[cayugabirds-l] Mundy warblers

2015-09-11 Thread Meena Madhav Haribal

At least 12 species of warblers in mundy
Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone


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RE:[cayugabirds-l] Mundy warblers

2015-09-11 Thread Meena Madhav Haribal
Warblers in Mundy
Blackburnian
Black and White
Ovenbird
Wilson’s warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Nashville
Chestnut-sided
Tennessee
Bay-breasted
Northern Parula
Magnolia
Black-throated Blue
Common Yellowthroat
Philadelphia Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
I thought of Gladys’s report on Ovenbird and was looking for one there it 
popped up in front of me as if asking what Ovenbird? I am here.
Then I thought of Wilson’s shortly I saw Wilson’s. Same with Black throated 
blue and Black and White. Then I became greedy and thought of Golden-winged 
warbler and Mourning warbler but no luck with them.  Initially they were 
against the sun and moving interior in the Mundy. So  I anticipated them to 
come to a perfectly lighted patch. And there they were. I stood at one location 
and they moved.
I must have totally walked just a quarter of mile in Mundy.


Meena


From: bounce-119643249-3493...@list.cornell.edu 
[mailto:bounce-119643249-3493...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Meena Madhav 
Haribal
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2015 1:01 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Mundy warblers


At least 12 species of warblers in mundy
Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone
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[cayugabirds-l] Avicaching update—early September

2015-09-11 Thread Ian Davies
Hi Cayugabirders,

Hope that all is well and that you’ve been enjoying the migrant arrivals from 
the frontal passage over the past day or so. It has certainly been noticeable 
for nocturnal migration (both on radar and for flight calls), and the roving 
mixed migrant flocks are a good indicator that things are changing on the 
ground as well. ’Tis the season.

With the fantastically changing avian landscape throughout September, you never 
know what you’ll find when you’re out and about. This makes it one of the most 
enjoyable months of birding (for me at least), and a good time to explore new 
areas! New areas, for example, like those for Avicaching 
(http://ebird.org/content/ebird/avicaching/).

Avicachers have already reported 17 species of warblers over the past 10 days 
from these locations scattered across Tompkins and Cortland Counties, including 
Hooded, Cape May, Bay-breasted, and lots of other fun species. Many of the 
Avicaching locations are well-situated along forest edges, giving you a good 
chance of encountering wandering migrant flocks. With the crispness of fall in 
the morning air, and birds on the wing overhead, do you really need another 
reason to head out birding?

In case you do, Avicaching also gives you a chance to win a free pair of 
binoculars, explore new areas, and directly contribute to science—helping 
improve our local knowledge of bird distributions through your sightings. 
Please let me know if you have any questions about the Avicaching project—most 
anything you need to know can be found in the above link.

Hope to see you out there!

Best,
Ian

--
Ian Davies
eBird Project Assistant
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/




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[cayugabirds-l] 9/12 Cornell Lab Open House& Migration Celebration

2015-09-11 Thread Lee Ann van Leer
FYI: Celebrate Cornell Lab's Centennial!
See below:
--Lee Ann
-
Migration Celebration and Centennial Open House!
Saturday, September 12, 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road

Come celebrate the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's 100th Anniversary and the 
fantastic fall migrations of birds! 
 
Join us for this family-friendly event that includes a special Open House, in 
addition to our usual guided bird walks, interactive exhibits, live birds, 
games, face-painting, and hands-on activities for children. 
 
For the first time in a dozen years, visitors will be able to go 
behind-the-scenes to see where the scientists work, and to talk with staff 
about the research, conservation, and educational programs at the Lab.
 
Admission: Free
Contact: (800) 843-BIRD, http://www.birds.cornell.edu/birdday
This event is made possible in part by a grant from the Tompkins County Tourism 
Program.

Anne Rosenberg
Youth Programs Coordinator
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850
b...@cornell.edu
birds.cornell.edu/education



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RE:[cayugabirds-l] hurt bird question

2015-09-11 Thread Mary E. Winston
Call the Wildlife Clinic

From: bounce-119641931-12723...@list.cornell.edu 
[mailto:bounce-119641931-12723...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Chris R. Pelkie
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2015 9:31 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Fwd: hurt bird question

Forwarded for a friend in Ithaca not on the list: not sure who might help, 
Victoria? or is this a vet school question?
Thanks

__

Chris Pelkie
Information/Data Manager; IT Support
Bioacoustics Research Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850

Begin forwarded message:




Hi Chris,

I have a bird question, and since you're at the Lab of O now, I'm hoping it's 
ok to start with you?

My son (undergrad) found a hurt pigeon (broken wing?) inside a building on 
campus last night, about 10:30.  What's the best thing for the non-birder to do 
in that situation?  He wanted to do something to help it, but had no idea what.

Thanks-
S

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[cayugabirds-l] Fwd: hurt bird question

2015-09-11 Thread Chris R. Pelkie
Forwarded for a friend in Ithaca not on the list: not sure who might help, 
Victoria? or is this a vet school question?
Thanks

__

Chris Pelkie
Information/Data Manager; IT Support
Bioacoustics Research Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850

Begin forwarded message:



Hi Chris,

I have a bird question, and since you're at the Lab of O now, I'm hoping it's 
ok to start with you?

My son (undergrad) found a hurt pigeon (broken wing?) inside a building on 
campus last night, about 10:30.  What's the best thing for the non-birder to do 
in that situation?  He wanted to do something to help it, but had no idea what.

Thanks-
S


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[cayugabirds-l] Nightflight calls yesterday night

2015-09-11 Thread Meena Madhav Haribal
Hi all,

I have the new Bill Evans' mic on my roof and have been trying to detect and 
identify calls of the creatures that fly over my head while I am asleep. Today 
I had blast in the morning while looking at the spectrograms to see what flew 
over my head. The mic with the software recorded about 375 calls of which 347 
were of warblers and sparrows and some other species. Only one of the kind Rose 
Breasted Grosbeak/ Swainson's thrush.


It is an addicting phenomenon. I got up early hoping I will spend sometime out  
looking for birds, but got carried away by the recordings, I spent most of the 
time trying to look what exciting birds were flying overhead.


I am sure people will find lots of birds today on the ground!


Cheers

Meena


Meena Haribal
Ithaca NY 14850
42.429007,-76.47111
http://www.haribal.org/
http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/
Ithaca area moths: https://plus.google.com/118047473426099383469/posts
Dragonfly book sample pages: http://www.haribal.org/dragonflies/samplebook.pdf




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Re: [cayugabirds-l] a mystery---goldfinchs

2015-09-11 Thread Chris R. Pelkie
Sounds like Sandy’s recent report was ‘payback time’ for the birds…

Oh, speaking of Disney films, you may want to avoid watching “The Living 
Desert” (some seriously rigged nature photography to get one critter to eat 
another, several different episodes).
Disney learned his lesson after the bad reviews and didn’t do quite so much 
fake photography after that, ceding the crown to Wild Kingdom.

ChrisP
__

Chris Pelkie
Information/Data Manager; IT Support
Bioacoustics Research Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850

On Sep 11, 2015, at 24:17, Melanie Uhlir 
> wrote:

Well, I do really like Red Foxes. I'm glad to know they like to eat chipmunks. 
I can't help but think Red Squirrels are cute. I blame Beatrix Potter.

I think some Disney films I was shown in early childhood damaged my ability to 
accept the food chain. I just want all the animals to be herbivores who are 
friends!

I guess I just have completely illogical biases for some creatures, but nature 
does not support favoritism based on cuteness.

Thank you for the gently phrased reality check, Chris.

Melanie

On 9/10/2015 10:14 AM, Chris R. Pelkie wrote:
Chipmunks make excellent fox food.
I enjoy the Red Foxes that have taken up nesting, breeding, cavorting, and 
howling at my place in the last few years.
For better or worse, we have a nice selection of chipmunks, red squirrels, and 
gray squirrels, along with voles, deer mice, etc. to keep them well-fed (in 
addition to the compost we toss out there).
The circle goes on.
ChrisP
__

Chris Pelkie
Information/Data Manager; IT Support
Bioacoustics Research Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY 14850

On Sep 9, 2015, at 20:05, Kathleen P Kramer 
<k...@cornell.edu> wrote:

Several years ago, I posted to Cayugabirds-L about seeing a chipmunk kill an 
adult female cardinal. The chipmunk and the cardinal were feeding, apparently 
companionably, on the ground beneath my dad’s bird feeder. Suddenly, the 
chipmunk lunged at the cardinal and grasped her in his/her mouth by the head. 
The cardinal flopped wildly from side to side, trying to escape. We ran 
outside, not able to repress that desire to save the bird, even knowing that as 
Rob says, “Nature is messy.”

The chipmunk ran off, scolding loudly, but we were too late to help the 
cardinal. Her neck was broken. We had to go away from the house on an errand, 
so we placed the dead cardinal on a nearby stump. When we came back a short 
time later, the cardinal was gone. We know she didn’t leave under her own 
power, so the answer probably is that the chipmunk came back and dragged her 
away. Or perhaps a cat that wasn’t kept inside took her.  Pretty dramatic 
example of how predatory these little bundles of muscle really are.

Kathy Kramer

On Sep 9, 2015, at 6:53 PM, Rob Blye 
> wrote:

Chipmunks and squirrels do what they do without conscience or shame as do all 
predators. Nature is messy. Good work for keeping your cats inside.


From: "Melanie Uhlir" >
To: "Robyn Bailey" 
<rb...@cornell.edu>, "Susan 
Fast" >, "CAYUGABIRDS-L" 
<cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, September 9, 2015 4:17:23 PM
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] a mystery---goldfinchs

I guess I hate chipmunks now. Why didn't the vicious vermin eat the murder 
victims??

My cats are indoor-only. If I could train them to eat only chipmunks and House 
Sparrows I would let them out.

Melanie

On 9/9/2015 4:11 PM, Robyn Bailey wrote:
Re: Part 2…I have heard that this is a chipmunk M.O. Fortunately, have never 
had to witness it in person.

Robyn Bailey

From: 
bounce-119633859-15067...@list.cornell.edu
 
[mailto:bounce-119633859-15067...@list.cornell.edu]
 On Behalf Of Susan Fast
Sent: Wednesday, September 09, 2015 3:20 PM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] a mystery---goldfinchs

I've been watching some inexplicable behavior (to me) by 1 or 2 goldfinches 
nesting in my yard.  There are 2 parts.

Part 1:  2 weeks ago I noticed a female goldfinch perching in bushes along the 
front of the house, then flying toward the upper lefthand corner of a large 
double-hung window, hovering for a second, then flying against the glass.  This 
was late afternoon and she repeated the behavior a dozen times.  I would scare 
her away, but she returned after several minutes.   Night fell and she 
desisted.  At 0700 next morning she was at it again.
I tightly closed the inside curtains.  No effect.  I 

[cayugabirds-l] Need Someone to Deliver Birding Guidebooks to Montezuma this weekend?

2015-09-11 Thread Sandy Wold
I need nine birding guide books picked up from my house (near Ithaca High)
and delivered to the gift shop.  Hours are 10-3, but if you arrive earlier
than 10am, you can drop the books off at the office as early as 8am-4:30pm,
which is a small building located in the same vicinity opposite the visitor
center, same parking lot.   This may be urgent as they want them for the
MuckRace, and I don't know what that is or when it is.  Please write to me
by end of the day tomorrow, Saturday, if you can help.  After that, I might
not be able to respond promptly.  Thank you!
Sandy Wold

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[cayugabirds-l] a mystery---goldfinchs - correction

2015-09-11 Thread Sandy Wold
I stand corrected (and happy to have learned something new, thanks, Scott):
 European Starlings are NOT in the same family as grackles...I was using
the term "family" loosely, thinking "blackbird" family as the starling is
found on the same page as a Red-winged Blackbird in the American Bird
Conservancy's Field Guide, "All the Birds of North America," 1997.  I see
now that starlings are not blackbirds; rather, they are grouped in the
"blackbird-size straight bills" group in said book.





On Fri, Sep 11, 2015 at 10:35 AM, Scott Haber  wrote:

> Sandy,
>
> Starlings aren't blackbirds. They're in their own unrelated family.
>
> Best,
> Scott
>
> On Fri, Sep 11, 2015 at 10:02 AM, Sandy Wold 
> wrote:
>
>> I have been watching goldfinches a lot lately, but I wonder if they were
>> doing what I recently saw a mob of chickadees and a nutchatch do recently.
>> Nuthatch came first, then a mob of chickadees followed; all landed on my
>> patio umbrella and were going crazy, gleening something from the underside
>> of the umbrella underside where the rods insert into canvas pockets.  They
>> spent about ten minutes doing this.  After they left, I went up close to
>> see if I could figure out what they were eating, but saw nothing.  I can
>> only figure it was some kind of insect or insect egg, and the canvas was
>> completely clean.  Perhaps the goldfinch saw some kind of insect eggs or
>> insect hatchlings in the corner of those windows???
>>
>> Regarding the headless nestlings, I have heard the grackles bite off the
>> heads of baby birds.  I've noticed that Starlings have returned to urban
>> trees this week, after having been gone all spring and summer. Being
>> blackbirds, perhaps they do that too?
>>
>> Sandy Wold
>> Fall Creek, Ithaca
>> --
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>
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[cayugabirds-l] Arboretum birds

2015-09-11 Thread Meena Madhav Haribal
I spent ¾ of an hour at the arboretum in the morning.  As I about to leave the 
actions started to happen. A Chickadee flock came with assorted species of 
warblers. Interestingly all warblers dove in the same trees and spent some time 
there and then to a next tree. They spent a lot of time in ash, walnut and 
oaks.  The flock consisted of
American redstarts.
Magnolia lots of them
Canada Warbler
Chestnut-sided (2)
Common Yellowthroat
Black-throated Greens (several)
Blackburnian
Hooded Warbler female or a young (which came very close to me and sat on an 
exposed branch for several seconds
Philadelphia Vireo and nice little plum and chunky bird
Red-eyed Vireos
Then it was time to head back.
But it was soul satisfying!

I will try going during lunch hours a little later!

Cheers
Meena



Dr. Meena Haribal
409, Boyce Thompson Institute (BTI)
Ithaca NY 14853 USA
Email: m...@cornell.edu


http://haribal.org/
http://meenaharibal.blogspot.com/
Ithaca area moths: http://tinyurl.com/kn6q2p4
Dragonfly book sample pages: http://www.haribal.org/140817samplebook.pdf



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[cayugabirds-l] Sapsucker Woods walk reports from last weekend

2015-09-11 Thread Linda Orkin
Hope these tempt you to come out this weekend.  7:30 Saturday and Sunday.
Led by bird club members.  Sponsored by the Cayuga Bird Club and the Lab of
Ornithology.  Linda Orkin

Lisa Wood's 9/5 walk  20 attendees..

Had a great three-hour walk around the Wilson Trail this morning. Thanks to
Paul Anderson for coming along to be the point person for an Ithaca Times
journalist who is writing an article about the Cayuga Bird Club. Bill
Chaisson, managing editor of the Times and a former/returning bird walk
leader, was also there and helped out with our fairly big, enthusiastic
group (which included my daughter and sister, both visiting from out of
town). On the main pond we had a Green Heron and a couple of Wood Ducks.
There were a few small migrant flocks, with Magnolia, Chestnut-sided, and
Wilson’s warblers IDed, as well as a close, eye-level (though brief) look
at two Wood Thrushes, probably an adult and a juvenile. Paul found a
Cooper’s Hawk and offered us all nice views through his scope. A Great Blue
Heron at the back of the pond was beautiful through the scope as well (the
bird's eye was stunning). We also watched several Eastern Phoebes hawking
over the water. Noted absences were Red-winged Blackbirds and Eastern
Kingbirds—perhaps owing to the Cooper’s keeping a keen eye on things about
the pond. Unfortunately, the walk ended on a sad note back at the Visitors
Center, where we found a dead Ovenbird that had flown into the glass near
the entrance.

Suan Hsi Yong's 9/6 walk 21 attendees

We were greeted immediately at the footbridge by a small mixed warbler
flock -- black-and-white, black-throated-green, and tennessee warblers --
en route to the pergola with three interacting GBHs (two looking juvenile)
and a green heron, while grackles and waxwings gathered on treetops and
various woodpecker family groups moved about. Our group eventually grew to
21 people, almost all out-of-towners, from Cincinnati, Connecticut, DC, two
from New Mexico. We eventually made it to the parking lot where there were
a few more warblers, from which I only definitively identified one as
bay-breasted, showing reddish stains on its sides. A grosbeak chipped but
flew away when we approached. A sapsucker worked a tree right by the trail
for close if obscured looks by all. Fuller's three wood ducks flushed, but
later everyone got scope views of two other young wood ducks at Sherwood.
There was warbler activity near the feeder blind, of which I only clearly
saw one magnolia, but their movement was too fleeting for this group of
mostly casual birders. Continuing activity from great blue and green herons
kept everyone happy, though. A final highlight in the woods was a pileated
woodpecker working on one spot in a nearby tree for scope views by all.
-- 
Veganism is simply the acknowledgment that a replaceable and fleeting
pleasure isn't more valuable than someone's life and liberty.
~ Unknown

If you permit
this evil, what is the good
of the good of your life?

-Stanley Kunitz...

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[cayugabirds-l] Sapsucker Woods, Fri 9/11

2015-09-11 Thread Mark Chao
I found some migrants along the Wilson Trail in Sapsucker Woods on Friday,
mostly high in the canopy around the map stand south of the Podell
Boardwalk.



Tennessee Warbler (2 yellow birds together by Sherwood Platform)

Bay-breasted Warbler (1 by Sherwood, 2 at aforementioned map stand)

Black-throated Blue Warbler (1 by map stand)

Black-throated Green Warbler (1+ by map stand)

Magnolia Warbler (several scattered throughout)

Northern Parula (1 by map stand)

Wilson’s Warbler (1 by Sherwood Platform)

Northern Waterthrush (1 heard only by small pool south of Sherwood Platform)

Common Yellowthroat (Podell Boardwalk)



Yellow-throated Vireo (1 by map stand)



Mark Chao

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