At least 12 species of warblers in mundy
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Warblers in Mundy
Blackburnian
Black and White
Ovenbird
Wilson’s warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Nashville
Chestnut-sided
Tennessee
Bay-breasted
Northern Parula
Magnolia
Black-throated Blue
Common Yellowthroat
Philadelphia Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
I thought of Gladys’s report on Ovenbird and was
Hi Cayugabirders,
Hope that all is well and that you’ve been enjoying the migrant arrivals from
the frontal passage over the past day or so. It has certainly been noticeable
for nocturnal migration (both on radar and for flight calls), and the roving
mixed migrant flocks are a good indicator
FYI: Celebrate Cornell Lab's Centennial!
See below:
--Lee Ann
-
Migration Celebration and Centennial Open House!
Saturday, September 12, 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Come celebrate the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's 100th Anniversary and the
Call the Wildlife Clinic
From: bounce-119641931-12723...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-119641931-12723...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Chris R. Pelkie
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2015 9:31 AM
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Fwd: hurt bird question
Forwarded for a friend in Ithaca not on the list: not sure who might help,
Victoria? or is this a vet school question?
Thanks
__
Chris Pelkie
Information/Data Manager; IT Support
Bioacoustics Research Program
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods Road
Ithaca, NY
Hi all,
I have the new Bill Evans' mic on my roof and have been trying to detect and
identify calls of the creatures that fly over my head while I am asleep. Today
I had blast in the morning while looking at the spectrograms to see what flew
over my head. The mic with the software recorded
Sounds like Sandy’s recent report was ‘payback time’ for the birds…
Oh, speaking of Disney films, you may want to avoid watching “The Living
Desert” (some seriously rigged nature photography to get one critter to eat
another, several different episodes).
Disney learned his lesson after the bad
I need nine birding guide books picked up from my house (near Ithaca High)
and delivered to the gift shop. Hours are 10-3, but if you arrive earlier
than 10am, you can drop the books off at the office as early as 8am-4:30pm,
which is a small building located in the same vicinity opposite the
I stand corrected (and happy to have learned something new, thanks, Scott):
European Starlings are NOT in the same family as grackles...I was using
the term "family" loosely, thinking "blackbird" family as the starling is
found on the same page as a Red-winged Blackbird in the American Bird
I spent ¾ of an hour at the arboretum in the morning. As I about to leave the
actions started to happen. A Chickadee flock came with assorted species of
warblers. Interestingly all warblers dove in the same trees and spent some time
there and then to a next tree. They spent a lot of time in
Hope these tempt you to come out this weekend. 7:30 Saturday and Sunday.
Led by bird club members. Sponsored by the Cayuga Bird Club and the Lab of
Ornithology. Linda Orkin
Lisa Wood's 9/5 walk 20 attendees..
Had a great three-hour walk around the Wilson Trail this morning. Thanks to
Paul
I found some migrants along the Wilson Trail in Sapsucker Woods on Friday,
mostly high in the canopy around the map stand south of the Podell
Boardwalk.
Tennessee Warbler (2 yellow birds together by Sherwood Platform)
Bay-breasted Warbler (1 by Sherwood, 2 at aforementioned map stand)
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