[nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler. Setauket

2020-09-27 Thread Jeanne

Still present at Frank melville park now
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler. Setauket

2020-09-27 Thread Jeanne

Still present at Frank melville park now
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler at West Meadow Beach, Stony Brook

2018-12-09 Thread Patrice Domeischel
Found about 12:30 p.m. today, a Tennessee Warbler at West Meadow Beach in Stony 
Brook.  Location was about 500 feet from the end of Trustees Road (almost one 
mile from parking lot), then turn towards the Long Island Sound. The bird was 
feeding near edge where maritime brushland and beach meet.  Photos on eBird 
list:   https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S50547105 


Patrice Domeischel
Setauket, New York 
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler at West Meadow Beach, Stony Brook

2018-12-09 Thread Patrice Domeischel
Found about 12:30 p.m. today, a Tennessee Warbler at West Meadow Beach in Stony 
Brook.  Location was about 500 feet from the end of Trustees Road (almost one 
mile from parking lot), then turn towards the Long Island Sound. The bird was 
feeding near edge where maritime brushland and beach meet.  Photos on eBird 
list:   https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S50547105 


Patrice Domeischel
Setauket, New York 
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler (etc.)

2016-04-02 Thread David Gasner
Mr Fiore:
Thank you for the most informative note. I had no sense that the sighting might 
be quite unusual and I will try to get some evidence so that others more 
knowledgable, of whom there are many, can corroborate or falsify as the case 
may be.
Having said that, I have a decent idea of what I saw, and a very, very good 
idea of what I heard. I am quite sure that it was not Pine or Palm Warbler, 
both of which I am reasonably familiar with.
If I can get a decent pic and/or recording I will send it along.
Best to everyone
David Gasner

Sent from my iPad

> On Apr 2, 2016, at 4:14 PM, Thomas Fiore <tom...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> 
> Hi David & all,
> 
> I would not be the only list-member to note that a Tennessee Warbler at this 
> early date would be somewhat remarkable, and since around a feeder, perhaps 
> can be video'd with the vocalizations that were noted, as well as for a 
> visual confirmation.  I believe any occurrence of that species earlier than 
> the last week in April (anywhere in NY state, or the greater region) would be 
> most unusual, and certainly very unexpected.  (I was in a location near the 
> Mexico-Guatemala border less than 3 weeks ago where some of us witnessed a 
> mass migratory passage of Tennessee Warbler, an indication of how far away 
> they still were then.  Now perhaps some are in the deep southern U.S.A. but 
> not likely most (if any) have made it a lot farther north just yet - unless 
> south winds really did bring in such a major over-shoot, or if there had been 
> a rare-overwintering individual in the general vicinity, so far north of the 
> typical winter range for Tennessee Warbler - which is not in N. America.
> 
> ..
> At least 2 species of expected warblers & other typical early-April migrants 
> are showing in Central Park this changeable-weather day in Manhattan (N.Y. 
> City) - those being Pine & Palm Warbler, in modest numbers and most of the 
> other spring migrants that are being seen also in modest or small numbers, to 
> my knowledge & from what I've been seeing so far... (B.-g. Gnatcatcher, 
> Kinglets of both spp., Hermit Thrush, Spizella-genus sparrows)
> 
> the song (if there was song heard) of Tennessee Warbler is rather unique, so 
> an interesting report & worth some follow-up.
> 
> best and good birding,
> 
> Tom Fiore
> Manhattan
> .>>
> Date: 4/2/16 12:31 pm
> From: Davidgasner 
> Subject: [nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler
> Seen and heard, near backyard feeders, Shinnecock Hills, Southampton. Also 
> fos Eastern Towhee yesterday. 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone 
> -- 
> 
> NYSbirds-L List Info: 
> 
> --
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Re: [nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler (etc.)

2016-04-02 Thread David Gasner
Mr Fiore:
Thank you for the most informative note. I had no sense that the sighting might 
be quite unusual and I will try to get some evidence so that others more 
knowledgable, of whom there are many, can corroborate or falsify as the case 
may be.
Having said that, I have a decent idea of what I saw, and a very, very good 
idea of what I heard. I am quite sure that it was not Pine or Palm Warbler, 
both of which I am reasonably familiar with.
If I can get a decent pic and/or recording I will send it along.
Best to everyone
David Gasner

Sent from my iPad

> On Apr 2, 2016, at 4:14 PM, Thomas Fiore  wrote:
> 
> Hi David & all,
> 
> I would not be the only list-member to note that a Tennessee Warbler at this 
> early date would be somewhat remarkable, and since around a feeder, perhaps 
> can be video'd with the vocalizations that were noted, as well as for a 
> visual confirmation.  I believe any occurrence of that species earlier than 
> the last week in April (anywhere in NY state, or the greater region) would be 
> most unusual, and certainly very unexpected.  (I was in a location near the 
> Mexico-Guatemala border less than 3 weeks ago where some of us witnessed a 
> mass migratory passage of Tennessee Warbler, an indication of how far away 
> they still were then.  Now perhaps some are in the deep southern U.S.A. but 
> not likely most (if any) have made it a lot farther north just yet - unless 
> south winds really did bring in such a major over-shoot, or if there had been 
> a rare-overwintering individual in the general vicinity, so far north of the 
> typical winter range for Tennessee Warbler - which is not in N. America.
> 
> ..
> At least 2 species of expected warblers & other typical early-April migrants 
> are showing in Central Park this changeable-weather day in Manhattan (N.Y. 
> City) - those being Pine & Palm Warbler, in modest numbers and most of the 
> other spring migrants that are being seen also in modest or small numbers, to 
> my knowledge & from what I've been seeing so far... (B.-g. Gnatcatcher, 
> Kinglets of both spp., Hermit Thrush, Spizella-genus sparrows)
> 
> the song (if there was song heard) of Tennessee Warbler is rather unique, so 
> an interesting report & worth some follow-up.
> 
> best and good birding,
> 
> Tom Fiore
> Manhattan
> .>>
> Date: 4/2/16 12:31 pm
> From: Davidgasner 
> Subject: [nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler
> Seen and heard, near backyard feeders, Shinnecock Hills, Southampton. Also 
> fos Eastern Towhee yesterday. 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone 
> -- 
> 
> NYSbirds-L List Info: 
> 
> --
> 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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RE:[nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler (etc.)

2016-04-02 Thread Thomas Fiore
Hi David & all,

I would not be the only list-member to note that a Tennessee Warbler  
at this early date would be somewhat remarkable, and since around a  
feeder, perhaps can be video'd with the vocalizations that were noted,  
as well as for a visual confirmation.  I believe any occurrence of  
that species earlier than the last week in April (anywhere in NY  
state, or the greater region) would be most unusual, and certainly  
very unexpected.  (I was in a location near the Mexico-Guatemala  
border less than 3 weeks ago where some of us witnessed a mass  
migratory passage of Tennessee Warbler, an indication of how far away  
they still were then.  Now perhaps some are in the deep southern  
U.S.A. but not likely most (if any) have made it a lot farther north  
just yet - unless south winds really did bring in such a major over- 
shoot, or if there had been a rare-overwintering individual in the  
general vicinity, so far north of the typical winter range for  
Tennessee Warbler - which is not in N. America.

..
At least 2 species of expected warblers & other typical early-April  
migrants are showing in Central Park this changeable-weather day in  
Manhattan (N.Y. City) - those being Pine & Palm Warbler, in modest  
numbers and most of the other spring migrants that are being seen also  
in modest or small numbers, to my knowledge & from what I've been  
seeing so far... (B.-g. Gnatcatcher, Kinglets of both spp., Hermit  
Thrush, Spizella-genus sparrows)

the song (if there was song heard) of Tennessee Warbler is rather  
unique, so an interesting report & worth some follow-up.

best and good birding,

Tom Fiore
Manhattan
.>>
Date: 4/2/16 12:31 pm
From: Davidgasner 
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler
Seen and heard, near backyard feeders, Shinnecock Hills, Southampton.  
Also fos Eastern Towhee yesterday.

Sent from my iPhone
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RE:[nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler (etc.)

2016-04-02 Thread Thomas Fiore
Hi David & all,

I would not be the only list-member to note that a Tennessee Warbler  
at this early date would be somewhat remarkable, and since around a  
feeder, perhaps can be video'd with the vocalizations that were noted,  
as well as for a visual confirmation.  I believe any occurrence of  
that species earlier than the last week in April (anywhere in NY  
state, or the greater region) would be most unusual, and certainly  
very unexpected.  (I was in a location near the Mexico-Guatemala  
border less than 3 weeks ago where some of us witnessed a mass  
migratory passage of Tennessee Warbler, an indication of how far away  
they still were then.  Now perhaps some are in the deep southern  
U.S.A. but not likely most (if any) have made it a lot farther north  
just yet - unless south winds really did bring in such a major over- 
shoot, or if there had been a rare-overwintering individual in the  
general vicinity, so far north of the typical winter range for  
Tennessee Warbler - which is not in N. America.

..
At least 2 species of expected warblers & other typical early-April  
migrants are showing in Central Park this changeable-weather day in  
Manhattan (N.Y. City) - those being Pine & Palm Warbler, in modest  
numbers and most of the other spring migrants that are being seen also  
in modest or small numbers, to my knowledge & from what I've been  
seeing so far... (B.-g. Gnatcatcher, Kinglets of both spp., Hermit  
Thrush, Spizella-genus sparrows)

the song (if there was song heard) of Tennessee Warbler is rather  
unique, so an interesting report & worth some follow-up.

best and good birding,

Tom Fiore
Manhattan
.>>
Date: 4/2/16 12:31 pm
From: Davidgasner 
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler
Seen and heard, near backyard feeders, Shinnecock Hills, Southampton.  
Also fos Eastern Towhee yesterday.

Sent from my iPhone
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler

2016-04-02 Thread Davidgasner
Seen and heard, near backyard feeders, Shinnecock Hills, Southampton. Also fos 
Eastern Towhee yesterday.

Sent from my iPhone
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee warbler

2016-04-02 Thread Davidgasner
Seen and heard, near backyard feeders, Shinnecock Hills, Southampton. Also fos 
Eastern Towhee yesterday.

Sent from my iPhone
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler, Eared Grebe, Sandhill Cranes

2012-04-28 Thread Willie D'Anna and Betsy Potter
It was a productive day.  I will keep this short because I am tired but here
are some highlights from the day:

Betsy had a very early TENNESSEE WARBLER in the yard this afternoon, which
she first saw from inside the house (how many times has this happened
before?!).  It was silent but she had very good views of it to rule out
other more likely possibilities like Nashville and Orange-crowned Warblers
and Warbling Vireo.

 

Corey Callaghan, Brian Morse, and I had two SANDHILL CRANES at Meadville
Marsh on the Tonawanda WMA (TWMA).  Corey and I had a breeding plumaged
EARED GREBE on Lake Ontario at Shadigee.  There were also four breeding
plumaged HORNED GREBES here, one of which had all of its head feathers
erect, making it look spectacular!  We also had shorebirds at Paddy #2,
TWMA, accessed from Griswold Road, not far from Rt 77 - both yellowlegs,
Solitary, Pecs, and snipe.  A WARBLING VIREO at Paddy #1 was our first of
the year.

 

We stopped at the Elba Mucklands (Rt 98, north of the village of Elba) which
has excellent shorebird habitat again this year.  We only had both
yellowlegs today but this should be checked in the days to come.  The best
fields are on the north side of the ditch near the end of the road.

 

For the day, Corey and I had over 100 species.

 

Good birding!

Willie

--

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Betsy Potter

Wilson, NY

dannapotterATroadrunner.com

http://www.betsypottersart.com  

 


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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler, Eared Grebe, Sandhill Cranes

2012-04-28 Thread Willie D'Anna and Betsy Potter
It was a productive day.  I will keep this short because I am tired but here
are some highlights from the day:

Betsy had a very early TENNESSEE WARBLER in the yard this afternoon, which
she first saw from inside the house (how many times has this happened
before?!).  It was silent but she had very good views of it to rule out
other more likely possibilities like Nashville and Orange-crowned Warblers
and Warbling Vireo.

 

Corey Callaghan, Brian Morse, and I had two SANDHILL CRANES at Meadville
Marsh on the Tonawanda WMA (TWMA).  Corey and I had a breeding plumaged
EARED GREBE on Lake Ontario at Shadigee.  There were also four breeding
plumaged HORNED GREBES here, one of which had all of its head feathers
erect, making it look spectacular!  We also had shorebirds at Paddy #2,
TWMA, accessed from Griswold Road, not far from Rt 77 - both yellowlegs,
Solitary, Pecs, and snipe.  A WARBLING VIREO at Paddy #1 was our first of
the year.

 

We stopped at the Elba Mucklands (Rt 98, north of the village of Elba) which
has excellent shorebird habitat again this year.  We only had both
yellowlegs today but this should be checked in the days to come.  The best
fields are on the north side of the ditch near the end of the road.

 

For the day, Corey and I had over 100 species.

 

Good birding!

Willie

--

Willie D'Anna

Betsy Potter

Wilson, NY

dannapotterATroadrunner.com

http://www.betsypottersart.com http://www.betsypottersart.com/ 

 


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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler at Inwood Hill Park

2012-01-06 Thread Christina M . Wilkinson
Two birders and I just identified a Tennessee Warbler at the Dickcissel 
location in the shrubs by the Amtrak tracks near Dyckman Street.

- Reply message -
From: "Taylor Sturm" 
Date: Fri, Jan 6, 2012 1:08 pm
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Dickcissel - YES
To: 

Dickcissel presently being seen foraging with a rather large flock of house
sparrows in its usual location (most south west area of Inwood Hill Park
(past the overpass near the river))

Rufous Hummingbird is also at its usual location.

Good luck if you go
Taylor Sturm

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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler at Inwood Hill Park

2012-01-06 Thread Christina M . Wilkinson
Two birders and I just identified a Tennessee Warbler at the Dickcissel 
location in the shrubs by the Amtrak tracks near Dyckman Street.

- Reply message -
From: Taylor Sturm tjst...@gmail.com
Date: Fri, Jan 6, 2012 1:08 pm
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Dickcissel - YES
To: NYSBIRDS-L@cornell.edu

Dickcissel presently being seen foraging with a rather large flock of house
sparrows in its usual location (most south west area of Inwood Hill Park
(past the overpass near the river))

Rufous Hummingbird is also at its usual location.

Good luck if you go
Taylor Sturm

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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler in yard

2011-10-04 Thread Andrew Block
Just had a Tennessee Warbler in my bird bath.  I seem to get them every  now 
and again in the fall.  Nice bird.
 
Andrew

Andrew v. F. Block
Consulting Naturalist/Wildlife Biologist
37 Tanglewylde Avenue
Bronxville, Westchester Co., New York 10708-3131
Phone: 914-337-1229; Fax: 914-771-8036
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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler, other migrants in the NorthWest Woods, East Hampton

2011-08-23 Thread Anthony Collerton
Woke this morning to what seemed like a crisp Fall day and a quick look in
the yard revealed that the birds seemed to think so too.  The yard was
hopping with birds and, while many were members the local Titmouse/Chickadee
mixed flock, or other local breeders, there were some migrants in the mix
too.

Highlight for me was a close, eye-level, male TENNESSEE WARBLER in the
flower garden along with Magnolia Warbler, Yellow Warbler, 2 Black-and-White
Warblers, an American Redstart, and 5 Pine Warblers.  Other residents
included a SUMMER TANAGER (YOY bird - notably *not* calling), a Scarlet
Tanager, 5 Baltimore Orioles, 2 Eastern Wood Pewees, a Yellow-billed Cuckoo,
4 woodpecker species, and 6 Ruby-throated Hummingbirds battling for the
feeders.  I'd estimate that there were over 75 individual birds of 29
species in the garden over the course of the two hours between 7am and 9am -
and the seed feeders aren't even up yet.

Thinking there might be some sort of major fallout I zipped over to Montauk
Point at around 9:00am where everything unfortunately was pretty quiet.  I
did add Common Yellowthroat and Veery for the day, along with a Solitary
Sandpiper at Deep Hollow and a Turkey Vulture at West Lake.  Otherwise not
much of note.

Changing topics - our resident Screech Owls have also been extremely vocal
of late, often calling before dark.  Seems to be an August event most years.

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
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] Tennessee Warbler, other migrants in the NorthWest Woods, East Hampton

2011-08-23 Thread Anthony Collerton
Woke this morning to what seemed like a crisp Fall day and a quick look in
the yard revealed that the birds seemed to think so too.  The yard was
hopping with birds and, while many were members the local Titmouse/Chickadee
mixed flock, or other local breeders, there were some migrants in the mix
too.

Highlight for me was a close, eye-level, male TENNESSEE WARBLER in the
flower garden along with Magnolia Warbler, Yellow Warbler, 2 Black-and-White
Warblers, an American Redstart, and 5 Pine Warblers.  Other residents
included a SUMMER TANAGER (YOY bird - notably *not* calling), a Scarlet
Tanager, 5 Baltimore Orioles, 2 Eastern Wood Pewees, a Yellow-billed Cuckoo,
4 woodpecker species, and 6 Ruby-throated Hummingbirds battling for the
feeders.  I'd estimate that there were over 75 individual birds of 29
species in the garden over the course of the two hours between 7am and 9am -
and the seed feeders aren't even up yet.

Thinking there might be some sort of major fallout I zipped over to Montauk
Point at around 9:00am where everything unfortunately was pretty quiet.  I
did add Common Yellowthroat and Veery for the day, along with a Solitary
Sandpiper at Deep Hollow and a Turkey Vulture at West Lake.  Otherwise not
much of note.

Changing topics - our resident Screech Owls have also been extremely vocal
of late, often calling before dark.  Seems to be an August event most years.

--

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
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/

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[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler and others

2010-09-10 Thread Andrew Block
Just had a nice adult Tennessee Warbler, female Common Yellowthroat and 
Red-eyed 
Vireo in my yard.  The TEWA and vireo were in the same Hercule's Club tree so 
was able to get good comparisons.  The warbler also came down to my birdbath.  
Also just had a female hummer at the feeder.

Andrew
 
Andrew v. F. Block 
Consulting Field Biologist & Eco-tour Leader
37 Tanglewylde Avenue 
Bronxville, Westchester Co., New York 10708-3131 
Phone: (914) 337-1229; Fax: (914) 771-8036

"When the last individual of a race of living things breathes no more, another 
heaven and another earth must pass before such a one can be again..." - William 
Beebe, first Curator of Birds, Bronx Zoo

"Crikey! Have a look at that!" - Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter

"Just like the white winged dove sings a song, sounds like she's singing whoo, 
baby...whoo...said whoo" - Stephanie L. Nicks, Edge of 17, Bella Donna


  
--

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L

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

--

[nysbirds-l] Tennessee Warbler and others

2010-09-10 Thread Andrew Block
Just had a nice adult Tennessee Warbler, female Common Yellowthroat and 
Red-eyed 
Vireo in my yard.  The TEWA and vireo were in the same Hercule's Club tree so 
was able to get good comparisons.  The warbler also came down to my birdbath.  
Also just had a female hummer at the feeder.

Andrew
 
Andrew v. F. Block 
Consulting Field Biologist  Eco-tour Leader
37 Tanglewylde Avenue 
Bronxville, Westchester Co., New York 10708-3131 
Phone: (914) 337-1229; Fax: (914) 771-8036

When the last individual of a race of living things breathes no more, another 
heaven and another earth must pass before such a one can be again... - William 
Beebe, first Curator of Birds, Bronx Zoo

Crikey! Have a look at that! - Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter

Just like the white winged dove sings a song, sounds like she's singing whoo, 
baby...whoo...said whoo - Stephanie L. Nicks, Edge of 17, Bella Donna


  
--

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

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NYSB.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L

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

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