), river edge, swamps, and deciduous forest.  We had 4 
walkie-talkies (thanks to Ann Spencer and Mary Normandia) which helped 
communication between cars.  Car-birding has its comical challenges – when 
someone sees a bird and asks you to stop the car (suddenly) and you hope the 
car behind doesn’t ram into you!  And then, because the stop can’t be 
instantaneous, you get asked to back-up, but there is a train of 4 cars behind 
you by this point!  At a couple of our stops, in front of someone’s house, the 
homeowners came out to see what was going on, and we think we may have started 
a couple people on the road to becoming birders as a result!  One young man was 
excited that there were 40 Pine Grosbeaks perched in his backyard and declared 
that he was going to go inside and google “Pine Grosbeak” right away!  (He also 
kindly offered that we could go in his backyard to see the birds even closer if 
we wanted.)  Another woman viewed the 18 Bohemian Waxwings across from her 
driveway through one of the participant’s binoculars!

Regardless of the morning rain and fog, we still managed to find quite a few 
winter visitors among other birds on Sunday.  Here are some of the species 
found:

Trumpeter Swan – 3 at the outlet of Lower Lake on Route 15 in Canton (2 adults 
and a juvenile)  (This area had been frozen last Thursday.)
Waterfowl – Amer. Black Duck, Mallard, Hooded Merganser, Common Merganser
Wild Turkey
Red-tailed Hawk – 10
Amer. Kestrel
Herring Gull
Great Black-backed Gull
Belted Kingfisher – 1 at the outlet of Lower Lake on Route 15 in Canton (given 
climate change, Belted Kingfisher is becoming a year-round bird up north)
Hairy Woodpecker
Northern Flicker – Hawkins Point
Northern Shrike – 4 (3 adults and 1 juvenile), 2 different locations on Irish 
Settlement Rd. in Canton, 1 in Madrid, and 1 in Massena on Robinson Bay Rd.
Common Raven
American Robin
Bohemian Waxwing – 24 (6 in Massena on Horton Rd. and 18 on Route 11 northeast 
of Potsdam)
American Tree Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Snow Bunting – 9 in Madrid (Route 30)
Northern Cardinal –many
Pine Grosbeak – 63 (15 in Canton along Route 11, ~40 in Ogdensburg, and 8 in 
Massena on Horton Rd.)
Common Redpoll – hundreds!  (We found a probable Hoary Redpoll in a large flock 
in Canton, but it was at a distance high in a tree.)

One of the Pine Grosbeaks in Ogdensburg was an adult male.  This was the first 
adult male that I’ve seen this winter!  This is certainly the most unusual 
irruption I’ve ever observed for this species.  I assume the adult males stayed 
north since I hear it is the same case in VT, NH, and ME – birders only viewing 
females and young birds.  There is a lot of fruit left on the trees in 
Ogdensburg, so Pine Grosbeaks will probably be there all winter.  The birds are 
located by the St. Lawrence River ranging from Caroline St. to Riverside Dr. to 
State St. to Washington St. (immediately drive behind the buildings to the 
left) to Crescent St. to Greene St.  In Canton, I’ve been viewing Pine 
Grosbeaks in the same fruit tree for 2 months now!  The large flocks of 
Bohemian Waxwings can polish off the fruit in a tree with remarkable speed 
compared to Pine Grosbeaks!

It was great to meet birders from around New York State over the weekend!  
Thank you to Kathy Schneider for organizing NYSOA’s quarterly 
presentations/field trips around the state.

Joan Collins
Long Lake, NY
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