Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-25 Thread Dave Nutter
This morning (Thursday 25 August) at 6:42am I watched the 2 Great Egrets fly over the Equine Drug Testing Lab (opposite the east end of Cherry Rd, north of the airport) and toward the Cornell experimental ponds which were hidden from my view by fences and vegetation. Again, anyone with access to this area, I'm interested in confirmation that the egrets are feeding there.Yesterday evening at 8:15pm the 2 Great Egrets were near each other in a tree along Cayuga Inlet at the edge of Jetty Woods.--Dave Nutter On Aug 24, 2011, at 08:51 AM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:This morning (Wed 24 Aug) from Snyder Rd behind the airport I had a brief glimpse of the 2 Great Egrets flying north-ish above the trees by the Borg-Warner factory at 6:31am, but I lost track of them while moving to what I thought would be a better vantage.Stuart Krasnoff saw them in a tree together yesterday evening at 7:45pm in Jetty Woods looking from Treman Marina.--Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 23, 2011, at 7:36 AM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:Tuesday 23 August I stood by the North Triphammer Road bridge over NYS 13 as a gorgeous sunrise spread across the clouds to the west. At 6:24am the 2 Great Egrets appeared over the horizon to the southwest. Although they crossed North Triphammer to the south of me, their course carried them north across MYS 13 before I lost them beyond trees to me east around Warren Rd at 6:27am. I suspect they were headed for the many ponds near the airport. I neglected to check the business park ponds, but I did drive around the back of the airport, where fog, vegetation, and fences hampered my efforts. If anyone with access to the research ponds behind the Equine Drug Testing lab or by Neimi Road, or east of the airport could look around and let me know if there are a couple of egrets around, I'd be very grateful.--Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 22, 2011, at 9:36 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:...Route 13 and disappeared to the east over the trees and out of the lake valley.(Sorry again about the hair-trigger "send" feature on this device I'm using.)--Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 22, 2011, at 9:28 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:This evening (Monday 22 August) the egrets are, like last night, sleeping separately. I walked through the dusk to have a brief look (8:35-8:40pm). Yet this morning as I scoped from East Shore Park they appeared nearly simultaneously out from behind Jetty Woods at 6:18am and immediately flew, very close together, almost directly towards me over the lake. When they were nearly overhead they circled once, then continued over NYS--Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 21, 2011, at 9:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:From 8:20-8:30pm this evening (21 Aug) I was by the mouth of Treman Marina gazing across Cayuga Inlet at our 2 local roosting Great Egrets. The sedentary one was on it's usual perch. The active one moved among 5 different perches during the darkening 10 minutes I watched. When I left it was on the more northerly of its 2 favorite roosting perch atop a small tree quite separate from the other egret. How does it decide between the 2 perches it regularly uses? How did the other decide on its single perch?--Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 20, 2011, at 10:34 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:Sorry about that - the message got sent before it was finished. Consider this interval while I finish writing to be like waiting for the egrets...At 7:31pm I spotted the first Great Egret, but perhaps because I was only armed with binoculars, it was only a minute away from landing. I first saw it about lined up with East Shore Park against the hillside about halfway between the lake and the sky. It flew south, then followed the Stewart Park shoreline toward us, veering a bit north as it rounded the Swan Pond, and as soon as it got to Cayuga Inlet it flew south to the perch occupied last night by, I believe, the same bird. That was the earlier one taking off which disappeared from my view for awhile because it took a more southerly route. This bird stayed put at least until we left, also characteristic of the earlier occupant of that perch. At 7:43 I spotted the second Great Egret flying toward us, initially seen in about the same direction, but it flew in a more direct path over the lake, then took a perch a few feet below its comrade. As we walked around the marina I saw this lower bird fly to its alternate perch, a low tree to the north. But by the time we had gotten back to the Inlet it was back again at the perch it first came to this evening and that it used last night. I wonder if they also have distinct feeding habits or other personality traits to distinguish them if I were to see them elsewhere during the day.--Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 20, 2011, at 10:01 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a bench north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our egrets. Judging 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-23 Thread Dave Nutter
Tuesday 23 August I stood by the North Triphammer Road bridge over NYS 13 as a 
gorgeous sunrise spread across the clouds to the west. At 6:24am the 2 Great 
Egrets appeared over the horizon to the southwest. Although they crossed North 
Triphammer to the south of me, their course carried them north across MYS 13 
before I lost them beyond trees to me east around Warren Rd at 6:27am. I 
suspect they were headed for the many ponds near the airport. I neglected to 
check the business park ponds, but I did drive around the back of the airport, 
where fog, vegetation, and fences hampered my efforts. If anyone with access to 
the research ponds behind the Equine Drug Testing lab or by Neimi Road, or east 
of the airport could look around and let me know if there are a couple of 
egrets around, I'd be very grateful.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 22, 2011, at 9:36 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 ...Route 13 and disappeared to the east over the trees and out of the lake 
 valley.
 (Sorry again about the hair-trigger send feature on this device I'm using.)
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 22, 2011, at 9:28 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 This evening (Monday 22 August) the egrets are, like last night, sleeping 
 separately. I walked through the dusk to have a brief look (8:35-8:40pm).  
 Yet this morning as I scoped from East Shore Park they appeared nearly 
 simultaneously out from behind Jetty Woods at 6:18am and immediately flew, 
 very close together, almost directly towards me over the lake. When they 
 were nearly overhead they circled once, then continued over NYS 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 21, 2011, at 9:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 From 8:20-8:30pm this evening (21 Aug) I was by the mouth of Treman Marina 
 gazing across Cayuga Inlet at our 2 local roosting Great Egrets. The 
 sedentary one was on it's usual perch. The active one moved among 5 
 different perches during the darkening 10 minutes I watched. When I left it 
 was on the more northerly of its 2 favorite roosting perch atop a small 
 tree quite separate from the other egret. How does it decide between the 2 
 perches it regularly uses? How did the other decide on its single perch?
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:34 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Sorry about that - the message got sent before it was finished.  Consider 
 this interval while I finish writing to be like waiting for the egrets...
 At 7:31pm I spotted the first Great Egret, but perhaps because I was only 
 armed with binoculars, it was only a minute away from landing.  I first 
 saw it about lined up with East Shore Park against the hillside about 
 halfway between the lake and the sky. It flew south, then followed the 
 Stewart Park shoreline toward us, veering a bit north as it rounded the 
 Swan Pond, and as soon as it got to Cayuga Inlet it flew south to the 
 perch occupied last night by, I believe, the same bird.  That was the 
 earlier one taking off which disappeared from my view for awhile because 
 it took a more southerly route.  This bird stayed put at least until we 
 left, also characteristic of the earlier occupant of that perch.  At 7:43 
 I spotted the second Great Egret flying toward us, initially seen in about 
 the same direction, but it flew in a more direct path over the lake, then 
 took a perch a few feet below its comrade.  As we walked around the marina 
 I saw this lower bird fly to its alternate perch, a low tree to the north. 
  But by the time we had gotten back to the Inlet it was back again at the 
 perch it first came to this evening and that it used last night.  I wonder 
 if they also have distinct feeding habits or other personality traits to 
 distinguish them if I were to see them elsewhere during the day.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:01 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a 
 bench north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our 
 egrets. Judging by how long they took to disappear from view after taking 
 off in the morning I figured I might have 6 minutes of lead time to see 
 where they came from. 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets 
 perched near each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the 
 first took flight, and judging by perch choice it was the same one that 
 flew first yesterday without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned 
 sharply east just past Jetty Woods such that it was hidden from my view 
 by 6:21am. I thought (temporarily, it turns out) that perhaps it was 
 headed for Stewart Park or Fuertes Sanctuary. I immediately looked back 
 to the roost tree and found it devoid of egrets - no 15 minute delay 
 between take-offs today! Fortunately I saw the second 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-22 Thread Dave Nutter
This evening (Monday 22 August) the egrets are, like last night, sleeping 
separately. I walked through the dusk to have a brief look (8:35-8:40pm).  Yet 
this morning as I scoped from East Shore Park they appeared nearly 
simultaneously out from behind Jetty Woods at 6:18am and immediately flew, very 
close together, almost directly towards me over the lake. When they were nearly 
overhead they circled once, then continued over NYS 

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 21, 2011, at 9:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 From 8:20-8:30pm this evening (21 Aug) I was by the mouth of Treman Marina 
 gazing across Cayuga Inlet at our 2 local roosting Great Egrets. The 
 sedentary one was on it's usual perch. The active one moved among 5 different 
 perches during the darkening 10 minutes I watched. When I left it was on the 
 more northerly of its 2 favorite roosting perch atop a small tree quite 
 separate from the other egret. How does it decide between the 2 perches it 
 regularly uses? How did the other decide on its single perch?
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:34 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Sorry about that - the message got sent before it was finished.  Consider 
 this interval while I finish writing to be like waiting for the egrets...
 At 7:31pm I spotted the first Great Egret, but perhaps because I was only 
 armed with binoculars, it was only a minute away from landing.  I first saw 
 it about lined up with East Shore Park against the hillside about halfway 
 between the lake and the sky. It flew south, then followed the Stewart Park 
 shoreline toward us, veering a bit north as it rounded the Swan Pond, and as 
 soon as it got to Cayuga Inlet it flew south to the perch occupied last 
 night by, I believe, the same bird.  That was the earlier one taking off 
 which disappeared from my view for awhile because it took a more southerly 
 route.  This bird stayed put at least until we left, also characteristic of 
 the earlier occupant of that perch.  At 7:43 I spotted the second Great 
 Egret flying toward us, initially seen in about the same direction, but it 
 flew in a more direct path over the lake, then took a perch a few feet below 
 its comrade.  As we walked around the marina I saw this lower bird fly to 
 its alternate perch, a low tree to the north.  But by the time we had gotten 
 back to the Inlet it was back again at the perch it first came to this 
 evening and that it used last night.  I wonder if they also have distinct 
 feeding habits or other personality traits to distinguish them if I were to 
 see them elsewhere during the day.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:01 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a bench 
 north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our egrets. 
 Judging by how long they took to disappear from view after taking off in 
 the morning I figured I might have 6 minutes of lead time to see where they 
 came from. 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets perched 
 near each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the first took 
 flight, and judging by perch choice it was the same one that flew first 
 yesterday without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned sharply east 
 just past Jetty Woods such that it was hidden from my view by 6:21am. I 
 thought (temporarily, it turns out) that perhaps it was headed for Stewart 
 Park or Fuertes Sanctuary. I immediately looked back to the roost tree and 
 found it devoid of egrets - no 15 minute delay between take-offs today! 
 Fortunately I saw the second egret in flight before it reached the end of 
 Jetty Woods, and I was able to follow it through my scope as it veered 
 northeast (a bit more northerly than yesterday) and flew steadily toward 
 the treeline atop the edge of the valley. As it cleared those trees I saw 
 that it was joined by the other egret, who must have taken a less direct 
 route, and they headed east together about where NYS 13 cuts through by 
 the Cayuga Heights exit. Again, I wonder where they go for they day to 
 feed - the Lab of O? Fall Creek's middle reaches? some fortunate farmer's 
 pond? And I'm intrigued that they return faithfully to Jetty Woods to 
 roost, sometimes to a particular branch. Perhaps they are attracted by the 
 Double-crested Cormorants who fly conspicuously around the area and have 
 established a successful and comfortable roosting site.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 19, 2011, at 10:12 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
 
 Today (Friday 19 August) I checked out the Ithaca egret roost in the 
 morning and in the evening.  During a dawn lull in work I stopped by 
 Treman Marina and saw the 2 GREAT EGRETS in their separate trees a few 
 minutes after 6am as I had 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-22 Thread Dave Nutter
...Route 13 and disappeared to the east over the trees and out of the lake 
valley.
(Sorry again about the hair-trigger send feature on this device I'm using.)
--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 22, 2011, at 9:28 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 This evening (Monday 22 August) the egrets are, like last night, sleeping 
 separately. I walked through the dusk to have a brief look (8:35-8:40pm).  
 Yet this morning as I scoped from East Shore Park they appeared nearly 
 simultaneously out from behind Jetty Woods at 6:18am and immediately flew, 
 very close together, almost directly towards me over the lake. When they were 
 nearly overhead they circled once, then continued over NYS 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 21, 2011, at 9:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 From 8:20-8:30pm this evening (21 Aug) I was by the mouth of Treman Marina 
 gazing across Cayuga Inlet at our 2 local roosting Great Egrets. The 
 sedentary one was on it's usual perch. The active one moved among 5 
 different perches during the darkening 10 minutes I watched. When I left it 
 was on the more northerly of its 2 favorite roosting perch atop a small tree 
 quite separate from the other egret. How does it decide between the 2 
 perches it regularly uses? How did the other decide on its single perch?
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:34 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Sorry about that - the message got sent before it was finished.  Consider 
 this interval while I finish writing to be like waiting for the egrets...
 At 7:31pm I spotted the first Great Egret, but perhaps because I was only 
 armed with binoculars, it was only a minute away from landing.  I first saw 
 it about lined up with East Shore Park against the hillside about halfway 
 between the lake and the sky. It flew south, then followed the Stewart Park 
 shoreline toward us, veering a bit north as it rounded the Swan Pond, and 
 as soon as it got to Cayuga Inlet it flew south to the perch occupied last 
 night by, I believe, the same bird.  That was the earlier one taking off 
 which disappeared from my view for awhile because it took a more southerly 
 route.  This bird stayed put at least until we left, also characteristic of 
 the earlier occupant of that perch.  At 7:43 I spotted the second Great 
 Egret flying toward us, initially seen in about the same direction, but it 
 flew in a more direct path over the lake, then took a perch a few feet 
 below its comrade.  As we walked around the marina I saw this lower bird 
 fly to its alternate perch, a low tree to the north.  But by the time we 
 had gotten back to the Inlet it was back again at the perch it first came 
 to this evening and that it used last night.  I wonder if they also have 
 distinct feeding habits or other personality traits to distinguish them if 
 I were to see them elsewhere during the day.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:01 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a 
 bench north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our 
 egrets. Judging by how long they took to disappear from view after taking 
 off in the morning I figured I might have 6 minutes of lead time to see 
 where they came from. 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets 
 perched near each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the 
 first took flight, and judging by perch choice it was the same one that 
 flew first yesterday without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned 
 sharply east just past Jetty Woods such that it was hidden from my view 
 by 6:21am. I thought (temporarily, it turns out) that perhaps it was 
 headed for Stewart Park or Fuertes Sanctuary. I immediately looked back 
 to the roost tree and found it devoid of egrets - no 15 minute delay 
 between take-offs today! Fortunately I saw the second egret in flight 
 before it reached the end of Jetty Woods, and I was able to follow it 
 through my scope as it veered northeast (a bit more northerly than 
 yesterday) and flew steadily toward the treeline atop the edge of the 
 valley. As it cleared those trees I saw that it was joined by the other 
 egret, who must have taken a less direct route, and they headed east 
 together about where NYS 13 cuts through by the Cayuga Heights exit. 
 Again, I wonder where they go for they day to feed - the Lab of O? Fall 
 Creek's middle reaches? some fortunate farmer's pond? And I'm intrigued 
 that they return faithfully to Jetty Woods to roost, sometimes to a 
 particular branch. Perhaps they are attracted by the Double-crested 
 Cormorants who fly conspicuously around the area and have established a 
 successful and comfortable roosting site.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 19, 2011, at 10:12 PM, Dave Nutter 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-21 Thread Dave Nutter
From 8:20-8:30pm this evening (21 Aug) I was by the mouth of Treman Marina 
gazing across Cayuga Inlet at our 2 local roosting Great Egrets. The sedentary 
one was on it's usual perch. The active one moved among 5 different perches 
during the darkening 10 minutes I watched. When I left it was on the more 
northerly of its 2 favorite roosting perch atop a small tree quite separate 
from the other egret. How does it decide between the 2 perches it regularly 
uses? How did the other decide on its single perch?

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:34 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 Sorry about that - the message got sent before it was finished.  Consider 
 this interval while I finish writing to be like waiting for the egrets...
 At 7:31pm I spotted the first Great Egret, but perhaps because I was only 
 armed with binoculars, it was only a minute away from landing.  I first saw 
 it about lined up with East Shore Park against the hillside about halfway 
 between the lake and the sky. It flew south, then followed the Stewart Park 
 shoreline toward us, veering a bit north as it rounded the Swan Pond, and as 
 soon as it got to Cayuga Inlet it flew south to the perch occupied last night 
 by, I believe, the same bird.  That was the earlier one taking off which 
 disappeared from my view for awhile because it took a more southerly route.  
 This bird stayed put at least until we left, also characteristic of the 
 earlier occupant of that perch.  At 7:43 I spotted the second Great Egret 
 flying toward us, initially seen in about the same direction, but it flew in 
 a more direct path over the lake, then took a perch a few feet below its 
 comrade.  As we walked around the marina I saw this lower bird fly to its 
 alternate perch, a low tree to the north.  But by the time we had gotten back 
 to the Inlet it was back again at the perch it first came to this evening and 
 that it used last night.  I wonder if they also have distinct feeding habits 
 or other personality traits to distinguish them if I were to see them 
 elsewhere during the day.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:01 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a bench 
 north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our egrets. 
 Judging by how long they took to disappear from view after taking off in the 
 morning I figured I might have 6 minutes of lead time to see where they came 
 from. 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets perched 
 near each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the first took 
 flight, and judging by perch choice it was the same one that flew first 
 yesterday without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned sharply east 
 just past Jetty Woods such that it was hidden from my view by 6:21am. I 
 thought (temporarily, it turns out) that perhaps it was headed for Stewart 
 Park or Fuertes Sanctuary. I immediately looked back to the roost tree and 
 found it devoid of egrets - no 15 minute delay between take-offs today! 
 Fortunately I saw the second egret in flight before it reached the end of 
 Jetty Woods, and I was able to follow it through my scope as it veered 
 northeast (a bit more northerly than yesterday) and flew steadily toward 
 the treeline atop the edge of the valley. As it cleared those trees I saw 
 that it was joined by the other egret, who must have taken a less direct 
 route, and they headed east together about where NYS 13 cuts through by the 
 Cayuga Heights exit. Again, I wonder where they go for they day to feed - 
 the Lab of O? Fall Creek's middle reaches? some fortunate farmer's pond? 
 And I'm intrigued that they return faithfully to Jetty Woods to roost, 
 sometimes to a particular branch. Perhaps they are attracted by the 
 Double-crested Cormorants who fly conspicuously around the area and have 
 established a successful and comfortable roosting site.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 19, 2011, at 10:12 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
 
 Today (Friday 19 August) I checked out the Ithaca egret roost in the 
 morning and in the evening.  During a dawn lull in work I stopped by 
 Treman Marina and saw the 2 GREAT EGRETS in their separate trees a few 
 minutes after 6am as I had left them Thursday night.  Unfortunately I got 
 distracted and did not see when one of them flew off around 6:10am.  That 
 one had been more actively stretching.  I was hoping to see where they 
 went.  The second, more lethargic, bird eventually stretched more, and at 
 6:23am it suddenly took flight to the north.  When it got to the white 
 lighthouse jetty it turned toward East Shore Park, flapping continuously 
 and slowly gaining altitude.  Then it circled several times for more 
 altitude and continued east over the treetops of 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-20 Thread Dave Nutter
Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets perched near 
each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the first took flight, 
and judging by perch choice it was the same one that flew first yesterday 
without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned sharply east just past Jetty 
Woods such that it was hidden from my view by 6:21am. I thought (temporarily, 
it turns out) that perhaps it was headed for Stewart Park or Fuertes Sanctuary. 
I immediately looked back to the roost tree and found it devoid of egrets - no 
15 minute delay between take-offs today! Fortunately I saw the second egret in 
flight before it reached the end of Jetty Woods, and I was able to follow it 
through my scope as it veered northeast (a bit more northerly than yesterday) 
and flew steadily toward the treeline atop the edge of the valley. As it 
cleared those trees I saw that it was joined by the other egret, who must have 
taken a less direct route, and they headed east together about where NYS 13 
cuts through by the Cayuga Heights exit. Again, I wonder where they go for they 
day to feed - the Lab of O? Fall Creek's middle reaches? some fortunate 
farmer's pond? And I'm intrigued that they return faithfully to Jetty Woods to 
roost, sometimes to a particular branch. Perhaps they are attracted by the 
Double-crested Cormorants who fly conspicuously around the area and have 
established a successful and comfortable roosting site.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 19, 2011, at 10:12 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:

 Today (Friday 19 August) I checked out the Ithaca egret roost in the morning 
 and in the evening.  During a dawn lull in work I stopped by Treman Marina 
 and saw the 2 GREAT EGRETS in their separate trees a few minutes after 6am as 
 I had left them Thursday night.  Unfortunately I got distracted and did not 
 see when one of them flew off around 6:10am.  That one had been more actively 
 stretching.  I was hoping to see where they went.  The second, more 
 lethargic, bird eventually stretched more, and at 6:23am it suddenly took 
 flight to the north.  When it got to the white lighthouse jetty it turned 
 toward East Shore Park, flapping continuously and slowly gaining altitude.  
 Then it circled several times for more altitude and continued east over the 
 treetops of Cayuga Heights and out of sight at 6:29am.  I wonder if it went 
 all the way to George Road or Dryden Lake.  
 
 This evening both Great Egrets were back.  At one point they occupied the 
 same perches in separate trees as the previous night, but this evening there 
 was more interaction and one of them (presumably the second to fly this 
 morning, considering its perch preference) moved back and forth, landing near 
 the other, returning to its previous perch (perhaps told to leave), then 
 eventually settling down near the other bird.  So tonight when I left they 
 were just a few feet apart in the same tree.  
 
 Other birds included an adult BALD EAGLE flying north over the lake.  This 
 morning I also stopped by Stewart Park and saw a/the adult Bald Eagle perched 
 on the snag opposite the boathouse.  I was able to see leg bands, blue on its 
 left leg and silver on its right. I know I photographed an eagle with these 
 color bands years ago on ice at Stewart Park, and when I get access to those 
 photos I will check whether they were on the same legs and whether it was the 
 adult or the juvenile with the bands.  
 
 Continuing from this evening, I counted at least 80 DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS 
 in the trees near the egrets.  Two GREAT BLUE HERONS were also nearby.  A 
 GREEN HERON flew past over the inlet then turned east at the south edge of 
 Jetty Woods.  A GREAT HORNED OWL flew from around the north part of Jetty 
 Woods westbound over the inlet and into the trees north of the marina.  There 
 were 13 CASPIAN TERNS discernible on the submerged red lighthouse breakwater 
 from my vantage south of the marina boating entrance.  There was also at 
 least one BELTED KINGFISHER  BARN SWALLOW, lots of MALLARDS  RING-BILLED 
 GULLS, a couple of GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS, and a few CANADA GEESE.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 
 
 On Aug 18, 2011, at 06:55 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
 
 This evening (Thursday 18 August) the two Great Egrets were clearly 
 identifiable with binoculars at 8:30pm in the same two trees as before.
 --Dave Nutter
 
 On Aug 13, 2011, at 07:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 This evening (13 August) I took a walk along Cayuga Inlet by Cass Park to 
 Treman Marina.  Although it was fairly dark by 9pm when I was opposite 
 Jetty Woods, with binoculars I was able to discern what I believe were 
 probably (the) 2 GREAT EGRETS roosting in separate trees.
 --Dave Nutter
 
 On Aug 06, 2011, at 06:35 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Two GREAT EGRETS were roosting in the same spot on the edge of Jetty Woods 
 next to Cayuga Inlet this evening, 6 August.  Also seen 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-20 Thread Dave Nutter
At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a bench 
north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our egrets. Judging 
by how long they took to disappear from view after taking off in the morning I 
figured I might have 6 minutes of lead time to see where they came from. 

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 20, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets perched 
 near each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the first took 
 flight, and judging by perch choice it was the same one that flew first 
 yesterday without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned sharply east just 
 past Jetty Woods such that it was hidden from my view by 6:21am. I thought 
 (temporarily, it turns out) that perhaps it was headed for Stewart Park or 
 Fuertes Sanctuary. I immediately looked back to the roost tree and found it 
 devoid of egrets - no 15 minute delay between take-offs today! Fortunately I 
 saw the second egret in flight before it reached the end of Jetty Woods, and 
 I was able to follow it through my scope as it veered northeast (a bit more 
 northerly than yesterday) and flew steadily toward the treeline atop the edge 
 of the valley. As it cleared those trees I saw that it was joined by the 
 other egret, who must have taken a less direct route, and they headed east 
 together about where NYS 13 cuts through by the Cayuga Heights exit. Again, I 
 wonder where they go for they day to feed - the Lab of O? Fall Creek's middle 
 reaches? some fortunate farmer's pond? And I'm intrigued that they return 
 faithfully to Jetty Woods to roost, sometimes to a particular branch. Perhaps 
 they are attracted by the Double-crested Cormorants who fly conspicuously 
 around the area and have established a successful and comfortable roosting 
 site.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 19, 2011, at 10:12 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
 
 Today (Friday 19 August) I checked out the Ithaca egret roost in the morning 
 and in the evening.  During a dawn lull in work I stopped by Treman Marina 
 and saw the 2 GREAT EGRETS in their separate trees a few minutes after 6am 
 as I had left them Thursday night.  Unfortunately I got distracted and did 
 not see when one of them flew off around 6:10am.  That one had been more 
 actively stretching.  I was hoping to see where they went.  The second, more 
 lethargic, bird eventually stretched more, and at 6:23am it suddenly took 
 flight to the north.  When it got to the white lighthouse jetty it turned 
 toward East Shore Park, flapping continuously and slowly gaining altitude.  
 Then it circled several times for more altitude and continued east over the 
 treetops of Cayuga Heights and out of sight at 6:29am.  I wonder if it went 
 all the way to George Road or Dryden Lake.  
 
 This evening both Great Egrets were back.  At one point they occupied the 
 same perches in separate trees as the previous night, but this evening there 
 was more interaction and one of them (presumably the second to fly this 
 morning, considering its perch preference) moved back and forth, landing 
 near the other, returning to its previous perch (perhaps told to leave), 
 then eventually settling down near the other bird.  So tonight when I left 
 they were just a few feet apart in the same tree.  
 
 Other birds included an adult BALD EAGLE flying north over the lake.  This 
 morning I also stopped by Stewart Park and saw a/the adult Bald Eagle 
 perched on the snag opposite the boathouse.  I was able to see leg bands, 
 blue on its left leg and silver on its right. I know I photographed an eagle 
 with these color bands years ago on ice at Stewart Park, and when I get 
 access to those photos I will check whether they were on the same legs and 
 whether it was the adult or the juvenile with the bands.  
 
 Continuing from this evening, I counted at least 80 DOUBLE-CRESTED 
 CORMORANTS in the trees near the egrets.  Two GREAT BLUE HERONS were also 
 nearby.  A GREEN HERON flew past over the inlet then turned east at the 
 south edge of Jetty Woods.  A GREAT HORNED OWL flew from around the north 
 part of Jetty Woods westbound over the inlet and into the trees north of the 
 marina.  There were 13 CASPIAN TERNS discernible on the submerged red 
 lighthouse breakwater from my vantage south of the marina boating entrance.  
 There was also at least one BELTED KINGFISHER  BARN SWALLOW, lots of 
 MALLARDS  RING-BILLED GULLS, a couple of GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS, and a 
 few CANADA GEESE.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 
 
 On Aug 18, 2011, at 06:55 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
 
 This evening (Thursday 18 August) the two Great Egrets were clearly 
 identifiable with binoculars at 8:30pm in the same two trees as before.
 --Dave Nutter
 
 On Aug 13, 2011, at 07:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 This evening (13 August) I took a walk along Cayuga Inlet by Cass 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-20 Thread Dave Nutter
Sorry about that - the message got sent before it was finished.  Consider this 
interval while I finish writing to be like waiting for the egrets...
At 7:31pm I spotted the first Great Egret, but perhaps because I was only armed 
with binoculars, it was only a minute away from landing.  I first saw it about 
lined up with East Shore Park against the hillside about halfway between the 
lake and the sky. It flew south, then followed the Stewart Park shoreline 
toward us, veering a bit north as it rounded the Swan Pond, and as soon as it 
got to Cayuga Inlet it flew south to the perch occupied last night by, I 
believe, the same bird.  That was the earlier one taking off which disappeared 
from my view for awhile because it took a more southerly route.  This bird 
stayed put at least until we left, also characteristic of the earlier occupant 
of that perch.  At 7:43 I spotted the second Great Egret flying toward us, 
initially seen in about the same direction, but it flew in a more direct path 
over the lake, then took a perch a few feet below its comrade.  As we walked 
around the marina I saw this lower bird fly to its alternate perch, a low tree 
to the north.  But by the time we had gotten back to the Inlet it was back 
again at the perch it first came to this evening and that it used last night.  
I wonder if they also have distinct feeding habits or other personality traits 
to distinguish them if I were to see them elsewhere during the day.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 20, 2011, at 10:01 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 At 7pm this evening (Saturday 20 August) Laurie and I settled in on a bench 
 north of the mouth of Treman Marina to await the arrival of our egrets. 
 Judging by how long they took to disappear from view after taking off in the 
 morning I figured I might have 6 minutes of lead time to see where they came 
 from. 
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 20, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Back at dawn today, Saturday 20 August, I found the 2 Great Egrets perched 
 near each other in the same tree as I left them. At 6:20am the first took 
 flight, and judging by perch choice it was the same one that flew first 
 yesterday without me seeing it. It flew north, then turned sharply east just 
 past Jetty Woods such that it was hidden from my view by 6:21am. I thought 
 (temporarily, it turns out) that perhaps it was headed for Stewart Park or 
 Fuertes Sanctuary. I immediately looked back to the roost tree and found it 
 devoid of egrets - no 15 minute delay between take-offs today! Fortunately I 
 saw the second egret in flight before it reached the end of Jetty Woods, and 
 I was able to follow it through my scope as it veered northeast (a bit more 
 northerly than yesterday) and flew steadily toward the treeline atop the 
 edge of the valley. As it cleared those trees I saw that it was joined by 
 the other egret, who must have taken a less direct route, and they headed 
 east together about where NYS 13 cuts through by the Cayuga Heights exit. 
 Again, I wonder where they go for they day to feed - the Lab of O? Fall 
 Creek's middle reaches? some fortunate farmer's pond? And I'm intrigued that 
 they return faithfully to Jetty Woods to roost, sometimes to a particular 
 branch. Perhaps they are attracted by the Double-crested Cormorants who fly 
 conspicuously around the area and have established a successful and 
 comfortable roosting site.
 
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY
 
 On Aug 19, 2011, at 10:12 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
 
 Today (Friday 19 August) I checked out the Ithaca egret roost in the 
 morning and in the evening.  During a dawn lull in work I stopped by Treman 
 Marina and saw the 2 GREAT EGRETS in their separate trees a few minutes 
 after 6am as I had left them Thursday night.  Unfortunately I got 
 distracted and did not see when one of them flew off around 6:10am.  That 
 one had been more actively stretching.  I was hoping to see where they 
 went.  The second, more lethargic, bird eventually stretched more, and at 
 6:23am it suddenly took flight to the north.  When it got to the white 
 lighthouse jetty it turned toward East Shore Park, flapping continuously 
 and slowly gaining altitude.  Then it circled several times for more 
 altitude and continued east over the treetops of Cayuga Heights and out of 
 sight at 6:29am.  I wonder if it went all the way to George Road or Dryden 
 Lake.  
 
 This evening both Great Egrets were back.  At one point they occupied the 
 same perches in separate trees as the previous night, but this evening 
 there was more interaction and one of them (presumably the second to fly 
 this morning, considering its perch preference) moved back and forth, 
 landing near the other, returning to its previous perch (perhaps told to 
 leave), then eventually settling down near the other bird.  So tonight when 
 I left they were just a few feet apart in the same tree.  
 
 Other birds 

Re: Re:[cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-19 Thread Dave Nutter
Today (Friday 19 August) I checked out the Ithaca egret roost in the morning and in the evening. During a dawn lull in work I stopped by Treman Marina and saw the 2 GREAT EGRETS in their separate trees a few minutes after 6am as I had left them Thursday night. Unfortunately I got distracted and did not see when one of them flew off around 6:10am. That one had been more actively stretching. I was hoping to see where they went. The second, more lethargic, bird eventually stretched more, and at 6:23am it suddenly took flight to the north. When it got to the white lighthouse jetty it turned toward East Shore Park, flapping continuously and slowly gaining altitude. Then it circled several times for more altitude and continued east over the treetops of Cayuga Heights and out of sight at 6:29am. I wonder if it went all the way to George Road or Dryden Lake. This evening both Great Egrets were back. At one point they occupied the same perches in separate trees as the previous night, but this evening there was more interaction and one of them (presumably the second to fly this morning, considering its perch preference) moved back and forth, landing near the other, returning to its previous perch (perhaps told to leave), then eventually settling down near the other bird. So tonight when I left they were just a few feet apart in the same tree. Other birds included an adult BALD EAGLE flying north over the lake. This morning I also stopped by Stewart Park and saw a/the adult Bald Eagle perched on the snag opposite the boathouse. I was able to see leg bands, blue on its left leg and silver on its right. I know I photographed an eagle with these color bands years ago on ice at Stewart Park, and when I get access to those photos I will check whether they were on the same legs and whether it was the adult or the juvenile with the bands. Continuing from this evening, I counted at least 80 DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS in the trees near the egrets. Two GREAT BLUE HERONS were also nearby. A GREEN HERON flew past over the inlet then turned east at the south edge of Jetty Woods. A GREAT HORNED OWL flew from around the north part of Jetty Woods westbound over the inlet and into the trees north of the marina. There were 13 CASPIAN TERNS discernible on the submerged red lighthouse breakwater from my vantage south of the marina boating entrance. There was also at least one BELTED KINGFISHER  BARN SWALLOW, lots of MALLARDS  RING-BILLED GULLS, a couple of GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS, and a few CANADA GEESE.--Dave NutterOn Aug 18, 2011, at 06:55 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:This evening (Thursday 18 August) the two Great Egrets were clearly identifiable with binoculars at 8:30pm in the same two trees as before.--Dave NutterOn Aug 13, 2011, at 07:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:This evening (13 August) I took a walk along Cayuga Inlet by Cass Park to Treman Marina. Although it was fairly dark by 9pm when I was opposite Jetty Woods, with binoculars I was able to discern what I believe were probably (the) 2 GREAT EGRETS roosting in separate trees.--Dave NutterOn Aug 06, 2011, at 06:35 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:Two GREAT EGRETS were roosting in the same spot on the edge of Jetty Woods next to Cayuga Inlet this evening, 6 August. Also seen on this evening's canoe-paddle all the way around the red lighthouse: 3 GREAT BLUE HERONS, 2 BELTED KINGFISHERS, 2 PURPLE MARTINS, 3 SPOTTED SANDPIPERS, 32 CASPIAN TERNS, 41 DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS, 3 WOOD DUCKS, 6 COMMON MERGANSERS, 2 GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS, 1 HERRING GULL, plenty of RING-BILLED GULLS, MALLARDS AND CANADA GEESE, one or more BARN SWALLOWS, 2 AMERICAN ROBINS, and 1 MOURNING DOVE. Also heard were 1 AMERICAN GOLDFINCH and 2 SONG SPARROWS. We did not see any fireflies in our yard this evening On August 1 we only saw 1 firefly, but a few weeks ago it was spectacular. --Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 02, 2011, at 06:55 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:The Great Egret is roosting in the same place this evening, 2 August.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 1, 2011, at 9:56 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 
 On this evening's (1 Aug) canoe-paddle on Cayuga Inlet Laurie and I saw a Great Egret atop a small tree on the edge of Jetty Woods.  A Great Blue Heron stood on a log below, and 17 Double-crested Cormorants rested on dead trees or soared nearby. A Belted Kingfisher and a couple of Caspian Tern families flew past. When we got home an Eastern Screech-Owl was calling from the edge of our yard.
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY

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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-18 Thread Dave Nutter
This evening (Thursday 18 August) the two Great Egrets were clearly identifiable with binoculars at 8:30pm in the same two trees as before.--Dave NutterOn Aug 13, 2011, at 07:48 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:This evening (13 August) I took a walk along Cayuga Inlet by Cass Park to Treman Marina. Although it was fairly dark by 9pm when I was opposite Jetty Woods, with binoculars I was able to discern what I believe were probably (the) 2 GREAT EGRETS roosting in separate trees.--Dave NutterOn Aug 06, 2011, at 06:35 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:Two GREAT EGRETS were roosting in the same spot on the edge of Jetty Woods next to Cayuga Inlet this evening, 6 August. Also seen on this evening's canoe-paddle all the way around the red lighthouse: 3 GREAT BLUE HERONS, 2 BELTED KINGFISHERS, 2 PURPLE MARTINS, 3 SPOTTED SANDPIPERS, 32 CASPIAN TERNS, 41 DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS, 3 WOOD DUCKS, 6 COMMON MERGANSERS, 2 GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS, 1 HERRING GULL, plenty of RING-BILLED GULLS, MALLARDS AND CANADA GEESE, one or more BARN SWALLOWS, 2 AMERICAN ROBINS, and 1 MOURNING DOVE. Also heard were 1 AMERICAN GOLDFINCH and 2 SONG SPARROWS. We did not see any fireflies in our yard this evening. On August 1 we only saw 1 firefly, but a few weeks ago it was spectacular. --Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 02, 2011, at 06:55 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:The Great Egret is roosting in the same place this evening, 2 August.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 1, 2011, at 9:56 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 
 On this evening's (1 Aug) canoe-paddle on Cayuga Inlet Laurie and I saw a Great Egret atop a small tree on the edge of Jetty Woods.  A Great Blue Heron stood on a log below, and 17 Double-crested Cormorants rested on dead trees or soared nearby. A Belted Kingfisher and a couple of Caspian Tern families flew past. When we got home an Eastern Screech-Owl was calling from the edge of our yard.
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY

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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-06 Thread Dave Nutter
Two GREAT EGRETS were roosting in the same spot on the edge of Jetty Woods next to Cayuga Inlet this evening, 6 August. Also seen on this evening's canoe-paddle all the way around the red lighthouse: 3 GREAT BLUE HERONS, 2 BELTED KINGFISHERS, 2 PURPLE MARTINS, 3 SPOTTED SANDPIPERS, 32 CASPIAN TERNS, 41 DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS, 3 WOOD DUCKS, 6 COMMON MERGANSERS, 2 GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULLS, 1 HERRING GULL, plenty of RING-BILLED GULLS, MALLARDS AND CANADA GEESE, one or more BARN SWALLOWS, 2 AMERICAN ROBINS, and 1 MOURNING DOVE. Also heard were 1 AMERICAN GOLDFINCH and 2 SONG SPARROWS. We did not see any fireflies in our yard this evening. On August 1 we only saw 1 firefly, but a few weeks ago it was spectacular. --Dave NutterIthaca, NYOn Aug 02, 2011, at 06:55 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:The Great Egret is roosting in the same place this evening, 2 August.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 1, 2011, at 9:56 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 
 On this evening's (1 Aug) canoe-paddle on Cayuga Inlet Laurie and I saw a Great Egret atop a small tree on the edge of Jetty Woods.  A Great Blue Heron stood on a log below, and 17 Double-crested Cormorants rested on dead trees or soared nearby. A Belted Kingfisher and a couple of Caspian Tern families flew past. When we got home an Eastern Screech-Owl was calling from the edge of our yard.
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY

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Welcome and Basics
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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Great Egret

2011-08-02 Thread Dave Nutter
The Great Egret is roosting in the same place this evening, 2 August.

--Dave Nutter
Ithaca, NY

On Aug 1, 2011, at 9:56 PM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@mac.com wrote:

 
 On this evening's (1 Aug) canoe-paddle on Cayuga Inlet Laurie and I saw a 
 Great Egret atop a small tree on the edge of Jetty Woods.  A Great Blue Heron 
 stood on a log below, and 17 Double-crested Cormorants rested on dead trees 
 or soared nearby. A Belted Kingfisher and a couple of Caspian Tern families 
 flew past. When we got home an Eastern Screech-Owl was calling from the edge 
 of our yard.
 --Dave Nutter
 Ithaca, NY

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