Hi, Thanks to all for suggestions on the best places for eagles - we did succeed yesterday. As many suggested, we drove up the east side of Cayuga, stopping first to watch the Red-Headed Woodpeckers at the intersection of Poplar Road & Rte 90. We had a late start and didn't get to Aurora until after 11 AM, but as soon as we got out of the car I heard the distinctive "qrrrr" from two different spots in the black walnuts around the famous sycamore tree. Soon there were multiple views of two adult RHWO flying around in those trees, and many chatter calls. Then both birds flew across Rte 90 to the lakeside of the road, where they spent periods in the grass and on tree trunks and a utility pole. They generously provided long close looks for the 45 minutes we were there, staying mostly on the west side of Rte 90. We did not always have both birds in view, but usually did, and did not see them ever land on any part of the sycamore tree. We finally left, the birds still in clear view, and the kids very impressed with their beauty. Needless to say, these are not birds they see in France!
Our next stop was the "Bet the Farm" store in the village, where we mentioned to the proprietors we had been seeing the RH Woodpeckers at Poplar Ridge Road. The pleasant man said oh, there are some there, too? He had been watching a pair daily this spring as they went in and out of their nest hole while he waited with his son there at the school bus stop - near where _Wells_ Road came into Rte 90! I asked if perhaps he meant Red Bellied Woodpecker, which has a red head, and he said 'no, I'm from Alabama, I've seen RH Woodpeckers all my life - they really aren't as much like RB Woodpeckers as Ladder-Backed Woodpeckers are." Well, shut my mouth! He said this nest tree was between Rte 90 and the lake, very close to where Wells Rd meets Rte 90. Looking at a map, this would be about 2/3 mile from Poplar Ridge, and it seems unlikely but not impossible that we all would be watching a pair consistently by Poplar Ridge Road, and it actually would be nesting 2/3 mile north ... so are there perhaps two pair of RH Woodpeckers in Aurora? Traveling north from Aurora, we saw many osprey, including a pair several miles south of the north end of the lake, soaring over their nest on a platform just east of Rte 90. At mud lock my young friend Zak found an adult eagle in a tree where we watched it for a half-hour but it was not inclined to fly. We went up to Armitage Rd but it was well past noon at this point and the eagles surely were at their siesta - at any rate, they weren't in evidence. Zak did find a pellet that had been cast by some raptor while we scanned the surrounding area for eagles. Moving on, we watched another pair of osprey with at least one chick in an active nest on 5&20, not far east of Rte 89. When we got to the visitor center, there were reports of multiple immature eagles on the Wildlife Drive eating carp, but we had a hungry 7 year old with us, as well as the 10 year old eagle lover, so we headed for the Finger Lakes Creamery for a late lunch and ice cream dessert. That evening, back in Ovid, while canoeing on Seneca Lake with my husband, Zak looked up and spotted a mature bald eagle flying overhead. They got a clear view as it passed overhead. They had not brought binoculars but my husband said the bird was fairly low and they got excellent looks. We see eagles in the area a few times a year, usually immature - how wonderful that this bird swung by today! I had told Zak of all the help people on this list gave us and the first thing he said when he got back was, "you have to tell the internet about our eagle." So I have. Thanks again for all your help in making this a very memorable day for Zak and the rest of us, too! Alicia -- Cayugabirds-L List Info: http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsWELCOME http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsRULES http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm ARCHIVES: 1) http://www.mail-archive.com/cayugabirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html 2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/Cayugabirds 3) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/CAYU.html Please submit your observations to eBird: http://ebird.org/content/ebird/ --