I also was hoping for some storm-related birds, but got a later start to 
Myer's. The SNOW GOOSE was still sitting on the spit with Canadas, but no terns 
or other goodies.

At Stewart Park, there were hundreds of swallows on the lake, mostly BARN with 
many TREE and a few BANK and ROUGH-WINGED - some exhausted swallows were 
sitting on twigs around the swan pen. An adult BALD EAGLE was cruising about, 
and an OSPREY came over. In the very windy willows around the swan pen were 3 
PALM WARBLERS ( at least one was yellow), sev. BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHERS, and 
YELLOW WARBLERS, and a single WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW.

I'm sure there are some great birds somewhere today,

KEN


On 5/9/10 10:21 AM, "Mark Chao" <markc...@imt.org> wrote:

In hopes that the severe weather might have downed some birds, I went to Myers 
Park on Sunday morning.  I found no extreme birds, but I did find extreme 
birder Jay McGowan, some COMMON TERNS, a SNOW GOOSE (smaller than Canada Geese, 
typical structure and grin patch -- not a white domestic goose), an ORCHARD 
ORIOLE singing near the entrance, and a SCARLET TANAGER in the trees around the 
private marina.  I missed a BRANT that Jay found north of the spit.

Then I joined a public walk led by Linda Orkin in Sapsucker Woods.  We found 
quite a nice variety of birds on the Wilson Trail, mostly in a loose mixed 
flock by the lone bench south of the Sherwood Platform, during a brief 
appearance by the sun.  (The east-facing edge here is perhaps the best of 
several excellent spots in Sapsucker Woods for finding concentrations of 
insectivorous birds on cold but sunlit mornings.)   This flock included 
BAY-BREASTED WARBLER and BLACK-AND-WHITE WARBLER perched in the same binocular 
view and offering a nice comparison of songs; MAGNOLIA WARBLER; CHESTNUT-SIDED 
WARBLER, BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER (2 males), AMERICAN REDSTART, NASHVILLE WARBLER, 
CANADA WARBLER, NORTHERN WATERTHRUSH, and BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHER, plus a few 
Yellow Warblers and many Yellow-rumped Warblers.  I also saw a PALM WARBLER 
before the first fork in the Wilson Trail North and heard a EASTERN WOOD-PEWEE 
singing somewhere near the sharp bend after the small footbridge.

Even aside from the warblers, a visit to Sapsucker Woods is plenty enjoyable 
just for the sight of Great Blue Herons on their nests and the noisy spectacle 
of Baltimore Orioles everywhere gathering nest material and defending 
territories.

Mark Chao


**********************************************
Ken Rosenberg
Director of Conservation Science
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Ithaca NY 14850

Phone: 607-254-2412
cell: 607-342-4594
k...@cornell.edu
www.birds.cornell.edu


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