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Conference clt::wild_birds

Title:Birders Like to Watch
Notice:June 1997 sightings in Note 65554
Moderator:ROCKS::ROBINSON
Created:Mon Oct 10 1988
Last Modified:Wed Jun 04 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:655
Total number of notes:6735

654.0. "May 1997 bird sightings." by SALEM::PERRY_W () Wed May 07 1997 19:30

    
    
    Post your May 1997 bird sightings here.
    
    Please include your location, Country, State, town etc.
    
    
                                          Thanks!
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
654.1Well, I'm still birding....ROCKS::ROBINSONSeasonally adjustedFri May 09 1997 13:0812
    May 9th and no sightings yet? Is this the demise of VMS, no birders
    left at DEC or something else?
    
    Large numbers of Whitethroats as I cycled into work this morning. I
    counted 14 without trying or stopping. Also 1 Nightingale (my first of
    the year), Sedge Warbler, lots of (Barn) Swallows but still no House
    Martins.
    
    I heard my first Cuckoo on Monday and there were dozens of Swifts at
    Theale on Tuesday.
    
    Chris
654.2near HLOBIGQ::GARDNERjustme....jacquiFri May 09 1997 14:399
    My feeders are being ravaged by bright feathered goldfinches 
    in Hudson (MA).  I will have to restock this weekend.  The 
    cardinals are still around, the nuthatches, chickadees, heard
    a woodpecker or two, the grackles, bluejays, squirrels of course,
    and a few others that my mind refuses to name for me presently
    without prompting from my poster.

    justme
654.3Myrtle warbler.BASEX::EISENBRAUNJohn EisenbraunFri May 09 1997 15:491
    Myrtle warbler last weekend.   (Detroit, MI)
654.4b&w warbler in NHSALEM::PERRY_WSat May 10 1997 15:196
    
    
    Black and white warbler last Wed.    Hampstead NH, USA.
    
    
                                                      Bill
654.5Skylarks on Skye.BROUGH::DAVIESHype is a 4 letter word !Mon May 12 1997 09:1446
I have just returned from a week of R&R on the Island of Skye. For the US 
readers of this conference, SKYE is located in the North West of the British
Isles off the west coast of Scotland. Skye is approx 80 miles long with
mountains (Cullins) and morland. It is not noted for its birds and that was not
my primary reason for going there. This was 1) Fishing and 2) Deer Stalking
with a Camera.  The Sea is very clean and the abundance of fish & shellfish
make this a good place to see Whales (Minkies), Seals & Otters. The Geology
is in the main some of the oldest rocks in the world (600Million Years). This
makes the sea cliffs in the main not very good for nesting sea birds as 
the Basalt Columns do not provide many ledges for nests.

Here are the birds seen in the week.

Eider			Oystercatcher		Merganser
Gt Northern Diver	Red Throated Diver	Dipper
Heron			Common Gull		Cormorant
Shag			Mallard			Herring Gull
Black Headed Gull	Common Tern		Lesser Black Backed Gull
Artic Tern		Gannet			Kittiwake
Black Guilliemot	Razorbill		Ringed Plover	
White Tailed Sea Eagle	Sanderling		Turnstone

Robin			Wood Warbler		Cuckoo
Buzzard			Skylark			Wheatear
Rock Pipit		Common Sandpiper	Golden Plover
Meadow Pipit		WhiteThroat		Winchat
StoneChat		Sedge Warbler		Song Thrush
Golden Eagle		Hen Harrier		Hooded Crow
Raven			Lapwing			Black Grouse
Caparcaille		Ptarmigan		Pied Wagtail

There is a lot of concern about the reduction in species like the Skylark
Lapwing and Thrush in the UK. All I can say is go to Skye. Every time I went
walking over the moors I heard and saw Skylarks. Sometimes there were 3 or 4
within earshot. It is also a good place to see Wheatears and Meadow Pipits. 
They arer also very common. Many of the spieces listed above are at the northern
limit of their range. This was true with the Sedge Warbler and Cuckoo. I saw
these at the very norther tip of Skye. The next obstacle to the north is the
Artic Icecap. If I had not been deer stalking I would not have seen the 
game birds or the golden eagle. The weather was very bad for most of my trip
with Snow Sqalls coming in from the north. At one point I almost stood on a
Black Grouse as it sat on its nest containing 4 eggs. I was walking into a
blizzard so I could not see much in front of me. 

Stephen Davies

654.6JAMIN::MAJEWSKIMon May 12 1997 12:317
    on Friday (9-may) I saw a male Baltimore Oriole.
    
    on Sunday (11-may) I had a male hummingbird visiting my feeders.  What
    surprise!
    
    Litchfield, NH  USA
    
654.7Epsom, NHTLE::PARODIMon May 12 1997 19:567
    
    Yup, the birds must have been in a holding pattern south of NH. This
    weekend I saw a male northern oriole, male hummingbirds, male rose
    breasted grosbeak, and a pair of bluebirds.
    
    JP
    
654.8More spottings on Skye.BROUGH::DAVIESHype is a 4 letter word !Wed May 14 1997 13:2314
I forgot these in .4

Swallow
House Martin
Bean Goose (200+)
Pink Foot Goose (150+)
Greylag Goose (40+)

This year should be a good year for those birds which rely on catching insects.
The infamous MIDGIES were already about. Usually they appear in late may.

Stephen Davies


654.9Ontario, CanadaTROOA::TEMPLETONUnhappy gardenerThu May 15 1997 12:4819
    I have the usual Finches, Sparrows, Redwing blackbirds, Brown headed
    cowbirds, Grackles, Starlings, Doves and Robins.
    Only one Humming Bird and that was a female, what do they nest in? she
    seemed to be very interested in a large pine tree, kept going back to
    it after each visit to the feeder.
    
    The one new visitor to my feeders was last night, an Indigo Bunting, my
    what an attractive looking bird it is.
    
    I did hear an Oriole, Cardinal and I think Cedar Waxwings  but did not see
    them.
    
    On the way to and from the office every puddle seems to have a pair of
    Mallards or Canada Geese in it, also there are lots of Crows, Red
    Tailed and Red Shouldered Hawks. Yesterday we saw a Heron but the light
    was so bad I could not see what kind.
    
    
    joan
654.11EnviousROCKS::ROBINSONSeasonally adjustedFri May 16 1997 11:354
    Just 500km north of you Mike exactly half of your list would be
    lifers for me. I'll leave you to figure out which...
    
    Chris
654.12Theale UKROCKS::ROBINSONSeasonally adjustedMon May 19 1997 16:5213
    I took the YOC (Young Ornithologists Club) for our annual spring/summer
    walk around Theale Gravel Pits. We just did a slow circuit of the "Fox
    and Hounds" pit (aka Hosehill lake). The work of Brian Uttley and the
    Theale Area Conservation Group is really starting to pay dividends.
    There were loads (technical term) of Reed Warblers in (yes) the reeds
    that they've planted around the edges. Also Sedge Warblers in good
    numbers. The Tern islands are well-populated this year too. The
    artificial Sand Martin wall is looking good but not yet finished so no
    residents yet.
    Other sightings/hearings: Nightingale, Turtle Dove, Garden
    Warbler, Reed Bunting, Sand Martin, Cuckoo + usual water stuff.
    
    Chris
654.13Mt. Auburn cemetary -- birding party (USA)ASDG::BECHTLERMon May 19 1997 17:0392
    Birding Mt. Auburn cemetery in Cambridge, Mass., USA (in greater Boston
    area) during peak times is an experience no local birders should miss. 
    I can't believe I've lived here 5 years and haven't made the effort
    before now.  I live out in the far suburbs and generally like to bird
    alone, enjoying the solitude and the challenge of finding my own birds. 
    But when you really want to fill out that list (year, state, life,
    whatever) Mt. Auburn is just the ticket.
    
    It's like one big birding trip.  Seems like 50% of the visitors there
    had binoculars.  The place is a spectacular migrant trap, and there are
    so many birders around that you can find out what was seen, when and
    where.  I think if you take a lunch and spend a few hours or a day
    there, you'll see many birds.  I spent 3 hours there Saturday and then
    again Sunday; I missed some good birds that were around but I have
    faith that a little more patience would have been rewarded.
    
    And the sheer beauty of the flowering trees doesn't hurt, either.  It's
    a lovely place.  Mid-May is the peak both for wood warbler migration
    and flowering trees.
    
    For warblers, I saw:
    	Canada warbler  (1)
    	American redstart  (many, M & F)
    	Black-throated green warbler (several)
    	Yellow-rumped warbler (many)
    	Black-throated blue warbler (several, M & F)
    	Yellow warbler (a few)
    	Chestnut-sided warbler (several)
    	Black & white warbler (many)
    	Magnolia warbler (several to many)
    	Blue-winged warbler (1)
    	Northern parula (a few)
    	Ovenbird (1)
    	Blackburnian warbler (1)
    	Pine warbler (1) 
    	Wilson's warbler (1 male)
    	Female hooded or Wilson's (not the best look)
    
    These birds are around in my local areas -- just much much harder to
    find.  It's so wooded out in most of Mass. that the birds are spread
    out and it's harder to get so many species.
    
    Other birds I saw at Mt. Auburn:
    	Wood thrush
    	Swainson's thrush
    	Veery
    	Scarlet tanager (several, males are BRILLIANT red)
    	Baltimore oriole
    	Red-eyed vireo
    	Fish crow
    	Ruby-throated hummingbird
    	White-eyed vireo
    	Red-tailed hawk
    	Cedar waxwing
        Green heron
    	Blue-gray gnatcatcher
    
    plus the usual list of common birds:
    
    	White-breasted nuthatch
    	American robin
    	Mourning dove
    	Gray catbird
    	Red-winged blackbird
    	Common grackle
    	European starling
    	Canada goose
        Mallard
    	American crow
    	Blue jay
    	Northern cardinal
    	House sparrow
    	American goldfinch
    	Chipping sparrow
        Northern mockingbird
        Black-capped chickadee
        Tufted titmouse
    	Eastern phoebe
    
    I'm going back next weekend!
    
    Birds reported that I missed:
    
    Indigo bunting
    Black-billed cuckoo
    Worm-eating warbler
    Rose-breasted grosbeak
    Cerulean warbler
    Blackpoll warbler
    
    	
    
654.14Rufous-sided Towhee in Hollis, NHIMBETR::NEUVONENMon May 19 1997 17:229
    I saw my first male Rufous-sided Towhee last Wednesday at Overlook CC 
    in Hollis, NH.  I went back to play golf this weekend and saw another
    one (same one?).  I actually had to shoo it off the front of the tee 
    box so that I could hit the ball.
    
    Also saw LOTS of male Northern Orioles as well.  Still waiting to see 
    the bluebirds again...
    
    Sharon
654.15VMS alive and kickingCOMICS::WYKESJTue May 20 1997 09:199
Re .1

VMS is alive and kicking at Viables Chris and so are the birders (well me at
least!) 

I saw some House Martins at the end of April at Dinton Pastures. Haven't seen
any Swallows yet.

Justin. (OpenVMS Group)
654.16Next timeROCKS::ROBINSONSeasonally adjustedTue May 20 1997 11:147
    Re .13
    This is more like the "good old days" of this notesfile when (it seemed
    like) Mt. Auburn was mentioned in every other sightings note!
    This site was the one place I really regret not visiting when Roy Young
    and I were over in the US five years ago. 
    
    Chris
654.17BIGQ::GARDNERjustme....jacquiTue May 20 1997 12:239
    I saw a Great Blue Heron whilst driving down Route 20 East on
    the Marlboro/Sudbury line.  It was flying overhead from the
    Wayside Inn area to the Raytheon Complex in Marlboro.  Both
    sides have good conditions for a Rookery.  Didn't stop to find
    out if there is one.  

    justme....jacqui

654.18Egyptian Vulture etc...BEORN::16.184.3.94::BOWMANWed May 21 1997 06:4515
Re. 654.11

Mike,

Just to add to it, last weekend I saw Great Reed Warbler and Egyptian Vulture. 
The GRWs have become very rare in this area so that was a pleasure. While I was 
watching them some youths gave a shout. I looked up and my first thought was oh 
its a White Stork, but it didn't have the neck and legs. It was a migrating 
adult Egyptian Vulture in a group of Honey Buzzards. This is only about the 
12th EV sighting ever for Switzerland so we were pretty pleased. Yet another 
raptor that has become very rare indeed in continental Europe with just a few 
couples in the south of France and the extreme toe of Italy and Sicily. 
Nevertheless they bred in this area 100 years ago.

Mike
654.19Keep some of them for me!BEORN::16.184.3.94::BOWMANWed May 21 1997 06:5012
RE. 654.13

Hold back some of the birds in Mt Auburn until I come! I shall be visiting New 
England from 26 May though 5 June....

I guess I better stop off there on the way into 3M from Logan on Monday!

Mt AUburn is certainly a wonderful birding spot and as you say the visitors 
with binoculars completely outnumber the others... Its the only cemetary in 
which I have seen a bird day list at the entry...

Mike
654.20Ontario, CanadaTROOA::TEMPLETONUnhappy gardenerWed May 21 1997 12:0125
    Unusual for such a built up area but,
    
    There was a commotion in the back yard last night and when I looked out
    there was a very large flock of gold finches, more than I have ever
    seen in one place at the same time, while I was watching them a pair of
    mallards drifted in and landed on our neighbors swimming pool, it still
    has the winter tarp on and there is about is about six inches of
    rainwater on it, they hung around for about a half hour, until our
    neighbors daughter got too close while taking pictures, I think they
    might have spent the night there as it was very windy and they were in
    a nice sheltered spot.
    This morning I was watching white crowned sparrows when an oriole
    landed on the hummingbird feeder and started to drink, suddenly
    the hummingbird shot out from a bush and started to dive bomb it, after
    a few minutes the oriole left and the hummingbird took over, fiesty
    little things arent they. 
    I was very reluctant to leave for work this morning, my back yard is
    turning unto a very intersting place.
    And on the way to work we saw the two swans that had wintered over, in
    the classic wedding card pose, their bodies almost touching, necks
    arched, beak to beak, we did stop for a minute they looked so lovely.
    I am going to have to start taking a camera every where I go.
    
    
    joan                                
654.21Also in SpainBROUGH::DAVIESHype is a 4 letter word !Tue May 27 1997 10:489
Re .18

Egyptian Vultures are VERY common in Andalucia, Spain. A few years ago
I saw about 100 in the air at the same time at one place in the mountains
aboyt 60km NW of Malaga. 

Regards,
	Stephen Davies

654.22Isle of shoals, NH USASALEM::PERRY_WTue May 27 1997 12:0023
    
    Trip to Appledore Island off the coast of NH on Sat 24 May.
    
    Blue Gray Gnatcatcher
    Northern Waterthrush
    Common Yellowthroat Warbler   -many-
    Yellow rumped Warbler
    Common Eider   -nesting on rocks-
    Red bellied Woodpecker   -Doesn't have a red belly??-
    Black and white Warbler
    Kingbird
    Song Sparrow
    Greater yellowlegs
    Black crown night Herron
    Glossy Ibis
    Snowy Egret
    Nashville warbler  
    Philadelphia Vireo
    ovenbird
    Pine siskin
    Ruby crown kinglet
                            and more!
                                                bill
654.233-day weekend birding in Mass (USA)ASDG::BECHTLERTue May 27 1997 14:4573
    Good birding weekend...a 3 day weekend here in the US.  It rained
    Sunday but otherwise weather was great.  I joined a Brookline Bird Club
    trip to Newburyport on Saturday; also birded locally on Friday after
    work and Monday morning, plus made a quick stop at Mt. Auburn cemetery
    on Monday afternoon.  
    
    Total for weekend:  88 species, including 16 warblers, 5 flycatchers,
    and 7 shorebirds; 3 life birds.  Missed a few good ones, too.
    
    Saturday was the best day, with a warbler parade at Oak Hill cemetery
    (on Newburyport/Newbury town line) in the morning and a nice day at
    Plum Island in the late morning/early afternoon...69 species for the
    day.  Sunday it rained lightly; I didn't bird but heard that it was a
    good day nonetheless.  Sunday night was very clear, consequently Monday
    seemed a little light -- many birds probably flew out.  Monday
    afternoon was pretty quiet at Mt. Auburn, due to time of day, warmth of
    temperature, and fewer birds around to begin with.  I didn't do enough
    sleuth work, however, as I read in the MASSBIRD e-mail digest this
    morning that a Mourning warbler was there at that time, if I had only
    looked in the right place.  Oh, well, they should be around for another
    week or two.
    
    Warblers for weekend:
      	Ovenbird
    	Canada
    	Chestnut-sided
    	Magnolia
    	Blackburnian
    	Common yellowthroat
    	Bay-breasted
    	American redstart 
    	Cape May
    	Yellow
    	Black-throated blue
    	Black-throated green
    	Northern parula
    	Tennessee (life bird for me)
    	Yellow-rumped
    	Black and white
    
    Flycatchers:
    	Eastern phoebe
    	Eastern wood-pewee
    	Least (at Mt. Auburn)
    	Willow (at Bolton Flats)
    	Olive-sided (life bird, at Plum Island)
    
    Shorebirds:
    	Willet
    	Least sandpiper
    	Lesser yellowlegs
    	Greater yellowlegs (thx to BBC experts for ID help!)
    	Black-bellied plover
    	Killdeer
    	Spotted sandpiper
    
    Herons and egrets:
    	Green heron
    	Black-crowned night heron
    	Great blue heron
    	Great egret
    	Snowy egret
    
    Other "good" birds:
    	Rose-breasted grosbeak (one of my favorite birds)
    	Indigo bunting (cooperative singing male)
        Scarlet tanager (seeing more than usual this year)
        Bank/barn/tree swallows, plus Purple martins
        Purple finch
        Savannah sparrow
    
    Rest of list filled out with the usual common species. 
    
654.24Addendum to .23ASDG::BECHTLERTue May 27 1997 14:5516
    Oops, I forgot one of my life birds!  A beautiful female Wilson's
    phalarope at Plum Island.  
    
    It really helped being on the BBC trip...between their CB radios and
    the fact that the leaders knew many of the other birders that we saw
    out there, word of good birds was easily spread.  I would have missed
    the phalarope on my own.  
    
    Many of the BBC (Brookline Bird Club) members are retired and can bird
    intensively.  One of the men on the trip has 253 birds in Massachusetts
    already for 1997!  I was impressed, considering that the yearly highs
    for individuals are usually about 315, and the yearly total for ALL
    sightings on BBC trips was 368 for 1996.  I only have about half his
    total...but then, I wasn't very energetically birding during the
    winter.  
    
654.25Scarlet Tanager, Male and Female.NETCAD::CREEGANTue May 27 1997 17:408
    Male and Female Scarlet Tanager
    in Poland, Maine as they make their
    migration from South America to South 
    Cananda.  A red-velvet bird with black
    wings whose mate is greenish-yellow.
    I've read they only have a window of
    three-four weeks of coming through 
    the area.  Wish I hear him sing.
654.26Hollis, NHIMBETR::NEUVONENThu May 29 1997 17:146
    At Overlook CC in Hollis, NH:
    
    Male and female Rufous-sided Towhee
    Male Rose Breasted Grosbeak
    
    Still looking for the bluebirds...
654.27Danube Delta, RumaniaBROUGH::DAVIESHype is a 4 letter word !Fri May 30 1997 08:1329
I have just come back form a work assignment in Rumania. As I worked over a
weekend, I took two days off before I came back. I went with someone from
the local Digital office to the Danube Delta. 

The delta is a World Biosphere site. It is a really amazing place. It is partly
in the Ukraine but most is in Rumania. It also extends south down the coast
towards the port of Constanza. This bit is a more conventional wetland area.

Here is a list of some of then birds that were seen.

Hooded Crow		Raven			Rook
Starling		Tree Sparrow		Sand Martin
Swallow			House Martin		Kestrel
Avocet			Grey Heron		Squacco Heron
Night Heron		Great White Eagret	?? Ibis {forgot which one}
Cormorant		Mallard			Great Crested Grebe
Mute Swan		Pochard			Egyptian Goose
Shellduck		Bee Eater		Kingfisher
White Pelican		Willow Warbler		Grashopper Warbler
Pied Wagtail		Crested Lark		Skylark

The Bee Eaters were a first for me. They are beautiful birds.
I got some real close up photos of some Cormorant Fledgelings (2ft away)

Regards,
	Stephen Davies



654.28Plymouth, Mass. area (USA)ASDG::BECHTLERMon Jun 02 1997 16:3429
    One more BBC (Brookline [Mass., USA] Bird Club) trip this weekend --
    resulting in several more life birds (as well as one life
    tick...yuck...fortunately it was a dog tick and not a deer tick).
    
    This was a marathon trip, in part because the leader was going for a
    new personal record for the month of May in Massachusetts; by the end
    of the day he thought it was around 215.  An impressive total for one
    month, but of course May is THE month to bird in Massachusetts.
    
    We hit Myles Standish State Forest at dawn and again at dusk; in
    between was a visit to the Plymouth Beach tern colony, the Plymouth
    airport, and the access road to the nuclear power plant.  
    
    Best birds:  Willow and Alder flycatchers
    		 Least, Common, Roseate and Arctic terns
    		 Piping plover, plus Black-bellied plover and 
    			Semipalmated sandpiper
    		 A late and out of place Blue-winged Teal
    		 Grasshopper and Vesper sparrows
    		 Whip-poor-will flying close by at dusk
    		 Prairie, Pine and Blackpoll warblers
    
    Most of these birds are breeders by now; not too many migrants seen.
    
    A great day...
    
    Laurie