Thanks Greg!  I was just thinking that we could probably confirm Red and 
White-winged Crossbills for the Atlas in every block in the central Adirondacks 
this year!  Juveniles should be showing up in late March and April.

 

There was something else I forgot to mention in my post.  Most birders are 
aware of the problem with crossbills being killed in the roads while gritting 
because they fly up last minute (so usually they are not run over, but smacked 
hard enough to die).  One of the things I’ve learned to do living in the 
Adirondacks is to immediately hit my car horn when I see a deer – this is 
really effective since they run away from the sound (rather than running toward 
your headlights like they do at night when blinded).  I have tried hitting my 
horn with crossbill flocks several times this winter and it works!  They 
immediately fly up when they hear the horn!  It isn’t always possible to react 
that fast – I came around the corner on Route 28N in Long Lake the other day to 
crossbills all over the road – I swerved my way through them and was fortunate 
not to hit any.  There was no time to hit the horn.  But when you do have time, 
it does work.  I hope this advice saves a few crossbills because it is an awful 
problem.

 

Joan Collins

Adirondack Avian Expeditions & Workshops LLC

Editor, New York Birders

Long Lake, NY

(315) 244-7127 cell       

(518) 624-5528 home

http://www.adirondackavianexpeditions.com/  

http://www.facebook.com/AdirondackAvian

 

From: nnybi...@groups.io <nnybi...@groups.io> On Behalf Of Greg Lawrence via 
groups.io
Sent: Tuesday, February 8, 2022 10:49 AM
To: nnybi...@groups.io; nnybi...@groups.io
Subject: Re: [NNYBirds] Winter Birding Weekends in the central Adirondacks 
(Hamilton and Essex Counties)

 

In addition to the locations Joan mentioned from this weekend (which were all 
incredible!), for anyone coming up to (or just looking for a closer crossbill 
location) the ADKs from the western or central parts of the state, a great 
place to check is around the towns of Forestport and Ohio in Oneida/Herkimer 
Counties.  Robert Buckert and I had Red Crossbills along North Lake Rd. heading 
ENE from Forestport starting from the old communications tower grounds just 
over the Herkimer County line all the way to Atwell on North Lake, where we had 
a couple large, very active Red Crossbill flocks along with a White-winged 
Crossbill.  Crossbills were gritting in a few spots along this stretch, with 
another good spot at the intersection of N Lake Rd. and Farr Rd. at Otter 
Brook.  We had a lot of Purple Finches and American Goldfinches along this 
stretch as well.  

 

Please note any breeding activity such as singing, courtship, or even gathering 
of nest material (Robert and I had a pair of White-wingeds gathering nest 
material at the Raquette Lake outlet bridge on Saturday), and  put any eBird 
lists w/ crossbill breeding activity in the NY Breeding Bird Atlas portal 
(ebird.org/atlasny)-this is a great way to contribute unique and meaningful 
data on this extraordinary event to the atlas even during the winter!  

 

Good birding!

Greg Lawrence

 

On Tuesday, February 8, 2022, 10:18:29 AM EST, Dana Rohleder via groups.io 
<dcrohleder=yahoo....@groups.io <mailto:dcrohleder=yahoo....@groups.io> > 
wrote: 

 

 

Thanks for the post Joan!

I can tell you where the Crossbills AREN'T. A week ago I took a long drive 
making a loop from PK to Silver Lake Bog, Union Falls, Franklin Falls, and 
Plank/Forestdale Rd. in calm, overcast, zero weather. On the entire woodland 
route I only saw two birds - both Blue Jays! No Juncos, Chickadees, Crows - 
nuthin'. I also saw very few cones that would at least partially explain this. 
So if anyone is thinking about checking out the Catamount/Falls vicinity for 
Crossbills, I would suggest finding another area. 

-- 
Dana Rohleder 
Port Kent, NY

On 2/8/2022 9:06 AM, Adirondack Avian Expeditions wrote:

Hi Everyone,

 

Two different Winter Birding Weekends were held in the central Adirondacks the 
past two weekends – January 29-30, 2022 was cosponsored by the Town of Long 
Lake Parks and Recreation Dept. and Northern New York Audubon, and February 
5-6, 2022 was sponsored by the NYS Ornithological Association.  Both weekends 
featured extremely cold weather with some difficult wind chills!  (Hand and 
foot warmers were used by all of us!)  We had some participants cancel as a 
result, but still had quite a few intrepid birders brave the weather and the 
birds were terrific!  Normally, both events would feature a speaker and social 
dinner, but due to the pandemic, we decided to just hold field trips.  
Hopefully, we’ll be able to have some indoor events once again next year.

 

The Red and White-winged Crossbill irruption is quite remarkable in the central 
Adirondacks.  It is the second largest White-winged Crossbill irruption I’ve 
observed in over two decades and the largest Red Crossbill irruption.  Both 
species are abundant in the central Adirondacks.  The southern Adirondacks has 
a large Red Crossbill irruption with some White-winged Crossbills also.  I 
birded with Matt Young and Ryan Mandelbaum on the Friday afternoon (1/28/22) 
before the first weekend event (they were up to observe, record, and photograph 
crossbills).  Matt remarked that this is an overall record year for crossbills 
since both species are in such large numbers at the same time.  If you enjoy 
watching crossbills, this is a fantastic winter in the central Adirondacks!

 

We tallied 19 species the first weekend and 25 the second weekend by staying 
within boreal habitat.  All of our birding was in the Long Lake – Newcomb – 
Minerva – N. Hudson region.  Here are a few highlights from each day:

 

January 29, 2022 (all Long Lake locations in Hamilton Co.)

 

Ruffed Grouse – 2 (1 in Sabattis Road and 1 feeding in a deciduous tree on the 
drive to Sabattis Station)

Black-backed Woodpecker – 2 (1 drumming north of John Dillon Park on Rt. 30 and 
a female we hiked through snow to observe foraging along North Point Road)

Canada Jay – 6 (groups of 2 and 4 along Sabattis Road)

Boreal Chickadee – 2 near a marsh along Route 30

Brown Creeper – 1

Purple Finch

Red Crossbill – many

White-winged Crossbill – many

Pine Siskin – many

American Goldfinch – many

 

January 30, 2022 (Newcomb – Minerva – N. Hudson locations in Essex Co.)

 

Ruffed Grouse – 2 (1 on Tahawus Road and 1 feeding in a tree at the Wolf Pond 
Trailhead on the Blue Ridge Road)

Sharp-shinned Hawk – hunting Red Crossbills in the village of Newcomb

Black-backed Woodpecker – 2 (1 foraging bird at Hyslop Marsh and 1 female 
observed along Tahawus Road – we had several White-winged Crossbills singing 
around us as we observed the BBWO and I can’t believe I was ignoring the WWCRs!)

Pileated Woodpecker – heard on Tahawus Road

Boreal Chickadee – 6 on both sides of the road by the Boreas River on the Blue 
Ridge Road

Purple Finch

Red Crossbill – many

White-winged Crossbill – many

Pine Siskin

American Goldfinch

 

February 5, 2022 (all Long Lake locations in Hamilton Co.)

 

Common Merganser – 2 females on a small patch of open water at the outlet 
bridge of Raquette Lake (quite a surprise!)

Bald Eagle – 2 adults (1 perched in the sun along Route 30 and 1 at the outlet 
bridge of Raquette Lake)

Black-backed Woodpecker – male observed north of John Dillon Park along Rt. 30

Canada Jay – 10 (4 along Rt. 30, 2 at the Round Lake Trailhead, and 4 at 
Sabattis Bog)

Brown Creeper – 2 together along the North Point Road

Purple Finch

Red Crossbill – many

White-winged Crossbill – many

Pine Siskin

American Goldfinch

 

February 6, 2022 (Newcomb – Minerva – North Hudson locations in Essex Co.)

 

Ruffed Grouse – 2 feeding together in a deciduous tree along Tahawus Road

Black-backed Woodpecker – we had brief views of a foraging and rattle-calling 
bird at Hyslop Marsh

Canada Jay – 3 (2 at Hyslop Marsh that wanted to be fed – fortunately, several 
participants had nuts to share! And 1 at Sand Pond Marsh along the Blue Ridge 
Road)

Boreal Chickadee – 3 east of the Boreas River bridge on the Blue Ridge Road – 
fantastic views!  It is a dangerous place to stop (narrow and twisty with no 
shoulder) and I only stopped because I know the logging trucks don’t run on 
Sundays.  I used to regularly bird this entire road until major logging 
operations started many years ago making it dangerous to pull over.

Golden-crowned Kinglet – 4 with the BOCHs (very low numbers this year for this 
species, which makes two winters in a row with low numbers)

Cedar Waxwing – 2 in Newcomb

Purple Finch - many

Red Crossbill – many

White-winged Crossbill – many

Pine Siskin - many

American Goldfinch - many

American Tree Sparrow – 4 at a feeder in Newcomb

Northern Cardinal – vocalizing in Newcomb!

 

It was really cold the morning of 2/6/22 and we celebrated seeing our car temp 
indicators hit zero!  When it hit 10 degrees, we took a walk on the Tahawus 
Road and all the finches were in remarkable numbers.  The highlight of both 
weekends came for me on that walk when we stood listening to a male 
White-winged Crossbill singing away at the top of a conifer along the road with 
a male Red Crossbill a couple trees over also singing away (lots of beautiful 
variation in the Red Crossbill’s song) – my ears were in heaven with both songs 
going at the same time!  It was interesting watching the Red and White-winged 
Crossbills interacting and gritting together.

 

Just an update on snow conditions – it is thigh deep for me when I venture into 
it!  So bushwhacking without snowshoes or skis would be tricky!

 

Joan Collins

Adirondack Avian Expeditions & Workshops LLC

Editor, New York Birders

Long Lake, NY

(315) 244-7127 cell       

(518) 624-5528 home

http://www.adirondackavianexpeditions.com/ 
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