Re: [nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk Lapwings

2012-11-11 Thread Phil Jeffrey
That bird was in Mercer County NJ.
The confusion probably arises because the nearest town (Allentown) is in
Monmouth.
The bird was not seen since the original sighting and wasn't evident on
checking the most likely areas around Allentown on Saturday morning - but
there's a great deal of habitat in that area.

Phil Jeffrey

On Sat, Nov 10, 2012 at 9:15 PM, Mike  wrote:

> **
> In addition to the recent Lapwings mentioned by Angus, another wa in
> Monmouth County NJ on Thursday- photos here
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/sgalick/8166827941/in/photostream
>
> Mike Cooper
> Ridge, LI, NY
>

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Re: [nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk Lapwings

2012-11-11 Thread Phil Jeffrey
That bird was in Mercer County NJ.
The confusion probably arises because the nearest town (Allentown) is in
Monmouth.
The bird was not seen since the original sighting and wasn't evident on
checking the most likely areas around Allentown on Saturday morning - but
there's a great deal of habitat in that area.

Phil Jeffrey

On Sat, Nov 10, 2012 at 9:15 PM, Mike mike...@optonline.net wrote:

 **
 In addition to the recent Lapwings mentioned by Angus, another wa in
 Monmouth County NJ on Thursday- photos here

 http://www.flickr.com/photos/sgalick/8166827941/in/photostream

 Mike Cooper
 Ridge, LI, NY


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Re: [nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk Lapwings

2012-11-10 Thread Mike
In addition to the recent Lapwings mentioned by Angus, another wa in Monmouth 
County NJ on Thursday- photos here 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/sgalick/8166827941/in/photostream

Mike Cooper
Ridge, LI, NY
  - Original Message - 
  From: Angus Wilson 
  To: NYSBIRDS-L 
  Sent: Saturday, November 10, 2012 6:32 PM
  Subject: [nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk 
Lapwings


  The Lapwings could well be in the area tomorrow (they are generally diurnal 
migrants) and I encourage searchers to check open grassy areas starting of 
course with the horse pastures in Deep Hollow or if necessary areas of 
disturbed soil, anywhere they might clean invertebrates. Twice the birds were 
spooked into flight by deer.





  Congratulations to Jorn Ake for an amazing find and to Peter Polshek for 
getting the rest of us on the birds before it became too dark to see.





  An extremely rare vagrant to the northeast from Europe, Lapwing has occurred 
in New York State on at least 5 previous occasions. The last twitchable bird 
being the one that lingered around through the Mecox Dairy area (Watermill, 
Suffolk Co.) in 1995 (Jan-Mar). Focusing on the South Fork, another was 
collected by Beebe at Mecox Bay in late 1905 and a few readers will even 
remember the bird from Deep Hollow in early December 1966! In the past few 
days, 4 different Lapwings were reported, with 2 together on Nantucket, 
Nantucket (still present this morning) and one seen and photographed on 3 Nov 
in Maine. Closer to home, workers involved in the Hurricane Sandy cleanup 
photographed a Lapwing in an area of Jones Beach (? I think) that is not 
accessible to the public. 





  Please post immediately to this list if you have any positive (or negative) 
news tomorrow. Many area birders will face the vexing challenge of 'Virginia's 
Warbler' vs 'Lapwing'. Maybe some will score twice.



  -- 
  Angus Wilson
  New York City & The Springs, NY, USA
  http://birdingtotheend.blogspot.com/

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[nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk Lapwings

2012-11-10 Thread Angus Wilson
The Lapwings could well be in the area tomorrow (they are generally diurnal
migrants) and I encourage searchers to check open grassy areas starting of
course with the horse pastures in Deep Hollow or if necessary areas of
disturbed soil, anywhere they might clean invertebrates. Twice the birds
were spooked into flight by deer.


Congratulations to Jorn Ake for an amazing find and to Peter Polshek for
getting the rest of us on the birds before it became too dark to see.


An extremely rare vagrant to the northeast from Europe, Lapwing has
occurred in New York State on at least 5 previous occasions. The last
twitchable bird being the one that lingered around through the Mecox Dairy
area (Watermill, Suffolk Co.) in 1995 (Jan-Mar). Focusing on the South
Fork, another was collected by Beebe at Mecox Bay in late 1905 and a few
readers will even remember the bird from Deep Hollow in early December 1966! In
the past few days, 4 different Lapwings were reported, with 2 together on
Nantucket, Nantucket (still present this morning) and one seen and
photographed on 3 Nov in Maine. Closer to home, workers involved in
the Hurricane
Sandy cleanup photographed a Lapwing in an area of Jones Beach (? I
think)that is not accessible to the public.


Please post immediately to this list if you have any positive (or negative)
news tomorrow. Many area birders will face the vexing challenge of
'Virginia's Warbler' vs 'Lapwing'. Maybe some will score twice.

-- 
Angus Wilson
New York City & The Springs, NY, USA
http://birdingtotheend.blogspot.com/

--

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http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME
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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

--

[nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk Lapwings

2012-11-10 Thread Angus Wilson
The Lapwings could well be in the area tomorrow (they are generally diurnal
migrants) and I encourage searchers to check open grassy areas starting of
course with the horse pastures in Deep Hollow or if necessary areas of
disturbed soil, anywhere they might clean invertebrates. Twice the birds
were spooked into flight by deer.


Congratulations to Jorn Ake for an amazing find and to Peter Polshek for
getting the rest of us on the birds before it became too dark to see.


An extremely rare vagrant to the northeast from Europe, Lapwing has
occurred in New York State on at least 5 previous occasions. The last
twitchable bird being the one that lingered around through the Mecox Dairy
area (Watermill, Suffolk Co.) in 1995 (Jan-Mar). Focusing on the South
Fork, another was collected by Beebe at Mecox Bay in late 1905 and a few
readers will even remember the bird from Deep Hollow in early December 1966! In
the past few days, 4 different Lapwings were reported, with 2 together on
Nantucket, Nantucket (still present this morning) and one seen and
photographed on 3 Nov in Maine. Closer to home, workers involved in
the Hurricane
Sandy cleanup photographed a Lapwing in an area of Jones Beach (? I
think)that is not accessible to the public.


Please post immediately to this list if you have any positive (or negative)
news tomorrow. Many area birders will face the vexing challenge of
'Virginia's Warbler' vs 'Lapwing'. Maybe some will score twice.

-- 
Angus Wilson
New York City  The Springs, NY, USA
http://birdingtotheend.blogspot.com/

--

NYSbirds-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME
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http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm

ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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Re: [nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk Lapwings

2012-11-10 Thread Mike
In addition to the recent Lapwings mentioned by Angus, another wa in Monmouth 
County NJ on Thursday- photos here 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/sgalick/8166827941/in/photostream

Mike Cooper
Ridge, LI, NY
  - Original Message - 
  From: Angus Wilson 
  To: NYSBIRDS-L 
  Sent: Saturday, November 10, 2012 6:32 PM
  Subject: [nysbirds-l] South Fork LI: A little more information on the Montauk 
Lapwings


  The Lapwings could well be in the area tomorrow (they are generally diurnal 
migrants) and I encourage searchers to check open grassy areas starting of 
course with the horse pastures in Deep Hollow or if necessary areas of 
disturbed soil, anywhere they might clean invertebrates. Twice the birds were 
spooked into flight by deer.





  Congratulations to Jorn Ake for an amazing find and to Peter Polshek for 
getting the rest of us on the birds before it became too dark to see.





  An extremely rare vagrant to the northeast from Europe, Lapwing has occurred 
in New York State on at least 5 previous occasions. The last twitchable bird 
being the one that lingered around through the Mecox Dairy area (Watermill, 
Suffolk Co.) in 1995 (Jan-Mar). Focusing on the South Fork, another was 
collected by Beebe at Mecox Bay in late 1905 and a few readers will even 
remember the bird from Deep Hollow in early December 1966! In the past few 
days, 4 different Lapwings were reported, with 2 together on Nantucket, 
Nantucket (still present this morning) and one seen and photographed on 3 Nov 
in Maine. Closer to home, workers involved in the Hurricane Sandy cleanup 
photographed a Lapwing in an area of Jones Beach (? I think) that is not 
accessible to the public. 





  Please post immediately to this list if you have any positive (or negative) 
news tomorrow. Many area birders will face the vexing challenge of 'Virginia's 
Warbler' vs 'Lapwing'. Maybe some will score twice.



  -- 
  Angus Wilson
  New York City  The Springs, NY, USA
  http://birdingtotheend.blogspot.com/

  --
  NYSbirds-L List Info:
  Welcome and Basics 
  Rules and Information 
  Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
  Archives:
  The Mail Archive
  Surfbirds
  BirdingOnThe.Net
  Please submit your observations to eBird!
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  No virus found in this message.
  Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
  Version: 2012.0.2221 / Virus Database: 2441/5386 - Release Date: 11/10/12

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