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Updated on Thursday, September 2 at 09:36 AM ET
The most recently received Mail is at the top.


Sickle-billed Vanga,©Tony Disley

2 Sep Hillenbrand FWA Greene Co September 1 [Lee Sterrenburg ]
2 Sep Whip-poor-will ["Terri B. Greene" ]
2 Sep Goose Pond - Western Sandpiper [Kirk Roth ]
2 Sep 34 Common Nighthawk [Ray Troyer ]
1 Sep Beehunter, Goose Pond ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
1 Sep Goose Pond FWA waterfowl survey August 31 2010 [Lee Sterrenburg ]
1 Sep Wed. AM bird walk [Dan Stoltzfus ]
1 Sep black-throated blue warbler [Vince Gresham ]
1 Sep Franke Park [Jerry Brown ]
31 Aug new photos [Jeff Moore ]
31 Aug Madison Co. Buff-breasted Sanpiper and McCool Basin [John Kendall ]
31 Aug Montgomery Eurasian-Collared Doves [Amy Kearns ]
31 Aug Franke Park []
31 Aug Goose Pond FWA Plegadis ibis August 31 [Lee Sterrenburg ]
31 Aug Little quakers [Bill Poindexter ]
31 Aug Fairfax area ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
30 Aug Swifts and Nighthawks [John Harley ]
30 Aug Fwd: Photos ["Kenneth J. Brock" ]
30 Aug Nighthawks [Sara Brink ]
30 Aug Goose Pond FWA Buff-breasted Sandpipers continue [Mike Clarke ]
30 Aug Lake Monroe ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
30 Aug New IOS Photo Quiz (no sightings) [Robert Hughes ]
29 Aug Warrick county birding trip. [Vicky Whitaker ]
29 Aug The Kearns Buff-breasted Sandpipers at Beehunter 5S 8-29-10 []
29 Aug Celery Bog [Russell Allison ]
29 Aug 6 Buff-Breasted Sandpipers, Sanderling - Goose Pond FWA [Amy Kearns ]
29 Aug Eagle Creek Park, Sunday August 29, 2010 [John Ulmer ]
29 Aug Eastern Screech Owls & Mississippi Kite [Vicky Whitaker ]
29 Aug Limberlost Swamp [John Harley ]
29 Aug Least Terns [Mel Lodato ]
29 Aug Willow Slough FWA [Jed Hertz ]
29 Aug Limberlost shorebirds []
29 Aug Fairfax - Buff-br. Sandpiper ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
29 Aug Heaton Lake Sandhills [Trice Berkley ]
29 Aug Fwd: [IN-BIRD-L] GPFWA Buff-breasted Sandpiper [Lee Sterrenburg ]
29 Aug GPFWA Buff-breasted Sandpiper [Lee Sterrenburg ]
28 Aug Lk. Lemon - 8/28 and prior [Jim Hengeveld ]
28 Aug Stillwater, North Fork ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
28 Aug Pigeon R. & MI: Least Bittern, R-n Phal []
28 Aug NW Ind 28Aug10 Red Knot, Buff-br Sand., Ruby-crn Kinglet ["Kenneth J. Brock" ]
28 Aug Willow Slough FWA 8/27/10 [Jed Hertz ]
28 Aug Wakarusa shorebirds and swallows [Dan Stoltzfus ]
28 Aug Prophetstown SP , 8/28/10 ["Dunning, John B" ]
28 Aug lost sun glasses [Lee Sterrenburg ]
27 Aug N.W.Indiana - 8/27, Avocet, Knot, Turnstones [Michael Topp ]
27 Aug Lake Monroe ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
27 Aug Fox Island []
27 Aug Pine Creek Gamebird Habitat Area , 8/27/10 ["Dunning, John B" ]
26 Aug Beehunter Marsh Unit BH5S August 25 afternoon [Lee Sterrenburg ]
26 Aug migrant warblers Morgan Co [Doug & Cheri Johnstone ]
26 Aug Chain O' Lakes State Park []
26 Aug Blackpoll Warbler [Jerry Brown ]
26 Aug IOS Photo Quiz (no sightings) [Robert Hughes ]
26 Aug Summer Bird Counts [Amy Kearns ]
26 Aug SW Allen Thrushes- Aug 26 AM ["Rodger P. Rang" ]
25 Aug Beehunter, Goose Pond ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
25 Aug FW: eBird Report - Falls of the Ohio (IN) , 8/25/10 [Ed Peter ]
25 Aug Beehunter Marsh Baird's Sandpipers [Lee Sterrenburg ]
25 Aug Goose Pond FWA Waterfowl Survey Aug 24 1010 [Lee Sterrenburg ]
25 Aug Lakefront 25 Aug '10 ["Kenneth J. Brock" ]
25 Aug Dunes Area, 8/25/10 [Brad Bumgardner ]
25 Aug Eagle Marsh ducks, shorebirds []
25 Aug Eagle Creek Tuesday Aug. 24th 2010 [Spike Selig ]
25 Aug Lake Monroe shorebirds, RUGR, OSFL [Mike Clarke ]
24 Aug Eagle Marsh, Ft Wayne []
24 Aug Fairfax area ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
24 Aug Goose Pond FWA/Beehunter Marsh [Eric Ripma ]
24 Aug Limberlost shorebirds []
24 Aug eBird Report - Marian College Ecolab , 8/24/10 [G L Chastain ]
24 Aug Case of the missing godwits ["Kenneth J. Brock" ]
23 Aug L. Shaum's photos [Dan Stoltzfus ]
23 Aug Flatwoods Park Henslow's and Dickcissels [Cathy Meyer ]
23 Aug yellow-throated vireo [Vince Gresham ]
23 Aug The IBA south of Waterford [Dan Stoltzfus ]
23 Aug Eagle Creek count Sunday Aug 22, 1010 [Spike Selig ]
23 Aug No Subject [Bill Poindexter ]

Subject: Hillenbrand FWA Greene Co September 1
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Thu, 2 Sep 2010 10:35:53 -0400
Yesterday evening (September 1 2010) I visited the grassland portion of 
Hillenbrand FWA in far western Greene County (the western edge of the property 
is on the Sullivan County line). 


I was there 6:50-8:55 PM.  Sunset was 8:21 PM.

The primary purpose of the trip to was to check out some recent prescribed burn 
areas in the grasslands. It was mainly a habitat tour. Conditions were very dry 
with drought continuing in western Greene County. Walking out the grasslands 
and along roads through them produced basically no lingering obligate grassland 
bird species. 


If there were any bird highlights, I guess it would be 3 BARRED OWLS 
vocalizing. 


Weather: a WSW front moved through just before I arrived, bringing wind, a few 
sprinkles, and thunder rumbling off to the north and south. Then the wind 
calmed down and by sunset water on the lakes was almost classy calm. 


Location:     Hillenbrand FWA
Observation date:     9/1/10
Notes:     Grassland habitat inspection at Hillenbrand FWA
Number of species:     17

duck sp unident 3 flew over at twilight, only seen going away, either Mallard 
or Wood Duck 

Green Heron     1     called at Moss Lake
Greater Yellowlegs     1     called at Moss Lake
Mourning Dove     5
Barred Owl 3 vocalizing at three widely separate locales, the first at 7:57 PM 
over 20 minutes before sunset 

Hairy Woodpecker     1
American Crow     6
Carolina Wren     1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     1
Gray Catbird     4
European Starling     385
Cedar Waxwing     5     fly-catching over Moss Lake
Tennessee Warbler     1
Eastern Towhee     6
Blue Grosbeak     1   a male singing along a roadside
Indigo Bunting     4
Common Grackle     2
American Goldfinch 21 at seeding plants in the grasslands, virtually the only 
species out in the grasslands 


This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 








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**********************************************************
Subject: Whip-poor-will
From: "Terri B. Greene" <tgreene AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Thu, 2 Sep 2010 09:20:04 -0400
I heard a Whip-poor-will this morning south of my house.

1	Whip-poor-will

Terri Greene
SW Monroe Co

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**********************************************************
Subject: Goose Pond - Western Sandpiper
From: Kirk Roth <kirkleeroth AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Thu, 2 Sep 2010 09:16:41 -0400
Yesterday evening (Sep 1) from around 6-6:30 I had a single Western
Sandpiper at Goose Pond in the mudflats north of Tern Island.  It appeared
to be a 1st summer bird - fairly grayish, but still with brown
intrusions.  It and a couple of Least Sandpipers were the only peeps
there.  A front passed through last night, but if it is still there this
individual had a pretty pronounced droop to the bill, was mostly grayish,
and the small head/hunchback feeding posture seemed very noticeable.

Also, the Black Terns that Don Whitehead reported were at this same location
during the entire time I was there.  I saw no signs of the ibis he reported.

I also checked out BH5S.  The five Buff-breasted Sandpipers were there.  I
recommend slowly scanning, with a scope, the far edge of the mudflat,
where sparse weeds grow.  Look for movement.  The Baird's Sandpipers
were also there, closer on the mudflat.  I had at least six.  In addition to
the birds that Don mentioned, I also had a single Wilson's Snipe.

-Kirk

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**********************************************************
Subject: 34 Common Nighthawk
From: Ray Troyer <raytroyer AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Thu, 2 Sep 2010 03:34:03 +0000
At 6:15 PM there were 34 Common Nighthawk in 2 groups around the area where CR 
26 overpasses CR17 in Elkhart County. 


Ray Troyer 

Goshen, Elkhart Co 

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**********************************************************
Subject: Beehunter, Goose Pond
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2010 21:20:18 -0400
This morning Bob Dodd, Bob Kissel, Jim Mitchell, Dan Weber (from Terre 
Haute), and I birded Beehunter and various sites in Goose Pond. A very 
nice morning - great views of some nice birds. The highlights:

100S from 67 to Beehunter:
     Red-tailed Hawk - 2
     E. Wood-pewee - 1
     E. Kingbird - 1

Beehunter 4/5:
     Canada Goose - 22
     Wood Duck - 6
     Mallard - 2
     Blue-winged Teal - 25
     No. Shoveler - 6
     Red-tailed Hawk - 1
     Great Blue Heron - 14
     Great Egret - 28
     Green Heron - 1
     Semipalmated Plover - 4
     Killdeer - 29
     Spotted Sandpiper - 1
     Greater Yellowlegs - 3
     Semipalmated Sandpiper - 2
     Least Sandpiper - 12
     BAIRD'S SANDPIPER - 4
     BUFF-BR. SANDPIPER - 5
     Ruby-thr. Hummingbird - 3
     White-eyed Vireo - 1
     Bell's Vireo - 2
     Sedge Wren - 6

MPE - from 59:
     Double-cr. Cormorant - 137
     Am. Bittern - 1
     Great Blue Heron - 38
     Great Egret - 45
     Black-cr. Night-heron - 2
     Bald Eagle - 1 (juv)
     Red-tailed Hawk - 3
     Sora - 2
     Semipalmated Plover - 1
     Killdeer - 6
     Bell's Vireo - 2
     Bobolink - 2

Sites along 59 - mostly MPW:
     Killdeer - 16
     Black-necked Stilt - 24
     Lesser Yellowlegs - 3
     Least Sandpiper - 12
     Pectoral Sandpiper - 6
     Swallows - 3000 - 95% Tree Swallows, 150 Bank Swallows, 2 Rough-wings

1200 - Looking N over MPW:
     Canada Goose - 46
     Wood Duck - 12
     Mallard - 8
     Blue-winged Teal - 28
     Green-winged Teal - 3
     Double-cr. Cormorant - 35
     Am. Bittern - 1
     Great Blue Heron - 65
     Great Egret - 115
     Little Blue Heron - 4
     Cattle Egret - 5 (on 500)
     Turkey Vulture - 5
     Red-tailed Hawk - 1
     Am. Kestrel - 1
     PLEGADIS IBIS - 1 (flew from N - landed in cattails 200 yds N of Tern
          Island - at 10:32)
     BLACK TERN - 7
     Killdeer - 18
     Black-necked Stilt - 9
     Lesser Yellowlegs - 6
     Henslow's Sparrow - 3
     Indigo Bunting - 4
     Bobolink - 1

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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**********************************************************
Subject: Goose Pond FWA waterfowl survey August 31 2010
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2010 16:37:51 -0400
Yesterday (August 31 2010) I conducted the weekly DNR waterfowl survey at Goose 
Pond FWA in Greene County. Property Manager Brad Feaster had a conflict and 
could not participate. In his place, Matt Bredeweg and Dennis Workman of the 
DNR did the driving for Main Pool West. They also checked a few Units on their 
own. 


Waterfowl results included 402 CANADA GEESE (100 by Matt and Dennis), 489 WOOD 
DUCKS, 404 MALLARDS (50 by Matt and Dennis), 741 BLUE-WINGED TEAL, 37 NORTHERN 
SHOVELERS, and 10 GREEN-WINGED TEAL. 


The robust count on Blue-winged Teal was especially gratifying, given the 
relatively early date in fall. Brock's Birds of Indiana lists the peak date for 
Blue-winged Teal for the southern tier in fall as September 20. Goose Pond FWA 
may actually peak earlier than that. Even if there are more BWTE later, the 
start of early Teal hunting season on Saturday September 4 will likely make the 
big groups of BWTE spookier and harder to find and tally. 


Abundant results aside from waterfowl featured 5 AMERICAN WHITE PELI CANS, 268 
DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS, 5 AMERICAN BITTERNS, 6 LEAST BITTERNS, 389 GREAT 
BLUE HERONS, 801 GREAT EGRETS, 6 LITTLE BLUE HERONS, 5 CATTLE EGRETS, 24 
BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERONS including 10 nestlings, 1 PLEGADIS IBIS sp, 3 
AMERICAN GOLDEN-PLOVERS, 29 BLACK-NECKED STILTS, and 9 BAIRD'S SANDPIPERS, a 
new property high count for the species. Land birds included 9 BELL'S VIREOS 
(all still singing) and 33 BOBOLINKS. 


The property was crawling with birds, most notably or obviously the over 800 
showy Great Egrets. That spectacle alone is worth the drive. 


Time: 6:40 AM to 8:55 PM, with a couple of breaks to compile data, eat lunch, 
and get out of the hot sun. 


Weather: yet another hot day. Afternoon nigh temperature 91 F at the Weather 
Underground Station at Casey's in Linton. Wind calm early and at sunset, 
afternoon SW 6-7 mph occasionally gusting to 10-12 mph. Skies clear early, 
partly cloudy late afternoon, clearing again toward sunset. Very dry and 
drought conditions prevail on the ground. Several wetland Units are drying out 
rapidly. 



Location:     Goose Pond FWA Unit GP11
Observation date:     8/31/10
Notes: Starting Unit for the weekly DNR waterfowl survey, a watch from the 
GP11S parking lot, 6:40-7:10 AM 


Wood Duck     128
American Bittern 5 all flying before sunrise, 3 commuted off to other units, 2 
circled up but landed back in the GP11N cattails 

Least Bittern     3    GP11S, 1 flying and at least 2 more dong kak calls 
Green Heron     9     morning flight
Black-crowned Night-Heron     1     heard only, GP11S along Black Creek
Common Nighthawk     1
American Crow     4

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)



Location:     Goose Pond FWA Main Pool West
Observation date:     8/31/10
Notes: The weekly waterfowl count with Matt Bredeweg and Dennis Workman of the 
DNR driving and assisting, 7:20-9:45 AM. Included a tour of the east levee. 
Later walking north solo from the Least Tern island for shorebirds in the far 
south end, 3:05-4:15 PM. No ducks counted as new on this second excursion. 


Canada Goose     276   almost all flying out in westerly directions, early AM
Wood Duck     339
Mallard     348
Blue-winged Teal 616 clouds of them, particularly south of the Double Ditches 
peninsula 

Northern Shoveler     18     resting and foraging together
Green-winged Teal     6
Pied-billed Grebe     3
American White Pelican     X     counted in the evening in MPE
Double-crested Cormorant     X     ditto, counted in the evening in MPE
Least Bittern     3     all 3 doing kak calls
Great Blue Heron     173     doubtless a significant under count
Green Heron     3
Black-crowned Night-Heron 5 2 adults & 3 juveniles. See note later below on one 
adult carrying nesting material. 

PLEGADIS sp. 1 a Plegadis ibis sp seen flying with ducks, not observed on the 
ground or with a scope 

Northern Harrier     1     dark juvenile
Sora 4 2 heard along the east levee, 2 heard walking north of the Least Tern 
island 

American Golden-Plover     3     seen from the east levee
Killdeer     X    did not count
Black-necked Stilt 28 included 23 together east of the cattails along SR 59. 
Most of these BNSTs would likely not have been visible from the west side of 
MPW or from SR 59 

Solitary Sandpiper     2
Greater Yellowlegs     6
Lesser Yellowlegs     75     included a flock of 39 dropping in before sunset
Semipalmated Sandpiper     5
Least Sandpiper     13
Pectoral Sandpiper     56
Mourning Dove     10
Belted Kingfisher     1
Eastern Kingbird     3
Bell's Vireo     9     all along the east levee, and all 9 still singing
American Crow     12
Sedge Wren     1
Gray Catbird     3
Common Yellowthroat     2
Field Sparrow     4
Grasshopper Sparrow     1
Song Sparrow     4
Indigo Bunting     3
Dickcissel     2
Bobolink 33 in two groups. Despite what ebird warning flags say this is NOT an 
unusual or exceptional count for GPFWA at the end of August. GPFWA is a major 
fall staging area for Bobolink in Indiana. 

Eastern Meadowlark     3

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

Note: Great Egrets, Double-crested Cormorants, etc were tallied at the evening 
roost in MPE and were not counted in the morning. We did do Great Blue Herons 
in the morning. 



Location:     Goose Pond FWA Beehunter Marsh BH5S
Observation date:     8/31/10
Notes: Beehunter Mash Unit BH5S, walking out the splitter levee. I went looking 
for Buff-breasted Sandpipers but did not find them. The compensation was a new 
property high for Baird's Sandpiper. Time 5:35-6:50 PM. 


Wood Duck     6
Mallard     2
Blue-winged Teal     18
Great Blue Heron     9
Northern Harrier    1  adult male
Semipalmated Plover     3
Killdeer     53        high count on one sweep
Greater Yellowlegs     1
Lesser Yellowlegs     1
Semipalmated Sandpiper     4
Least Sandpiper     20
Baird's Sandpiper 9 juveniles, all in view at the same time, number confirmed 
on 3 different sweeps. 

Wilson's Snipe     1

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

(Note: we did not visit Beehunter Marsh for the waterfowl survey in the AM. I 
went there in the early evening to look for shorebirds.) 




Location:     Goose Pond FWA Main Pool East
Observation date:     8/31/10
Notes: Driving by with Matt and Dennis in the morning; later viewing from a 
distance in the evening to see the Great Egret roost, 7:15-8:55 PM. Doing the 
evening roost is about the only way to get somewhat comprehensive numbers on 
the Great Egrets. All waterfowl numbers are morning only: 


Canada Goose     17
Wood Duck     13
Blue-winged Teal     37
Northern Shoveler 19 different group from the Shovelers across Hamilton Ditch 
in MPW 

Green-winged Teal     4
American White Pelican     5     number in view at the same time, evening visit
Double-crested Cormorant 268 count on one scope sweep at the evening roost. 
These were the only DCCOs included in the day tally. 

Great Blue Heron 189 all counted on one scope sweep from the former pump 
station and gate locale at the far south end 

Great Egret 801 doubtless an undercount. Good numbers were continuing on south 
beyond the usual roost, and some of those were missed. Ending at 8:04 PM I 
counted 620 already on the roost. The rest were tallied as they arrived in 
groups through after sunset. Over 100 arrived after sunset. 

Little Blue Heron 6 evening count at the egret and heron roost. 1 present and 5 
more arrived in a group 

Cattle Egret     5     number at the roost when we passed by in the morning
Black-crowned Night-Heron 18 8 adults, and 10 nestlings in 3 nests. See notes 
below. 

Solitary Sandpiper     1    calling in the evening

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)


BCNH notes: One adult Black-crowned Night-Heron carrying nesting material while 
flying over the Double Ditches peninsula at MPW in the morning made for a 
surprising sight on the last day of August. At the BCNH nesting colony in Main 
Pool East the first wave of nests has now been followed up by three more (and 
different) pairs nesting successfully, with nestlings currently occupying those 
nests. But starting to build new nest at the end of August? Maybe two 
Night-Herons are building a time share condo for fall and early winter! 


The three more recent BCNH nests at the MPE colony had a total of 10 nestlings 
yesterday. The earlier set of nests produced at least 19 nestlings in view at 
one time. This means that some 29 nestlings have been observed at the MPE 
Black-crowned Night-Heron breeding colony so far this summer and early fall. If 
anything, a total of 29 would be an under count, with many birds often the way 
blocking views of the nests. Anyway, lots of young Black-crowned Night-Herons 
this year. 



A few other results from some other Units here and there:

GPFWA UNIT GP12, 1:00-1:18 PM:
Blue-winged Teal 51
Turkey Vulture 2
Black-necked Stilt 1
Least Sandpiper 11

(I went to BH12 on tip from Matt and Dennis, who found the BWTE flock there.)

GPFWA UNIT GP10:
Canada Goose 100   conservative estimate by Matt and Dennis
Red-shouldered Hawk 1     juvenile soaring over the Unit at 1:22 PM, by LS

GPFWA UNIT GP8, by Matt and Dennis only:
Mallard 50

GPFWA UNIT GP9:
Blue Grosbeak 1

GPFWA BEEHUNTER MARSH UNIT BH2, evening after visiting BH5S, 7:02-7:05 PM. BH2 
is drying out rapidly. 

Mallard 4
Great Blue Heron 9

GPFWA UNIT GP13:
Wood Duck 3

(no shorebirds found except for Killdeer)


Swallow note. While doing the traveling waterfowl count I did not try to count 
or sort out Swallows. There were several 1000s, comprised mostly of Bank, Tree, 
and Barn Swallows when I checked occasionally in cursory fashion. I likewise 
did not work on the large Blackbird flocks in Main Pool West in the evening 
while counting Great Egrets. 


I also dropped from the overall reported counts good numbers of ducks and geese 
seen here and there. 


Note to visitors to Goose Pond FWA. Early Canada Goose hunting season began 
today, September 1, as did Mourning Dove season. Be on the lookout for hunters 
before entering Units. 



Lee Sterrenburg, Bloomington & Matt Bredeweg and Dennis Workman, Goose Pond FWA






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**********************************************************
Subject: Wed. AM bird walk
From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2010 13:14:29 EDT
Location:     Shanklin Park
Observation  date:     9/1/10
Notes:     75 deg. sunny,  moderate wind.
Dan Stoltzfus,Larry ford, Janeen Bertsche Johnson, Mary  Martin, Elaine 
Harley, Mim Weaver, Don Beyerler, Liz Jacobs, Melissa Kinsey.  
Number of species:     36

Mute Swan      33
Mallard     95
Pied-billed Grebe      1
Double-crested Cormorant     1
Great Blue Heron   2
Cooper's Hawk     1
Red-tailed Hawk   1
American Kestrel     1
Solitary  Sandpiper     2
Mourning Dove     13
Great  Horned Owl     1
Common Nighthawk      1
Chimney Swift     5
Ruby-throated Hummingbird   3
Red-headed Woodpecker     1
Red-bellied  Woodpecker     4
Downy Woodpecker      2
Northern Flicker     1
Eastern Wood-Pewee   6
Eastern Phoebe     1
Warbling Vireo   4
Blue Jay     3
American Crow   4
Northern Rough-winged Swallow     200
Barn  Swallow     6
Black-capped Chickadee      2
White-breasted Nuthatch     1
House Wren   1
American Robin     14
Gray Catbird   5
European Starling     10
Cedar Waxwing   4
Song Sparrow     1
Northern Cardinal   6
House Finch     5
American Goldfinch   5

This report was generated automatically by eBird  v2(http://ebird.org)
Dan Stoltzfus
Elkhart County

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Subject: black-throated blue warbler
From: Vince Gresham <dempsey618 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2010 12:36:26 -0400
One of my better warbler pics.
Taken behind the nature center.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/rum_village/4948855726/

Vince

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Subject: Franke Park
From: Jerry Brown <jwbrown8628 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2010 11:10:19 -0400
I arrived at day break in order to beat the heat, and found a few good birds 
near the north entrance and a small flock along the north creek trail. A slow 
moving cold front tonight and tomorrow should bring some improvement. 

 
Red-eyed Vireo 1
Carolina Wren 1
Magnolia Warbler 3
Chestnut-sided Warbler 3
Black-throated Green Warbler 1
WILSON'S WARBLER 1
A. Redstart 1
Baltimore Oriole 1
 
Has any one else noticed the abundance of butterflys, especially Buckeyes this 
fall? 

Jerry Brown, Fort Wayne 		 	   		  
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Subject: new photos
From: Jeff Moore <merlin46783 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 23:21:54 -0400
I have been shooting the bluebirds nesting near our house. See how many 
different kinds of food you can identify :-) The young should fledge around 
this coming weekend. They have done well to tolerate all of the construction 
activity. 


Jeff Moore 
Roanoke, IN

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffmoore/
 		 	   		  
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Subject: Madison Co. Buff-breasted Sanpiper and McCool Basin
From: John Kendall <jeffro595 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 20:38:14 -0400
I birded a stormwater retention basin inside the Nestle facility along I-69 
near 

Anderson while working today.  This pond normally holds a few ducks, waders 
and geese, once in a while a few shorebirds.  The dry August has left a 5 acre 
area of both wet and dry mudflat.  The buffie caught my eye along the road 
inside and I obtained permission to set up a scope.

Killdeer-34
Semipalmated Plover-1
Gr. Yellowlegs-3
L. Yellowlegs-5
Spotted Sandpiper-juv-1
Baird's Sandpiper-1 juv.
Semipalmated Sandpiper-9
Least Sandpiper-12
Stilt Sandpiper-7
BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER-1 juv.
Pectoral Sandpiper-14

I also stopped by McCool Basin at 7 pm, which is drying up fast, with rain 
coming tonight:
Killdeer-25
Semi plover-1
Stilt Sandpiper-1 juv.
Semipalmated Sandpiper-3 2 juv's.
Least Sandpiper-8 mostly juv's.
L. Yellowlegs-2
Solitary Sandpiper-1 juv.

John Kendall
Valparaiso

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Subject: Montgomery Eurasian-Collared Doves
From: Amy Kearns <greenpertplus AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 12:48:42 -0400
Yesterday while passing through the town of Montgomery in Daviess county, 
John Castrale and I noted 10 Eurasian Collared-Doves.  The doves were in the 
residential areas in town as well as around the town's feed mill.  At the feed 
mill, 2 doves in a group of 4 were juveniles.  I can't find any record of EUCD 
being reported in this town before.  There are no ebird reports for that 
location and we don't have any atlas records for EUCD in Montgomery.

We also checked several former Loggerhead Shrike territories in Daviess, but 
did not locate any shrikes.

Amy Kearns
John Castrale
Mitchell

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Subject: Franke Park
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 11:51:52 EDT
Looking for something short on a hot Tuesday, Sandy Schacht and I birded  
Ft. Wayne's Franke Park for two hours this morning.  Nothing  spectacular, 
but we actually did better than I thought we would.  There  were two small 
flocks, one at the creek trail entrance on the west side of the  BMX track 
clearing and one along the creek in the northwest corner of the  park.  
Neotropicals were:
 
Warbling Vireo 1
Red-eyed Vireo 3
Warbler:
    Tennessee 1
    Chestnut-sided 1
    Magnolia 1
    Black-throated Green 1
    Blackburnian 1
    Black and White 1
    Am. Redstart 2
    Canada 1
 
Jim Haw

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Subject: Goose Pond FWA Plegadis ibis August 31
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 11:29:06 -0400
A partial and preliminary report. This morning (August 31 2010) I did the 
weekly DNR waterfowl count at Goose Pond FWA in Greene County. Dennis Workman 
and Matt Bredeweg of the DNR assisted me on the east levee of Main Pool West. 


We observed 1 PLEGADIS IBIS sp flying along with the many ducks in Main Pool 
West. 


The morning total so far on BLUE-WINGED TEAL is 712. (50 of them by Dennis and 
Matt in Unit GP8) That is not a bad tally for Blue-winged Teal in the southern 
tier in August. 


A total of 5 AMERICAN BITTERNS flew out of GP11N in the early morning.   

The east side of Main Pool West had 3 AMERICAN GOLDEN-PLOVERS on the emergent 
mud flats. 


More later, after the day's tally is over.

--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 

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Subject: Little quakers
From: Bill Poindexter <bpoindex AT CINERGYMETRO.NET>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 10:09:21 -0500
While walking along the Ohio River in Madison this morning I saw a mother
duck with at least five youngsters swimming along the riverbank.  Mallards?
I was on the street that goes along the river.  I didn't have my binoculars
and they were in line with the sun.  Isn't it late in the season for ducks
to be having newborns?

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Subject: Fairfax area
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 11:00:16 -0400
I ventured to Fairfax this morning - a little too late as folks were 
walking dogs on the peninsula - however, a nice morning. the highlights:

     Canada Goose - 44
     Mallard - 17
     Great Blue Heron - 3
     Black Vulture - 23
     Turkey Vulture - 37
     Osprey - 2
     Killdeer - 3
     Ring-billed Gull - 124
     Caspian Tern - 1
     Forster's Tern - 1
     E. Screech-owl - 1
     Red-eyed Vireo - 5
     Barn Swallow - 12
     Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 2
     E. Bluebird - 6

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: Swifts and Nighthawks
From: John Harley <ekjwh68 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 21:02:10 -0400
Several evenings in the last week or so Elaine and I have spent time sitting on 
our dock on the Goshen Dam pond. Tonight we were treated to a Great Blue Heron 
perching above our heads for a short time, a Great Egret (last week we had 2 
Great Egrets), a Pied-billed Grebe, over 30 Mute Swans, Wood Ducks, Cedar 
Waxwings, Rough-winged Swallows, Canada Geese, Chimney Swifts and Nighthawks. 
At about 8:30 the evening sky seemed to fill with Chimney Swifts and there were 
6 Common Nighthawks in the air at one time. One of them dipped down into the 
water for a drink. Earlier in the evening Elaine opened the front door and 
stopped, because there were 3 (possibly a 4th) baby Carolina Wrens right 
outside the door. It is always amazing to see the bird life around us. 


John and Elaine Harley, ekjwh68 AT hotmail.com, Goshen, IN


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Fwd: Photos
From: "Kenneth J. Brock" <kj.brock AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 19:40:45 -0500
John Cassady is having computer problems and asked me to post the  
following.
Ken Brock
Chesterton


Begin forwarded message:

> From: John & Wendy Cassady 
> Date: August 30, 2010 7:29:59 PM CDT
> To: "Kenneth J. Brock" 
> Subject: Photos
>
> Ken,
> We are unable to post to IN-Bird (account problem)......will you  
> post this for me?
> John
>
> Here are some recent shorebird shots fom the Lakefront:
>
> WILLET  http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/willA.htm
>
> BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER  http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/bbsa.htm
>
> BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER (in flight) 
http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/bbsaFLY.htm 

>
> STILT SANDPIPER (in flight) http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/stsaFLY.htm
>
> LEAST SANDPIPER (in flight) http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/lesaFLY.htm
>
> John Cassady
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Kenneth J. Brock" 
> To: "John Cassady" 
> Sent: Sunday, August 29, 2010 2:28:25 PM
> Subject: Coordinates of Soras
>
> John-
> Latitude and Longitude of the Beverly Shores Soras are at the bottom
> of the attached
> map.
> Ken
>
>
> [image/jpeg:Sora hot spot.jpg]


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Subject: Nighthawks
From: Sara Brink <sarajazzgirl2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 20:13:55 -0400
While watering our trees, we were lucky enough to glance up and see a 
Common Nighthawk flying directly above our heads! Within seconds, another 
one flew in the opposite direction of the first. Although the lighting wasnt 
great, the white stripe was completely visible. What a beauty!!

Russ and Sara Brink

Canaan, IN

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Subject: Goose Pond FWA Buff-breasted Sandpipers continue
From: Mike Clarke <redeyegravy AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 14:45:45 -0400
This morning I visited Beehunter Marsh and Goose Pond to look for
shorebirds.  The first stop was Beehunter 5S
where it seemed as though I wasn't going to find any of the Buff-breasted
Sandpipers reported by Amy and Noah Kearns and
Michael Brown.  After twenty five minutes enjoying the small flock of peeps
and a couple of Baird's Sandpipers from the splitter
levy, a group of *8 Buff-breasted Sandpipers* flew in together into the
northwest quadrant of BH5S.  They foraged together on the dry and sparsely-
grassed mud before splitting into a group of 3 and a group of 5.  All were
still there when I left the unit at around 8:45.

I also checked GP10 and Main Pool West from the tern island before heading
back to Bloomington.  A total of 13 shorebird species for the property.
There was a Sanderling, a Stilt Sandpiper and an American Golden Plover in
Main Pool West.  Lots of Sora and Sedge Wrens on the property as well
as many thousands of swallows.

Highlights for the morning:

Beehunter 5:

Northern Bobwhite     1
Sora     6 (4 responding to clapping east of farmhouse drive and 2 foraging
on flats in BH5S)
Semipalmated Plover     3
Killdeer     X
Spotted Sandpiper     2
Greater Yellowlegs     3
Lesser Yellowlegs     1
Semipalmated Sandpiper     11
Least Sandpiper     14
Baird's Sandpiper     2
Pectoral Sandpiper     1
Buff-breasted Sandpiper     8
Bell's Vireo     2
Sedge Wren     4 (along farmhouse drive)

Goose Pond 10N:

Cooper's Hawk     1
Sora     2
Semipalmated Plover     1
Killdeer     X
Spotted Sandpiper     1
Lesser Yellowlegs     2
Sanderling     1
Semipalmated Sandpiper     4
Least Sandpiper     6
Pectoral Sandpiper     22

Main Pool West (from tern island):


Double-crested Cormorant     X
Great Egret     X
Little Blue Heron     1
Sora     2
American Golden-Plover     1
Killdeer     X
Lesser Yellowlegs     5
Semipalmated Sandpiper     12
Least Sandpiper     33
Baird's Sandpiper     1
Pectoral Sandpiper     56
Stilt Sandpiper     1
Northern Rough-winged Swallow     X
Tree Swallow     X
Bank Swallow     X
Barn Swallow     X
Cliff Swallow     X
Sedge Wren     1
Vesper Sparrow     1
Henslow's Sparrow     1
Dickcissel     2
Bobolink     8

Mike Clarke
Bloomington

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Subject: Lake Monroe
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 13:56:42 -0400
This morning I made quick stops at both Paynetown and Cutright on Lake 
Monroe - a nice "wavelet" at Cutright (responding to iPod). The 
highlights:

Paynetown:
     Great Blue Heron - 6
     OSPREY - 1
     Turkey Vulture - 29
     Ring-billed Gull - 5
     Killdeer - 6
     Red-eyed Vireo - 3

Cutright:
    Canada Goose - 8
    Mallard - 3
    Great Blue Heron - 3
    Black Vulture - 1
    Turkey Vulture - 19
    Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 2
    E. Screech-owl - 1
    Ruby-thr. Hummingbird - 1
    OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER - 2
    E. Wood-pewee - 2
    White-eyed Vireo - 1
    Warbling Vireo - 2
    Red-eyed Vireo - 3
    Barn Swallow - 45
    Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 8
    Gray Catbird - 2
    Tenn. Warbler - 1
    No. Parula - 3
    Magnolia Warbler - 1
    Black-and-white Warbler - 1
    Am. Redstart - 2
    Hooded Warbler - 1

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: New IOS Photo Quiz (no sightings)
From: Robert Hughes <rhughes.enteract AT RCN.COM>
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 09:58:12 -0500
The Early Fall 2010 IOS Photo Quiz is now up. An answer will be given 
in mid October.

http://www.illinoisbirds.org/photo_quiz.html

Robert D. Hughes
Chicago, Illinois 

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Subject: Warrick county birding trip.
From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 22:50:47 -0400
8-29-10
 I forgot to thank the Evansville Audubon Society for sponsoring the field 
trip, 

sorry. 
Vicky Whitaker
Oakland City

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Subject: The Kearns Buff-breasted Sandpipers at Beehunter 5S 8-29-10
From: MikePytlak AT AOL.COM
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 22:41:33 EDT
8-29-10  10:30 pm
   Late this afternoon, I saw the note from Amy and Noah  Kearns on INBIRD 
by Lee Sterrenburg and went after the Buff-breasted Sandpipers  at Beehunter 
5S in Greene County, Indiana today.  I was there from about  6:30pm until 
7:30pm.   There were (6) Buff-breasted Sandpipers at  Beehunter 5S tonight.  
They were in two groups, one group of four and  another group of 2 and 
stayed that way the entire time I was there. They were still there when I left. 

  The Baird's Sandpipers were also still  there.    I also saw two immature 
Black-crowned Night Herons fly  up from the ditch west of the parking area.
 
Buff-breasted photos from BH5S and Egret roost photo from  GP MPE taken 
from GP5S at:
 
_http://www.flickr.com/photos/67383370 AT N00/?saved=1_ 
(http://www.flickr.com/photos/67383370 AT N00/?saved=1) 
 
 
Thanks Amy and Noah for chance to get hoosier Buff-breasted photos!
 
Michael Brown
Terre Haute
_MikePytlak AT aol.com_ (mailto:MikePytlak AT aol.com) 

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Subject: Celery Bog
From: Russell Allison <grounds11 AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 20:15:37 -0400
I made a day of birding the Celery Bog. 8:30am to 6:00pm. The Osprey was
present the entire day. I was hoping to get a Photo of him diving into the
water after a fish but missed tat. He did catch another large Goldfish at
5:30pm. I saw my first Warblers of the Fall. 

 

Birds seen:

 

Wood Duck-50+

Mallard 300+

Black Duck-1

Canada Goose-30+

Pied billed Grebe-1-I haven't seen many this year.

Great blue Heron-27

Green Heron-5

Killdeer-9

Double crested Cormorant-7-They flew in about 5:30pm.

Cooper's Hawk-1-At one Time I had (1) Cooper's,(2) Crows, and (1) Osprey in
the same tree at once. There was an debate about whose tree it was. 

Red tailed Hawk-1

Osprey-1

Turkey Vulture-1

American Crow-3

Northern Cardinal-3-

Carolina Chickadee-5

American Goldfinch-7

Ruby throated Hummingbird-3

Blue Jay-2

Belted Kingfisher-1

American Redstart-2

American Robin-10

European Starling-25

Tufted Titmouse-4

Tennessee Warbler-1

Cedar Waxwing-12

Mourning Dove-15-May have been chased by the Cooper's Hawk a few times. They
flew by in a panic a few times.

Barn Swallow-5

Tree Swallow-4

Chimney Swift-9

Northern Flicker-4

White breasted Nuthatch-4

Downey Woodpecker-5

Red bellied Woodpecker 4

Red headed Woodpecker-9-4 adult and 5 immature

Solitary Sandpiper-5

 

Good birding

Russ Allison, West Lafayette

 

http://ww.flickr.com/photos/russ_allison

 

be sure to put the underscore between russ and allison


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Subject: 6 Buff-Breasted Sandpipers, Sanderling - Goose Pond FWA
From: Amy Kearns <greenpertplus AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 19:40:58 -0400
Noah and I went to Beehunter/Goose Pond FWA this morning to look for Baird's 
Sandpipers.  We found our Baird's, plus a bonus SANDERLING (MPW) and 6 
BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPERS (BH5S, GP13).  We had extensive and fantastic 
looks at the Buff-Breasted Sandpipers in BH5S. They were lifers for us - it was 

very exciting.  I took some documentation photos which I hope to have in my 
flickr if not not by tonight then in the next couple days:  
http://www.flickr.com/photos/37627358 AT N07/
The most I could get in one photograph was 2 birds.  I hope a proper 
photographer will be able to get out to Beehunter soon and get some better 
photos!  All 5 of the birds were still there when we left.

Bloomfield gas station ~6:40 AM
1 Common Nighthawk - flyover

Beehunter 5S  7-9:20 AM
x Canada Goose 
10 Wood Duck 
8 Blue-winged Teal 
1 Double-crested Cormorant - flyover
15 Great Blue Heron 
1 juv Night-Heron - flushed from the ditch by the parking lot, this is the 
second 

time recently I've had night-herons in this ditch
2 Bald Eagle - imm, 2nd and 3rd year
2 Northern Harrier - 1 male, 1 fem/juv
15 Semipalmated Plover 
50 Killdeer 
2 Greater Yellowlegs 
4 Lesser Yellowlegs 
3 Semipalmated Sandpiper 
20 Least Sandpiper 
4 BAIRD'S SANDPIPER - juvs in view at one time 
10 Pectoral Sandpiper 
5 BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER - all 5 juvs in view at one time in the back of 
BH5S. Seen from the levee. Excellent looks in perfect light from as close as 30 

feet.  Foraging actively on the dry mudflats, flying occasionally but always 
returning. Weak dry flight call. Yellow legs, completely buffy breast with 
plain 

buffy face and short black bill, scaled pattern on the back and and wings.  In 
flight showed white underneath the wings and plain upperparts.  Photographed 
for documentation.  
4 Rock Pigeon 
10 Mourning Dove 
1 White-eyed Vireo - feeding young  - late!
1 Bell's Vireo 
1 Purple Martin 
20 Tree Swallow 
100 Bank Swallow - didn't pay much attention to swallows; most were Bank
5 Barn Swallow 
3 Cliff Swallow 
1 Gray Catbird 
1 Brown Thrasher 
25 Cedar Waxwing 
5 Song Sparrow 
2 Indigo Bunting 
300 Red-winged Blackbird 
1 American Goldfinch 


GP13  10-10:15 AM
1 Pied-billed Grebe 
10 Killdeer 
1 BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER - Towards the back of the unit, foraging on dry 
mudflats.  We originally saw it from the parking lot on 1400W, and then hiked 
the levee to get a better look and documentation photographs.  After hiking 
back out from GP10N, we rechecked GP13 from the back levee on 100S and 
did not refind the bird (although we didn't try very hard).
1 Warbling Vireo 


GP10N  10:15-11:45 AM  90 degrees, sunny and HOT.  Lots of heat distortion, 
less than 100 shorebirds, most of them distant.  We were there primarily to 
look for the Red-necked Phalarope, which we did not find.
Canada Goose 60
Blue-winged Teal 10
Green-winged Teal 3
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Double-crested Cormorant 6
Great Blue Heron X
Great Egret 15
Green Heron 1
Red-shouldered Hawk 1 - imm put up shorebirds
Semipalmated Plover X
Killdeer X
Spotted Sandpiper X
Greater Yellowlegs X
Lesser Yellowlegs X
Semipalmated Sandpiper X
Least Sandpiper X
Pectoral Sandpiper X
Dowitcher spp (heat distortion, extreme distance) 1
Mourning Dove X
Chimney Swift 1
Warbling Vireo 2
American Crow X
Bank Swallow X
Carolina Wren 2
House Wren 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 1
Common Yellowthroat 2
Field Sparrow 3
Song Sparrow X


Main Pool West  12-1:20 PM from bridge on 1200W until we bit the bullet and 
walked down to the Tern Island for a better look
x Canada Goose 
x Wood Duck 
x Mallard 
80 Blue-winged Teal 
1 Northern Shoveler - at least, we did not spend time on ducks
2 Green-winged Teal 
1 Pied-billed Grebe 
x Double-crested Cormorant 
x Great Blue Heron 
100 Great Egret - at least
3 SNOWY EGRET
1 LITTLE BLUE HERON - imm
1 Green Heron 
1 Turkey Vulture 
1 Semipalmated Plover 
x Killdeer 
1 Black-necked Stilt 
x Spotted Sandpiper 
1 Solitary Sandpiper 
3 Greater Yellowlegs 
3 Lesser Yellowlegs 
1 SANDERLING - juv 100 feet from the Tern Island, seen from the road.  A big 
white chunky shorebird nearly as big as the Pectoral next to it and much larger 

than both the Least and Semipalmated Sandpipers foraging near it.  Black legs 
and bill. Foraged actively and chased the small peeps around it. Photographed 

(very poor digiscope for documentation).  Was still near the Tern Island when 
we left.
4 Semipalmated Sandpiper 
8 Least Sandpiper 
x Pectoral Sandpiper 
x Mourning Dove 
2 Horned Lark 
x Tree Swallow 
x Bank Swallow 
x Barn Swallow 
3 Sedge Wren - singing
1 Northern Mockingbird 
1 Blue Grosbeak - singing
4 Bobolink - west side of the road
1 Eastern Meadowlark - in the thigh-level grass on the Tern Island


Cow pasture on 500S:
5 Cattle Egret - with the cows.  At least 4 still had some orange plumes


Amy & Noah Kearns
Mitchell

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Subject: Eagle Creek Park, Sunday August 29, 2010
From: John Ulmer <remlu AT TDS.NET>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 16:22:23 -0400
The Sunday Bird Group tallied 14 species of warblers for a total of 79 
species altogether. The list included --
Double Crested Cormorant
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Green Heron
Turkey Vulture
Canada Goose
Wood Duck
Mallard
Osprey
Bald Eagle
Coopers Hawk
Broad-winged Hawk
Red-tailed Hawk
Sora
Killdeer
Ring-billed Gull
Rock Dove
Mourning Dove
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
Common Nighthawk
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Belted Kingfisher
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Downy Woodpecker
Pileated Woodpecker
Eastern Wood Pewee
Acadian Flycatcher
Least Flycatcher
Eastern Phoebe
Great Crested Flycatcher
White-eyed Vireo
Yellow-throated Vireo
Warbling Vireo
Philadelphia Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Purple Martin
Tree Swallow
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Barn Swallow
Carolina Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
White-breasted Nuthatch
Carolina Wren
Winter Wren
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Swainson's Thrush
American Robin
Gray Catbird
Brown Thrasher
European Starling
Cedar Waxwing
Blue-winged Warbler
Tennessee Warbler
Northern Parula Warbler
Chestnut-sided Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Black-throated Blue Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Yellow-throated Warbler
Bay-breasted Warbler
Black and White Warbler
American Redstart
Ovenbird
Kentucky Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Summer Tanager
Scarlet Tanager
Eastern Towhee
Chipping Sparrow
Field Sparrow
Song Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Common Grackle
Baltimore Oriole
House Finch
American Goldfinch
House Sparrow
Bird walks begin at 9am at the Ornithology Center, all are welcome.
-- 
John Ulmer

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Subject: Eastern Screech Owls & Mississippi Kite
From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 13:46:25 -0400
8-26-10
Went fishing on White River, on a sandbar. I didn't catch anything, but bug 
bites. But I had a great time, visiting with great friends and seeing lots of 
Killdeer along the shore, and some other small shorebirds. When the sun went 
down the real show started, at least for me it did. We started hearing Screech 
Owls singing, and they sing very pretty I might add. There were at least four 
of them. It only lasted a few minutes and then they were quit for an hour or 
so. Then a couple of them started trilling, music to a birders ear. I heard a 
couple of great Blue Herons, a Barred Owl sang a few bars, and last but not 
least the coyotees as I pronounce it, started singing. Some were accross the 
river from us and some were behind us. very cool. We were all blessed with 
the best kind of music you could ever hear.
8-28-10
I was invited to go with a group of birders, that were going to Warrick county, 

looking for Mississippi Kites and lots of other wonderful birds. I think there 
were 15 of us, being led by Jim Campbell and his Wife Mary Jo. We went to 
Scales lake first to look for the Kites. We saw one fly over the camp ground 
with food in his or her mouth. Then drove up the road a ways and we saw 13 
Wild Turkeys foraging. Went a little further and got out to go on a small hike. 

We saw a Yellow-Billed Cuckoo fly over, lots of Rough-winged swalllows, a 
Pied-Billed Grebe, a Great-Blue Heron fly over. A little Prothonatary escorted 
us part of the way. We saw lots of birds and some we were not able to see 
long enough to ID. We saw Carolina Chickadees, Tufted Titmice, Cedar 
Waxwing, Downys, Blue Jays, heard a Pileated. We drove down another road 
that looked out over the lake and saw Baltomore Orioles, Eastern Kingbirds, 
Song sparrow, a Belted Kingfisher, we heard a Warbling Vireo. We saw a Brown 
Thrasher, lots of Robins. We drove out of the park and started towards 
BlueGrass. Somewhere between the two we stopped and heard Bell's Vireo and 
American Goldfinches. We had a great time, and lots of good fellowship. It's 
always nice talking to people who have the same interests. We then dropped 
off most of the birders, and the few diehards(6) of us me included, got a quick 

bite to eat and then went to Newburgh to go to the French Island Loop. We 
saw and heard an Eastern Wood Pewee, and saw two Red-Headed 
Woodpeckers. That was our day. I know I probably missed few birds, I always 
do. Thanks to LD and Brian for driving, and thanks again to the Campbells.
I got to add two lifers, the Kite and the Bell's Vireo.
 Sorry so long I just had alot to say this time around.
Vicky Whitaker
Oakland city

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Subject: Limberlost Swamp
From: John Harley <ekjwh68 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 13:28:23 -0400
Late yesterday afternoon/early evening Elaine and I visited Loblolly and 
Limberlost areas that Jim Haw has been reporting on. Things were pretty dry and 
we have little to add to what Jim Haw saw. We counted 31 Great Blue Herons and 
saw a solitary American Avocet at Limberlost. The Avocet spent a fair amount of 
time with little more than its head showing above some of the vegetation, but 
at times it moved out into clear view and we could see its upturned bill and 
watch it sweep its bill back and forth in the water. 


John and Elaine Harley, ekjwh68 AT hotmail.com, Goshen, IN


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Least Terns
From: Mel Lodato <jclodato AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 13:18:07 -0400
On Saturday the 28th of August Wesselman Woods Canoe Evansville took a 
canoe trip down the Wabash River from the town of New Harmony to New 
Harmony State Park. On the sand bars were between 6 - 8 Least Terns. 2 of the 
Terns were immature. One was being fed by an adult. Also of note were about 
100 kildeer, 10 least sandpipers, 1 lesser yellowlegs, 1 Osprey, 15 Turkey 
vultures and12 Great Blue Herons.

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Subject: Willow Slough FWA
From: Jed Hertz <jhh_60910 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 09:39:53 -0700
Hi all,
Sunday 29-Aug-10: Willow Slough FWA, Newton Co, IN: 0540-0950H (1 W + 1 
D)_Sun_70-90_SE 5_B. Ratcliff_E Chipmunk_Sunrise 0620H. 

Bronson Ratcliff and I found the following 83 species at the HQ this morning:
Anatidae 3 

  ¨ ¨ 12 Canada Goose ¨ 

  ¨ ¨ 12 Wood Duck ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 9 Mallard ¨   

Melagrididae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Wild Turkey ¨   

Ardeidae 3 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Great Blue Heron ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 17 Great Egret ¨ 0550H ->N 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Green Heron ¨   

Cathartidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Turkey Vulture ¨   

Accipitridae 3 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Osprey ¨ ad 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Bald Eagle ¨ ad at 0555H 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Cooper's Hawk ¨   

Gruidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 7 Sandhill Crane ¨   

Charadriidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Semipalmated Plover ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 14 Killdeer ¨   

Scolopacidae 9 (Mostly at a distance)

  ¨ ¨ 4 Greater Yellowlegs ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 3 Lesser Yellowlegs ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Solitary Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Spotted Sandpiper ¨ imm 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Semipalmated Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Least Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Stilt Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Short-billed Dowitcher ¨ Prob; at distance 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Wilson's Snipe ¨   

Columbidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 7 Mourning Dove ¨   

Coccyzidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Yellow-billed Cuckoo ¨   

Strigidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Eastern Screech-Owl ¨ Soft trilling 

Caprimulgidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Common Nighthawk ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Whip-poor-will ¨  Partial calls.

Apodidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Chimney Swift ¨   

Trochilidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 7 Ruby-throated Hummingbird ¨   

Cerylidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Belted Kingfisher ¨   

Picidae 6 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Red-headed Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 3 Red-bellied Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 3 Downy Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Hairy Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 4 Northern Flicker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Pileated Woodpecker ¨   

Tyrannidae 5 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Olive-sided Flycatcher ¨ FOS and 25 days later then my earliest. 

  ¨ ¨ 9 Eastern Wood-Pewee ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Eastern Phoebe ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Great Crested Flycatcher ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 10 Eastern Kingbird ¨   

Vireonidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 1 White-eyed Vireo ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Yellow-throated Vireo ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 6 Warbling Vireo ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 6 Red-eyed Vireo ¨   

Corvidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Blue Jay ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 7 American Crow ¨   

Hirundinidae 3 

  ¨ ¨ 5 Purple Martin ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 34 Tree Swallow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 4 Barn Swallow ¨   

Paridae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Tufted Titmouse ¨   

Sittidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 4 White-breasted Nuthatch ¨   

Sylviidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher ¨   

Turdidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Eastern Bluebird ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Veery ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Swainson's Thrush ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 12 American Robin ¨   

Mimidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 12 Gray Catbird ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Brown Thrasher ¨   

Sturnidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 200 European Starling ¨ % Blackbird Flock 0605H ->S 

Bombycillidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 84 Cedar Waxwing ¨   

Parulidae 10 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Tennessee Warbler ¨ 1st year female (1YF)

  ¨ ¨ 1 Northern Parula ¨ 1YF 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Yellow Warbler ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Yellow-rumped Warbler ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Black-throated Green Warbler ¨ 1YF; FOS and 6 days later then my 
earliest. 



  ¨ ¨ 1 Blackburnian Warbler ¨ F 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Blackpoll Warbler ¨ 1YF 

  ¨ ¨ 3 American Redstart ¨ FT 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Ovenbird ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Wilson's Warbler ¨   

Thraupidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Scarlet Tanager ¨ F 

Emberizidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Eastern Towhee ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 6 Chipping Sparrow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Field Sparrow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Song Sparrow ¨   

Cardinalidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 5 Rose-breasted Grosbeak ¨   

Icteridae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 2,000 Red-winged Blackbird ¨ % Blackbird Flock 0605H ->S 

  ¨ ¨ 200 Common Grackle ¨ % Blackbird Flock 0605H ->S 

  ¨ ¨ 100 Brown-headed Cowbird ¨ % Blackbird Flock 0605H ->S 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Baltimore Oriole ¨   

Fringillidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 7 American Goldfinch ¨   
Jed Hertz

Kankakee, Kankakee Co, IL (60 mi South of Chicago)

 

Photos/Videos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jhertz/



Give "ebird" a try: http://ebird.org/content/ebird

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Subject: Limberlost shorebirds
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 12:00:32 EDT
Nine species of shorebirds remained at Limberlost Swamp Wetland Preserve,  
Adams Co., on Sunday morning.  The wetland is drying up rapidly.  I  suspect 
that it will be completely dry in a few days unless we get substantial  
rain.  Still, it has been great while the water lasted, and is  certainly a 
very worthwhile project.  It should get even better; there are  plans to 
install a wooden water-control structure.
 
Mallard
Great Blue Heron 25
Semipalmated Plover 1
Killdeer 27
Greater Yellowlegs 2
Lesser Yellowlegs 43
Semipalmated Sandpiper 26
Least Sandpiper 11
BAIRD'S SANDPIPER 3
Pectoral Sandpiper 16
STILT SANDPIPER 3
Mourning Dove
Barn Swallow
Horned Lark 4
Bobolink 3
 
Jim Haw  

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Subject: Fairfax - Buff-br. Sandpiper
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 10:19:32 -0400
This morning Betsy and I visited Fairfax on Lake Monroe - only one 
shorebird on the beach, but it was a beautiful immature BUFF-BREASTED 
SANDPIPER! The morning's highlights:

     Canada Goose - 14
     Mallard - 19
     Black Vulture - 10
     Turkey Vulture - 16
     Great Blue Heron - 4
     Killdeer - 7 (near new launch ramp)
     BUFF-BR. SANDPIPER - 1 (immature - striking plumage - nice scaly back)
     Ring- billed Gull - 93
     Caspian Tern - 2
     E. Screech-owl - 1
     E. Wood-pewee - 1
     E. Kingbird - 1
     Red-eyed Vireo - 2
     Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 2
     Gray Catbird - 3

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: Heaton Lake Sandhills
From: Trice Berkley <Cellistharpsichordist AT YAHOO.CA>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 09:14:58 -0400
I went out to CR 4 just east of CR 13 and found 3 Sandhill Cranes  about 30'
from the road on the North side next to a corn-patch.  2 adults and a
juvenile, so apparently they nested successfully in the Heaton/Simonton-Lake
marshy area.

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Subject: Fwd: [IN-BIRD-L] GPFWA Buff-breasted Sandpiper
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 08:51:44 -0400
Amy Kearns just called again with an update on the report below. She says that 
they are now looking at 4 BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPERS in view at the same time. 
Amy notes that the sandpipers are not visible from the parking lot on CR 100 S 
and that in order to see them one has to walk out the splitter levee that 
separates Units BH5S and BH5N. 


--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 


Begin forwarded message:

> From: Lee Sterrenburg 
> Date: 29 August 2010 07:45:17 EDT
> To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
> Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] GPFWA Buff-breasted Sandpiper
> Reply-To: Lee Sterrenburg 
> 
> Sunday August 29 2010
> 
> Amy Kearns just called. She and Noah found 1 juvenile BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER 
in Goose Pond FWA Beehunter Marsh Unit BH5S. 

> 
> --Lee Sterrenburg
> Bloomington 
> 
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Subject: GPFWA Buff-breasted Sandpiper
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 2010 07:45:17 -0400
Sunday August 29 2010

Amy Kearns just called. She and Noah found 1 juvenile BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER 
in Goose Pond FWA Beehunter Marsh Unit BH5S. 


--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 

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Subject: Lk. Lemon - 8/28 and prior
From: Jim Hengeveld <jhengeve AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 22:50:25 -0400
Today (8/28) at the east end of Lk. Lemon were the following:

  -52 Turkey Vultures
  -1 Osprey
  -1 Sharp-shinned Hawk
  -1 L. Yellowlegs
  -1 Forster's Tern
  -1 E. Phoebe
  -1 E. Wood-Pewee
  -1 Warbling Vireo
  -1 Red-e. Vireo
  - 3 Tree Swallows
  -15 Purple Martins
  -20 Bank Swallows
  -5 Cliff Swallows
  -250 Barn Swallows
  -1 Yellow-throated Warbler

Yesterday (8/27):

  -9 Blue-w. Teal
  -1 Pied-b. Grebe - our FOS
  -1 Pectoral Sandpiper
  -1 Ring-b. Gull
  -1 Forster's Tern
  -2 Black Terns
  -2 E. Wood-Pewees,
  -2 E. Kingbirds
  -3 Red-e. Vireos
  -1 PHILADELPHIA VIREO
  -4 Blue-gr. Gnatcatchers
  -11 Cedar Waxwings
  -1 Yellow-thr. Warbler
  -1 WILSON'S WARBLER


8/26:
  -18 BW Teal
  -2 No. Shovelers
  -1 Cooper's Hawk harassing the hundreds of roosting starlings &  
redwings
  -1 Common Nighthawk - our FOS
  -2 E. Kingbirds

8/25:  1 Osprey & 4 Forster's Terns

8/23:  500+ swallows including a few Trees, 100+ Purple Martins, 75+  
Banks, ~10 Cliffs, a few No. Rough-wingeds, and ~300 Barns

8/22:
  -4 Green Herons
  -1 E. Wood-Pewee
  -2 Red-e. Vireos
  -1 No. Parula
  -2 Scarlet Tanagers - two very interesting birds, both of which had  
thin but distinct wingbars (one with a single wingbar, the other with  
2; both were in basic plumage - at least one was a 1st-cycle male &  
they might both have been.  Both lacked the strong contrast between  
the upper back and the lower back/rump that is characteristic of  
Western Tanager.

8/16 - 8/21:

   -2 Green Herons (8/17 - 8/21)
   -1 Osprey (8/17, 8/19)
   -1 MERLIN (8/21) - early ad. male harassing the swallows flying  
over the lotus
   -1 Semipalmated Plover (8/17 - 8/20)
   -1 Killdeer (8/18 - 8/20)
   -1 Lesser Yellowlegs (8/16)
   -1 Solitary Sandpiper (8/21)
   -1 Spotted Sandpiper (8/16 - 8/20)
   -2 Least Sandpipers (8/16 - 8/19)
   -1 Pectoral Sandpiper (8/20)
   -2 Black Terns (8/17, 819, 8/21)
   -1 YELLOW-BELLIED FLYCATCHER (8/19) - the second ever from our yard
   -1 Waterthrush sp. (8/19)


********************
Jim & Susan Hengeveld
East Lake Lemon Observatory
Southshore Drive
Unionville, IN  47468

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Subject: Stillwater, North Fork
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 22:12:28 -0400
This morning Betsy and I drove down McGowan Rd to North Fork - lovely, 
cool morning - not very birdy. The highlights:

     Wood Duck - 10
     Wild Turkey - 2
     Great Blue Heron - 11
     Great Egret - 2
     Green Heron - 2
     Bald Eagle - 1 (adult)
     Cooper's Hawk - 2 (imm)
     Killdeer - 3
     Solitary Sandpiper - 2
     Warbling Vireo - 2
     Red-eyed Vireo - 4
     Cedar Waxwing - 14

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: Pigeon R. & MI: Least Bittern, R-n Phal
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 19:21:19 EDT
Sandy Schacht and I recorded 71 species in Indiana and 6 more in Michigan  
on a visit to Pigeon River FWA and vicinity plus the Kinderhook MI sewage  
ponds.  Highlight at Pigeon River was a LEAST BITTERN that flew across the  
road at area D marsh.  My previous latest record for NE IN was Aug.  4.  The 
species is surely present regularly into late August or later; we  just 
don't find it.  Highlight in Michigan was three juv. RED-NECKED  PHALAROPES at 
the Kinderhook sewage ponds, along the west side of the  impoundment north of 
the area office.
 
Indiana birds, at Pigeon R. unless otherwise noted:
Canada Goose pond on SR 120, Steuben Co.
Mute Swan
Wood Duck
Mallard SR 120 pond
LEAST BITTERN 1
Great Blue Heron
Turkey Vulture
Osprey 3
Red-shouldered Hawk 2
Red-tailed Hawk
Am. Kestrel
Common Moorhen 4 juv.
Sandhill Crane 17
Killdeer Fawn R. Fish Hatchery
Least Sandpiper 2 SR 120 pond
Wilson's Snipe 1 Griffin Rd. pond, Allen Co.
Ring-billed Gull Fawn R.
Rock Pigeon
Mourning Dove
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 1
Chimney Swift 1
Ruby-thr. Hummingbird 2
Belted Kingfisher 1
Woodpecker:  Red-headed 1, Red-bellied, Downy, N. Flicker, Pileated  1
E. Wood Pewee 11
E. Phoebe 1
Great Crested Flycatcher 1
E. Kingbird 4
Vireo:  White-eyed 1, Yellow-throated 4, Warbling 3, Red-eyed 9
Blue Jay
Am. Crow
Purple Martin 6
Tree Swallow 4
Barn Swallow
Black-capped Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
White-br. Nuthatch
Wren:  House 1, Marsh 2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 3
E. Bluebird
Am. Robin
Gray Catbird
Eur. Starling
Cedar Waxwing
Warbler:
    Blue-winged 3
    Tennessee 4
    Nashville 3
    Magnolia 2
    Black-throated Green 2
    Black and White 2
    Am. Redstart 1
    Common Yellowthroat 5
    Hooded 1
E. Towhee
Sparrow:  Field, Song, Swamp
N. Cardinal
Indigo Bunting 2
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Baltimore Oriole 1
Am. Goldfinch
House Sparrow
 
Kinderhook MI notables:
Blue-winged Teal 6
Greater Yellowlegs 2
Lesser Yellowlegs 5
Semipalmated Sandpiper 1
Least Sandpiper 5
Pectoral Sandpiper 1
RED-NECKED PHALAROPE 3
 
Jim Haw
 

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Subject: NW Ind 28Aug10 Red Knot, Buff-br Sand., Ruby-crn Kinglet
From: "Kenneth J. Brock" <kj.Brock AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 18:05:29 -0500
Today (28 August ’10) Susan Bagby, John Cassady, Ed Hopkins, Randy  
Pals, and I birded the lakefront plus several inland sites.

We began at the traps and enjoyed a fine warbler flock at the Hammond  
Sanctuary, but little else.  So we adjourned to Miller Beach where we  
finished the morning.  After lunch we visited Grand Kankakee Marsh,  
157th Ave pond, Jerry Allen March, McCool Basin and finished the day  
at Beverly Shores.  The fall migration is clearly well underway.

HIGHLIGHTS (note- IMF stands for immature male or female)

HAMMOND LAKEFRONT SANCTUARY
Chimney Swift (10)
RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET (1- Indiana’s second earliest fall record and  
second August record).
Brown Thrasher (1)
Cedar Waxwing (20)
Tennessee Warbler (2- ad male & imm)
Magnolia Warbler (2 IMF)
Cape May Warbler (1- 1st-cycle female)
Black-throated Green Warbler (2- one 1st-cycle female & 1 IMF)
Blackburnian Warbler (2- 1st-cycle male & 1st-cycle female)
Bay-breasted Warbler (2- IMF & 1st-cycle female)
Blackpoll Warbler (2)
Black and white Warbler (1- 1st-cycle female)
American Redstart (8- IMF)

FORSYTHE PARK & ADJACENT WOLF LAKE
Double-crested Cormorant (400 est. as many flocks flew northward over  
Wolf Lake)
Magnolia Warbler (1- IMF)

MILLER BEACH (We joined Leland Shaum’s group, plus Michael Topp and  
Jeff McCoy)
Blue-winged Teal (4)
Double-crested Cormorant (20)
Great Blue Heron (4)
Turkey Vulture (3)
Semipalmated Plover (4- 1 adult & 3 not aged)
RED KNOT (1 juv- Jeff got excellent photos)
Least Sandpiper (3 juvs)
Sanderling (21- 1 adult & 20 juvs)
Pectoral Sandpiper (2)
Baird’s Sandpiper (2 juvs)
BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER (1 juv- watch for Cassady photos)
Bonaparte’s Gull (6- 1 adult & 5 juvs)
Caspian Tern (1)
Black Tern (1)
Common Tern (2)
Forster’s Tern (8- in basic plumage)
Chimney Swift (5)
B. Kingfisher (1)
Cliff Swallow (1)
Blackburnian Warbler (1 ad male-*see below note)
Field Sparrow (2 singing)
*IT’S A JUNGLE OUT THERE: Prior to our arrival sharp-eyed members of  
Leland’s group detected a small southbound passerine far out on the  
lake.  They monitored the obviously exhausted bird as it approached  
the beach, noting it land on the water for several brief rests.  As it  
got closer they identified the bird as an adult male Blackburnian  
Warbler and began rooting for it to successfully reach shore.  They  
also alerted Jeff who was initially unable to get on the bird.  The  
tired warbler, which had been fighting a stiff headwind all night as  
it crossed Lake Michigan, struggled mightily to reach the beach, but  
once again landed only 50 feet from the sandy beach.  Jeff finally  
located the floating bird just in time to see an opportunist Ring- 
billed Gull swoop down pick up the hapless warbler and swallow it whole.

GRAND KANKAKEE MARSH (water mostly gone, only two small pools remain)
Blue-winged Teal (1)
Green-winged Teal (4)
T. Vulture (4)
Semipalmated Plover (1 juv)
Semipalmated Sandpiper (2 juvs)
Least Sandpiper (14- an adult & 13 juvs)
House Wren (2)

We visited 157th Ave wetland and Jerry Allen; both still had high  
water and no shorebird habitat.

McCOOL BASIN (thanks to an alert by Leland, we visited this site and  
enjoyed several shorebirds that his group found)
Killdeer (28)
Semipalmated Sandpiper (3- including one that displayed a very long  
bill)
Least Sandpiper (10 juvs)
Baird's Sandpiper (2 juvs)
Stilt Sandpiper (1 juv- watch for Cassady pix)

WEST BEVERLY SHORES
Ruby-throated Hummingbird (3)
E. Screech Owl (1 called)
E. Wood-Pewee (7)
E. Phoebe (3)
E. Kingbird (1)
White-eyed Vireo (1 dark-eyed young bird)
Yellow-throated Vireo (2)
Red-eyed Vireo (3)
E. Bluebird (1)
Swainson’s Thrush (2)
Am. Robin (15 apx)
Gray Catbird (2)
Brown Thrasher (1)
Summer Tanager (1 called)
Scarlet Tanager (2- male & female)
Rose-breasted Grosbeak (1 1st-cycle male)
E. Towhee (3- including 1 juv)
Brown-headed Cowbird (1 juv- thanks Susan)
Baltimore Oriole (3- together)

Ken Brock
Chesterton, IN


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Subject: Willow Slough FWA 8/27/10
From: Jed Hertz <jhh_60910 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 16:03:23 -0700
Hi all,
Friday 27-Aug-10: Willow Slough FWA, Newton Co, IN: 0535-1015H (1 W + 1 
D)_Sun_51-76_S 5_Domestic Cat_Sunrise 0618H. 

I spent Friday morning at the Willow Slough FWA HQ where Owls and 
Whip-poor-Will were vocalizing as I arrived, while Nighthawks silently coursed 
high over the water.  Bald Eagle appeared at dawn, perching temporarily, then 
setting forth on the morning hunt.  Small numbers of waterfowl were active 
before dawn and a variety of shorebirds were huddled together feeding together 
along a narrow sand-spit off the closest island.  A flock of 19 Great Egret, 
minus any diminutive relatives, came in low from the south, as they have on 
previous visits, while pairs of Sandhill Crane bugled loudly from across the 
slough.  The dawn Blackbird flock, now building to sizable numbers, erupted 
from their cattail roost departed in waves strewn along the horizon heading 
mostly westward.  Later, one of the Pileated Woodpeckers heard drumming/calling 
earlier, made an appearance along entrance road - always a treat for us prairie 
dwellers.  Warblers are still trickling in 

 and a few Swainson's Thrush made their first fall appearance.  
Here's the run-down on 87 species recorded Friday morning at the HQ:
Anatidae 5 

  ¨ ¨ 8 Canada Goose ¨ 

  ¨ ¨ 23 Wood Duck ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 14 Mallard ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Blue-winged Teal ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 3 Green-winged Teal ¨   

Phasianidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Ring-necked Pheasant ¨   

Melagrididae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Wild Turkey ¨   

Podicipedidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Pied-billed Grebe ¨   

Ardeidae 3 

  ¨ ¨ 8 Great Blue Heron ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 19 Great Egret ¨ 0555H -> N 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Green Heron ¨   

Cathartidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Turkey Vulture ¨   

Accipitridae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Osprey ¨ ad 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Bald Eagle ¨ ad; just after dawn

Gruidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Sandhill Crane ¨  dawn

Charadriidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Semipalmated Plover ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 24 Killdeer ¨   

Scolopacidae 5 

  ¨ ¨ 15 Lesser Yellowlegs ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Spotted Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 5 Semipalmated Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Pectoral Sandpiper ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Stilt Sandpiper ¨   

Columbidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 14 Mourning Dove ¨   

Strigidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Eastern Screech-Owl ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Barred Owl ¨   

Caprimulgidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Common Nighthawk ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Whip-poor-will ¨   

Apodidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Chimney Swift ¨   

Trochilidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Ruby-throated Hummingbird ¨   

Cerylidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Belted Kingfisher ¨   

Picidae 6 

  ¨ ¨ 5 Red-headed Woodpecker ¨ 1 imm 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Red-bellied Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 4 Downy Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Hairy Woodpecker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 6 Northern Flicker ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Pileated Woodpecker ¨ 1 called (sighted) + 1 drumming 

Tyrannidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Eastern Wood-Pewee ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Least Flycatcher ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Eastern Phoebe ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 4 Eastern Kingbird ¨   

Vireonidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 3 White-eyed Vireo ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Yellow-throated Vireo ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 8 Warbling Vireo ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 5 Red-eyed Vireo ¨   

Corvidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 10 Blue Jay ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 6 American Crow ¨   

Hirundinidae 6 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Purple Martin ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 74 Tree Swallow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Northern Rough-winged Swallow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Bank Swallow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Cliff Swallow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 11 Barn Swallow ¨   

Sittidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 5 White-breasted Nuthatch ¨   

Troglodytidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Carolina Wren ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 House Wren ¨   

Sylviidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 5 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher ¨   

Turdidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Eastern Bluebird ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Veery ¨ Sighted 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Swainson's Thrush ¨ FOS and 4 days later then my earliest. 

  ¨ ¨ 22 American Robin ¨   

Mimidae 2 

  ¨ ¨ 14 Gray Catbird ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Brown Thrasher ¨   

Sturnidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 4,000 European Starling ¨ % blackbird dawn flight ->W 

Bombycillidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 94 Cedar Waxwing ¨   

Parulidae 9 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Tennessee Warbler ¨ imm 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Yellow Warbler ¨ Yellow undertail 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Magnolia Warbler ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 Blackburnian Warbler ¨ imm female 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Blackpoll Warbler ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 2 American Redstart ¨ FT 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Common Yellowthroat ¨ F 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Wilson's Warbler ¨ FOS and 5 days later then my earliest. 

  ¨ ¨ 1 Canada Warbler ¨   

Thraupidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Scarlet Tanager ¨ F + 2M (basic) 

Emberizidae 4 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Eastern Towhee ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 14 Chipping Sparrow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Field Sparrow ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 1 Song Sparrow ¨   

Cardinalidae 3 

  ¨ ¨ 6 Northern Cardinal ¨ 1 F 

  ¨ ¨ 3 Rose-breasted Grosbeak ¨   

  ¨ ¨ 3 Indigo Bunting ¨   

Icteridae 5 

  ¨ ¨ 2 Bobolink ¨ FO calling 

  ¨ ¨ 20,000 Red-winged Blackbird ¨ % blackbird dawn flight ->W 

  ¨ ¨ 1,000 Common Grackle ¨ % blackbird dawn flight ->W 

  ¨ ¨ 500 Brown-headed Cowbird ¨ % blackbird dawn flight ->W 

  ¨ ¨ 4 Baltimore Oriole ¨   

Fringillidae 1 

  ¨ ¨ 12 American Goldfinch ¨   
Jed Hertz

Kankakee, Kankakee Co, IL (60 mi South of Chicago)

 

Photos/Videos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jhertz/



Give "ebird" a try: http://ebird.org/content/ebird

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Subject: Wakarusa shorebirds and swallows
From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 18:47:19 EDT
Location:     Wakarusa Wastewater Treatment  Facility
Observation date:     8/28/10
Notes:   Sunny, in sixties.  There was a large midge hatch, which  provided 
food, and brought in many birds. When I opened my car windows a lot of  the 
midges came in but not a mosquito. I hope there will not be aerial spraying 
 of the area. The midges do not bite and they attract the birds. 
Number of  species:     30

Canada Goose     12
Wood  Duck     11
Mallard     25
Blue-winged  Teal     4
Northern Shoveler      14
Red-tailed Hawk     1
American Kestrel   3
Semipalmated Plover     1
Killdeer   45
Spotted Sandpiper     2
Solitary  Sandpiper     2
Lesser Yellowlegs      8
Semipalmated Sandpiper     9
Least Sandpiper   15
Baird's Sandpiper     1
Pectoral  Sandpiper     2
Mourning Dove     35
Chimney  Swift     30
Northern Flicker     1
American  Crow     4
Northern Rough-winged Swallow      20
Tree Swallow     7
Bank Swallow      25
Barn Swallow     80
Cliff Swallow      1
European Starling     12
Cedar Waxwing      35
Song Sparrow     1
American Goldfinch      4
House Sparrow     25

This report was generated  automatically by eBird v2(_http://ebird.org_ 
(http://ebird.org) )
Dan Stoltzfus
Elkhart county

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Subject: Prophetstown SP , 8/28/10
From: "Dunning, John B" <jdunning AT PURDUE.EDU>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 15:56:23 -0400
A good group of several people gathered at Prophetstown State Park this morning 
for a bird walk sponsored by the Sycamore Audubon Society. There weren't any 
migrants to speak of (although one participant had a redstart that disappeared 
for the rest). But we did see 45 species and got soaked walking through the 
restored prairie (big bluestem is really big...). Highlights included 15 
singing SEDGE WRENS, one of which showed itself well, and good looks at other 
specialties of the state park such as Red-headed Woodpecker, Yellow-billed 
Cuckoo, and a group of immature Dickcissels. 

 
Barny Dunning
misner13 AT verizon.net

Canada Goose     5
Mallard     1
Red-tailed Hawk     1
Killdeer     1
Mourning Dove     4
Yellow-billed Cuckoo     1
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     5
Belted Kingfisher     2
Red-headed Woodpecker     3
Red-bellied Woodpecker     1
Downy Woodpecker     3
Northern Flicker     1
Pileated Woodpecker     2
Eastern Wood-Pewee     4
Acadian Flycatcher     1
Warbling Vireo     1
Red-eyed Vireo     1
Blue Jay     2
Northern Rough-winged Swallow     4
Tree Swallow     10
Barn Swallow     3
Cliff Swallow     8
Carolina Chickadee     3
Tufted Titmouse     1
White-breasted Nuthatch     4
Carolina Wren     1
Sedge Wren     15
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     1
Eastern Bluebird     2
American Robin     15
Gray Catbird     2
European Starling     10
Cedar Waxwing     3
Common Yellowthroat     3
Field Sparrow     5
Song Sparrow     3
Northern Cardinal     1
Indigo Bunting     8
Dickcissel     7
Red-winged Blackbird     1
Eastern Meadowlark     1
Brown-headed Cowbird     4
Baltimore Oriole     3
House Finch     2
American Goldfinch     10

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

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Subject: lost sun glasses
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2010 11:55:46 -0400
On Tuesday afternoon August 24 I found a pair of sun glasses at the overlook 
site in Goose Pond FWA Unit GP5, where we look across to view the egret roost 
in Main Pool East. If anyone lost a pair and wants to send a description to me 
we might arrange a return. 


--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 
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Subject: N.W.Indiana - 8/27, Avocet, Knot, Turnstones
From: Michael Topp <mtopp7927 AT AOL.COM>
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2010 19:50:16 -0400
8/27
      I checked a couple of spots this mourning and was rewarded with some
   nice birds despite the High pressure that has settled in. Birds include
   American Avocet, Red Knot, Ruddy Turnstones, Red-breasted Nuthatch, 
   Warblers and Juvenile Shorebirds.
           * Photos I will post later
 MILLER BEACH:
    15-D.C.Cormorants
     3-G.B.Herons
     1-Great Egret
     6-Mallards
     8-B.W.Teal
     1-R.T.Hawk
     1-Coopers Hawk
     1-A.Kestrel
    10-Killdeer
    10-Semipalmated Plovers (1ad.,9Juvs)*
     1-AMERICAN AVOCET  (Flyby about 200yrds. out)
     1-Spotted Sandpiper (Juv.)
     2-RUDDY TURNSTONES *
     1-RED KNOT (Juv.)
    20-Sanderlings (3ad. , 17Juvs.) *
     2-Semipalmated Sandpipers (Juvs.)
     3-Least Sandpipers (Fresh Juvs.) *
     2-BAIRD'S Sandpipers (Juvs.) *
     1-Pectoral Sandpiper
     1-Dowitcher (Sps.)
     1-Great Black-backed Gull (Juv.)
     6-Bonaparte's Gulls (4ad. , 2 Juvs.)
     7-Caspian Terns
     2-Forster's Terns
     6-BLACK TERNS
    50+ Chimney Swifts
      1-Hummingbird
      1-Belted Kingfisher
      1-Downy W.P.
      1- Blue Jay
    100+ Barn Swallows
      1-RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH (The bird was first heard then seen
        in the nearest tree to the breakwall.)
      1-Magnolia Warbler (Breakwall vegetation.)
      1-Field Sparrow (Singing)
      1-Indigo Bunting (Singing)
      6-Goldfinch

  HAMMOND BIRD SANCTUARY:
      1-A.Kestrel
      1-Hummingbird
      1-Belted Kingfisher
      1-N.Flicker
      1-Cedar Waxwing
      1-G.C.Flycatcher
     25+Barn Swallows
       1-Blue Jay
       2-B.C.Chickadees
       2-House Wrens
       1-W.B.Nuthatch
       1-SWAINSON'S  Thrush
       1-Y.T.Vireo
       2-R.E.Vireo
       2-Tennessee Warblers
       1-ORANGE-CROWNED Warbler (Well seen)
       1-Nashville Warbler
       1-Chestnut-sided Warbler
       2-Magnolia Warblers (1-male)
       2-Blackpoll Warblers
       1-Black & White Warbler
       1-A.Redstart
       1-Canada Warbler
       2-C.Yellowthroats
       1-Scarlet Tanager (Female)
         
         Also 2 Monk Parakeets flew over my house when I returned home.
         There was also a mass migration of dragonflys with many hundreds
          at both locations.
 Michael Topp 

 Highland IN. 

           Photos:
                   http://community.webshots.com/user/mtopp101
                       
       
       
     
       
      
     
      

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Subject: Lake Monroe
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2010 17:36:17 -0400
This morning I visited both Paynetown and Cutright on Lake Monroe. A 
beautiful, clear, still, cool morning - a few things of interest.

Paynetown:
     Mallard - 3
     Great Blue Heron - 4
     Turkey Vulture - 14
     Killdeer - 2
     Spotted Sandpiper - 1
     Ring-billed Gull - 7
     E. Kingbird - 1
     Warbling Vireo - 2
     Red-eyed Vireo - 4
     Barn Swallow - 115 - impressive flight

Cutright:
     Double-cr. Cormorant - 1
     Great Blue Heron -3
     Black Vulture - 1
     Turkey Vulture - 78
     Bald Eagle - 1 (adult)
     E. Wood-pewee - 3
     E. Phoebe - 2
     E. Kingbird - 1
     Warbling Vireo - 6
     Red-eyed Vireo  - 45
     Barn Swallow - 25
     Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 10
     E. Bluebird - 5
     Gray Catbird - 2
     Cedar Waxwing - 12
     No. Parula - 2
     Yellow-thr. Warbler - 1
     Prairie Warbler - 1
     Am. Redstart - 1

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: Fox Island
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2010 13:51:03 EDT
Fox Island County Park, Allen Co., produced 51 species on this cool, sunny  
Friday morning, including nine species of warblers.  As an observer-comfort 
 bonus, I ran into virtually no mosquitoes.
 
Wood Duck 32
Great Blue Heron 9
Cooper's Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
AKilldeer 6
Mourning Dove 1
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 1
Ruby-thr. Hummingbird 6
Woodpecker:  Red-bellied 12, Downy 17, Hairy 3, N. Flicker 2, Pileated  1
E. Wood Pewee 13
Acadian Flycatcher 1
Vireo:  White-eyed 3, WSarbling 4, Red-eyed 6
Blue Jay 6
Am. Crow 2
Carolina Chickadee 18
Tufted Titmouse 16
White-br. Nuthatch 11
Wren:  Carolina 3, House 4
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 6
Am. Robin 190
Gray Catbird 38
Brown Thrasher 4
Eur. Starling 40
Cedar Waxwing 12
Warbler:
    Tennessee 6
    Chestnut-sided 3
    Magnolia 1
    Blackburnian 1
    Black and White 2
    Am. Redstart 5
    Ovenbird 3
    Common Yellowthroat 4
    Canada 1
Scarlet Tanager 2
E. Towhee 8
Sparrow:  Field 12, Song 3
N. Cardinal 29
Rose-br. Grosbeak 2
Indigo Bunting 9
Red-winged Blackbird 8
Common Grackle 92
Baltimore Oriole 7
Am. Goldfinch 23
 
Jim Haw

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Subject: Pine Creek Gamebird Habitat Area , 8/27/10
From: "Dunning, John B" <jdunning AT PURDUE.EDU>
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2010 12:54:14 -0400
I did the first of the weekly waterfowl surveys for the DNR this morning. At 
Pine Creek Gamebird Habitat area in Benton County there was a pleasant variety 
of birds, especially pleasant since the whole property was essentially dry last 
year and we missed fall migration there. Large numbers of waterfowl were there, 
especially Blue-winged Teal. If you want to visit, however, consider that early 
waterfowl seasons for Canada Geese and teal start on Sept 1 -4, depending on 
species. So this weekend is likely to be the best time to visit. Half of the 
property is closed during hunting season to give the waterfowl a refuge where 
they won't be disturbed. 


There was a scattering of shorebirds, most of which were ID'ed by silhouette 
due to the lighting conditions. There is a good amount of shorebird habitat and 
more will develop as the water levels drop. 


The Bobolink sang briefly, as did the Sedge Wren.

Barny Dunning
Misner13 AT verizon.net


Location:     Pine Creek Gamebird Habitat Area 
Observation date:     8/27/10
Number of species:     32

Canada Goose     28
Wood Duck     27
Mallard     264
Blue-winged Teal     130
Ring-necked Pheasant     4
Pied-billed Grebe     1
Great Blue Heron     37
Great Egret     15
Red-tailed Hawk     1
Sora     1
Killdeer     24
Lesser Yellowlegs     12
Least Sandpiper     6
Pectoral Sandpiper     11
Stilt Sandpiper     2
Mourning Dove     1
Chimney Swift     1
Eastern Kingbird     1
Blue Jay     1
American Crow     2
Tree Swallow     500
Bank Swallow     1
Cliff Swallow     1
Sedge Wren     1
American Robin     7
European Starling     42
Eastern Towhee     1
Field Sparrow     2
Song Sparrow     1
Northern Cardinal     1
Bobolink     1
American Goldfinch     3

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

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Subject: Beehunter Marsh Unit BH5S August 25 afternoon
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 19:45:45 -0400
Yesterday afternoon (August 25 2010) on my way home I stopped off at Goose Pond 
FWA Beehunter Marsh Unit BH5S in Greene County to check on shorebirds and 
potential rail habitat. 


I went out the splitter levee separating BH5S and BH5N and then ventured into 
the drying out wetland, heading southeast. I was wearing hip boots and thought 
I might try to cross the entire interior of the wetland. Rails have sometimes 
used the smartweed islands. I was curious to see what the islands looked like 
from the inside. 


The islands were not very promising, at least to my subjective eye. Most of 
them were quite dried out and one of them had smartweed taller than my head. I 
did not even know that smartweed got that tall. Admittedly, the vegetation was 
so thick and tall on the islands that I likely would not have seen a rail, even 
if some were present. (If the smartweed gets that tall in adjacent flooded BH5N 
it could potentially provide some cover for waterfowl hunters.) 


With vegetation so high and dense I scrubbed the attempt to do an interior 
transect of BH5S. 


Michael Brown arrived on the splitter levee as I was leaving. We briefly 
watched 6 BAIRD'S SANDPIPERS foraging on the mudflats before I departed. The 
walk turned up 13 species of shorebirds including 1 WILSON'S SNIPE kicked up 
from vegetated island edges in the east end. 


Location:     Goose Pond FWA Beehunter Marsh
Observation date:     8/25/10
Notes: Walking in GPFWA Beehunter Marsh Unit BH5S checking on shorebirds and 
habitat, 3:30-5:45 PM. 



Wood Duck     1
Mallard     7
Blue-winged Teal     14
Northern Shoveler     8
Northern Bobwhite     1  on the levee next to Beehunter Ditch
Great Blue Heron     5
Semipalmated Plover     2
Killdeer     29
Black-necked Stilt     4   all faded adults
Spotted Sandpiper     4
Solitary Sandpiper     2
Greater Yellowlegs     1
Lesser Yellowlegs     13
Semipalmated Sandpiper   20
Least Sandpiper     31
Baird's Sandpiper     6      juveniles, all in view at the same time
Pectoral Sandpiper     8
Stilt Sandpiper     12
Wilson's Snipe     1     flushed next to an island in the east end
Rock Pigeon     8
Mourning Dove     4
Bell's Vireo     1     singing along Beehunter Ditch
Indigo Bunting     4
Red-winged Blackbird     60
American Goldfinch     3

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 




















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Subject: migrant warblers Morgan Co
From: Doug & Cheri Johnstone <dougcher2080 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 16:24:13 -0400
Today we had a first year female chestnut-sided, female redstart, first year 
male blackburnian, and a Tennessee warbler. All first for the fall season. Doug 

Johnstone, Morgan Co.

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Subject: Chain O' Lakes State Park
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 15:34:38 EDT
Sandy Schacht and I, joined for the morning by Casey Ryan and Jeff  
Antonelis-Lapp (visiting birder, Washington) went to Chain O'Lakes in Noble 
County 

on Thursday morning.  We were hoping that last night's cold front  would 
bring the first good influx of migrant warblers.  It didn't.   There were more 
warblers than we have yet seen, but still just a trickle.   We found one 
good flock, a few other pockets of some activity, and long  stretches that 
were essentially birdless.  Still, we managed 55  species in the park, 
including some added in a walk around Dock Lake after Casey and Jeff left. 
Sandy 

and I quit at 12:30.  All birds  below were in the park.
 
Turkey 4
Great Blue Heron 1
Turkey Vulture 5
Red-shouldered Hawk 1
Broad-winged Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Mourning Dove 1
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 1
Belted Kingfisher 1
Woodpecker:  Red-headed 1, Red-bellied 5, Downy 2, N. Flicker 1,  Pileated 1
E. Wood Pewee 14
Acadian Flycatcher 3
E. Phoebe 2
Great Crested Flycatcher 1
E. Kingbird 3
Vireo:  Yellow-throated 3, Warbling 7, Red-eyed 1
Blue Jay 5
Am. Crow 2
Barn Swallow 1
Black-capped Chickadee 19
Tufted Titmouse 7
White-br. Nuthatch 5
Brown Creeper 1
Carolina Wren 1
House Wren 7
Am. Robin 12
Gray Catbird 6
Cedar Waxwing 12
Warbler:
    Blue-winged 2
    Tennessee 5
    Nashville 1
    Magnolia 3
    Black-throated Green 1
    Blackburnian 1
    Bay-breasted 2
    Black and White 1
    Hooded 1
Scarlet Tanager 3
E. Towhee 4
Sparrow:  Chipping 4, Field 7, Song 1
N. Cardinal 24
Rose-breasted Grosbeak 1
Indigo Bunting 2
Baltimore Oriole 3
Am. Goldfinch 7
House Sparrow 1
 
Jim Haw
 

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Subject: Blackpoll Warbler
From: Jerry Brown <jwbrown8628 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 13:03:12 -0400
A decent number of Magnolias and a FOS Blackpoll Warbler were the only bright 
spots in Franke this morning. Maybe I'll try Eagle Marsh tomorrow since the 
prediction is for lows in the high 40's tonight. 

 
Great Blue Heron 1
Coopers Hawk 1
Red-eyed Vireo 2
Pewee 1
Chestnut-sided Warbler 1
A. Redstart 2
Magnolia Warbler 5
Blackpoll Warbler 1
Indigo Bunting 1
Chipping Sparrow 1
 
Jerry Brown, Fort Wayne 		 	   		  
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Subject: IOS Photo Quiz (no sightings)
From: Robert Hughes <rhughes.enteract AT RCN.COM>
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 08:30:45 -0500
An answer to the Late Summer 2010 IOS Photo Quiz is now up. A new 
quiz will be posted in a few days.

http://www.illinoisbirds.org/photo_quiz.html

Robert D. Hughes
Chicago, Illinois 

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Subject: Summer Bird Counts
From: Amy Kearns <greenpertplus AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 09:11:52 -0400
If you participated in the Summer Bird Count, please send your data to us by 
September 1st.  You can email it to John Castrale or I (any format is fine 
although I prefer the SBC tally sheet), fax it or snail mail it.

Thanks for your participation!

Amy Kearns
Indiana Division of Fish & Wildlife
akearns AT dnr.in.gov
John Castrale
jcastrale AT dnr.in.gov
562 DNR Rd Mitchell IN 47446
Fax (812) 849-6013

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Subject: SW Allen Thrushes- Aug 26 AM
From: "Rodger P. Rang" <rrang AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 05:32:05 -0400
Just now outside my front door, I noted a fair number of Swainson's Thrushes 
flying overhead. Cold fronts are cool! 


Rodger Rang
Fort Wayne

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Subject: Beehunter, Goose Pond
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 22:14:23 -0400
This morning Bob Kissel, Bob Dodd and I birded Beehunter and various 
sites at Goose Pond. A good morning with nice views of many shorebirds. 
The highlights;

100S from 67 to Beehunter:
     Am. Kestrel - 3
     Killdeer - 3
     Bell's Vireo - 1
     Common Yellowthroat - 1
     E. Towhee - 1
     Indigo Bunting - 6
     Brown-headed Cowbird - 500 (one huge flock mixed with starlings)

Beehunter 4/5:
     Canada Goose - 12
     Wood Duck - 4
     Blue-winged Teal - 16
     No. Bobwhite - 3
     Great Blue Heron - 8
     Semipalmated Plover - 6
     Killdeer - 18
     Black-necked Stilt - 4
     Spotted Sandpiper - 4
     Greater Yellowlegs - 1
     Lesser Yellowlegs - 6
     Semipalmated Sandpiper - 2
     Least Sandpiper - 26
     Baird's Sandpiper - 1
     Stilt Sandpiper - 10
     Pectoral Sandpiper - 6
     Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 1
     Common Nighthawk - 2
     Willow Flycatcher - 1
     Sedge Wren - 7
     Gray Catbird - 3
     Savannah Sparrow - 1
     Indigo Bunting - 4
     Baltimore Oriole - 1

MPE from 59:
     Blue-winged Teal - 25
     Double-cr. Cormorant - 115 (one group of 75 flying N)
     Great Blue Heron - 45
     Great Egret - 56
     Green Heron - 2
     Black-cr. Night-heron - 2
     Ring-billed Gull - 1
     Caspian Tern - 1
     Bell's Vireo - 2
     Grasshopper Sparrow - 2
     Bobolink - 2

GP10N:
     Mallard - 16
     Blue-winged Teal - 24
     No. Shoveler - 26
     Great Blue Heron - 16
     Great Egret - 8
     Green Heron - 4
     Semipalmated Plover - 12
     Killdeer - 32
     Spotted Sandpiper - 6
     Greater Yellowlegs - 1
     Lesser Yellowlegs - 4
     Semipalmated Sandpiper - 2
     Least Sandpiper - 45
     Baird's Sandpiper - 5
     Stilt Sandpiper - 1
     Pectoral Sandpiper - 95
     Short-billed Dowitcher - 1
     E. Wood-pewee - 1
     Swallows - 5000 (75% tree, 20% bank, also barn and rough-winged)
     Cedar Waxwing - 14
     Sedge Wren - 4
     Henslow's Sparrow - 3

1200 looking N over MP:
     Canada Goose - 2
     Wood Duck - 6
     Mallard - 12
     Blue-winged Teal - 35
     No. Bobwhite - 3
     Double-cr. Cormorant - 16
     Great Blue Heron - 65
     Great Egret - 179
     Little Blue Heron - 2
     Cattle Egret - 5 (farm on 500)
     Black-cr. Night Heron - 2
     Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 1
     Bell's Vireo - 2
     Swallows - 3500 (mostly tree and bank)
     Sedge Wren - 5
     Henslow's Sparrow - 3
     Blue Grosbeak - 1
     Indigo Bunting - 6
     Baltimore Oriole - 1

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: FW: eBird Report - Falls of the Ohio (IN) , 8/25/10
From: Ed Peter <e.peter AT INSIGHTBB.COM>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 21:30:17 -0400
Location:     Falls of the Ohio (IN)
Observation date:     8/25/10
Number of species:     32

Canada Goose     5
Wood Duck     6
Mallard     50
Double-crested Cormorant     6
Great Blue Heron     25
Great Egret     18
Black-crowned Night-Heron     15
Black Vulture     30
Red-tailed Hawk     1
American Kestrel     1
Killdeer     2
Caspian Tern     1
Rock Pigeon     50
Mourning Dove     6
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     1
Belted Kingfisher     1
Eastern Kingbird     2
Blue Jay     2
American Crow     3
Barn Swallow     6
Tufted Titmouse     1
Carolina Wren     1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     2
American Robin     30
Northern Mockingbird     2
European Starling     40
Song Sparrow     2
Northern Cardinal     2
Baltimore Oriole     1
House Finch     3
American Goldfinch     6
House Sparrow     4

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

Ed Peter
Floyds Knobs

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Subject: Beehunter Marsh Baird's Sandpipers
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 18:14:21 -0400
I just returned from a 2 hour and 25 minute hike in Goose Pond FWA Beehunter 
Marsh Unit BH5S doing the shorebirds. 


I did not find the Buff-breasted Sandpiper reported yesterday.

However, there were some rewards.

As I was leaving the splitter levee Michael Brown and I watched 6 juvenile 
BAIRD'S SANDPIPERS in view at the same time, 5 of them together in one scope 
field. 


I Michael is now out on the mudflats photographing some of the shorebirds.

--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington 

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**********************************************************
Subject: Goose Pond FWA Waterfowl Survey Aug 24 1010
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 15:07:50 -0400
Yesterday morning (August 24 2010) Property Manager Brad Feaster and I did the 
inaugural weekly DNR waterfowl survey of the fall season at Goose Pond FWA in 
Greene County. 


This fall's survey featured our best start for ducks so far. We have been 
conducting the weekly DNR waterfowl survey from early fall through winter since 
the state acquired and opened the Goose Pond FWA property to public access in 
November of 2005. 


Yesterday's tallies were 213 CANADA GEESE, 414 WOOD DUCKS, 258 MALLARDS, 371 
BLUE-WINGED TEAL, 49 NORTHERN SHOVELERS, and 10 GREEN-WINGED TEAL. 


A glance at the database suggests these are all time property high counts for 
the month of August for Wood Duck, Blue-winged Teal, and Northern Shoveler. 
Last Friday August 20 DNR staff member Dennis Workman set a new August property 
high count for MALLARDS with 350 tallied. This also is the second highest state 
count for Mallard for the month August according to Ken Brock. 


The 1226 acre Main Pool West Unit has made a big difference for migratory duck 
foraging and resting. The newly completed Main Pool West first filled with 
water starting with the January thaw of 2009. Last year in August of 2009 we 
were fogged out at MPW the morning of the first day of the waterfowl survey. 
Fewer ducks were present on the property. And we had less physical access into 
the interior parts of MPW. (Inevitably, we still miss birds in large portions 
of the MPW wetland impoundment; the rapidly increasing vegetation obscures the 
view.) 


Among non-waterfowl: an evening vigil of the egret and heron roost in Main Pool 
East produced a new high tally for the current year of 883 GREAT EGRETS. The 
two Main Pool wetland Units at GPFWA continue to harbor the largest Great Egret 
spectacle in recorded Indiana history. 


Some other numbers on the day were 5 AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS, 3 SNOWY EGRETS, 
37 BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERONS, 3 COMMON MOORHENS, and 28 BLACK-NECKED STILTS. 
Fifteen BELL'S VIREOS were still singing as we toured the levees searching for 
waterfowl. 


The routes and Units: Brad started watching the early flight out at Beehunter 
Marsh Unit BH5. I started watching the Wood Duck flight out at Goose Pond Unit 
GP11. We then combined forces and visited the east levee of Main Pool West. 
Later Ross Brittain and Breck Robinson joined us for two forays into the swales 
and channels on west side the Main Pool West. I returned in the evening and did 
some more Units, including the watch of the egret and heron roost in Main Pool 
East through after sunset. 


Brad and I generally concentrated on waterfowl and except for the Black-necked 
Stilts we did not pause to count or scope shorebird concentrations when we 
encountered them. 


Weather: Starting an hour before sunrise: clear skies, full moon still up, some 
light patchy low fog. Later skies becoming partly cloudy at mid-day, mostly 
overcast late afternoon through evening. Temperature mid-60s F at the start 
with a mid-afternoon high of 81 F (much cooler than in recent weeks). Wind NE 
2-6 mph in the morning, by mid-late afternoon NE 10 mph occasionally gusting to 
18 mph, calming down toward sunset. 


GPFWA BEEHUNTER MARSH UNIT BH5, by Brad Feaster only:
Wood Duck 9
Mallard 63
Blue-winged Teal 18
Northern Shoveler 5

GPFWA UNIT GP11N, 6:10-7:05 AM. Linton sunrise was 7:09 AM. By Lee only:
Canada Goose 20
Wood Duck 87
Mallard 1
AMERICAN BITTERN 2    both flew from the tall grass prairie to the cattails
LEAST BITTERN 3    1 seen flying and at least 2 more doing kak calls
Great Blue Heron 12
Green Heron 7
Northern Bobwhite 1 
Mourning Dove 3 
Eastern Kingbird 1
American Crow 3
Barn Swallow 10
Carolina Wren 1
Gray Catbird 1
Song Sparrow 3
Red-winged Blackbird 52 (the big numbers in the cattails just starting to stir 
around when I left) 

American Goldfinch 3

GPFWA MAIN POOL WEST, from the east levee by Brad and Lee starting at 7:22 AM, 
and then, at mid-day starting at noon, two ventures into the interior of the 
far south end with Ross Brittain and Breck Robinson also coming along: 

Canada Goose 115    all leaving and heading west shortly after sunrise
Wood Duck 251
Mallard 183
Blue-winged Teal 353
Northern Shoveler 2
Green-winged Teal 10
Pied-billed Grebe 2
AMERICAN WHITE PELICAN 5    
Double-crested Cormorant X     didn't count, tally done in MPE
Great Blue Heron X   didn't count
Great Egret X    counted at the evening roost in MPE
small white egret/heron sp 6 seen flying distantly evening with binoculars 
only, either Cattle Egrets or Little Blue Herons, based on flight I would guess 
Cattle Egret 

Turkey Vulture 1
Bald Eagle 1   adult
Common Moorhen 3     fully grown juveniles together in a south end swale
Killdeer X    did not count
BLACK-NECKED STILT 28 included 26 on one sweep from the north end levee at the 
check-in stand, one less than Eric Ripma and his party found there; 2 more were 
on the east side of MPW 

Greater Yellowlegs 3
Lesser Yellowlegs 8
Eastern Kingbird 8
Bell's Vireo 13    all of them singing along ditch lines
Sedge Wren 1
Gray Catbird 3
Field Sparrow 3
Grasshopper Sparrow 5
Blue Grosbeak 1
Dickcissel 3
Eastern Meadowlark 2
Bobolink 2

GOOSE POND FWA MAIN POOL EAST, looking over from the Main Pool West east levee 
in the morning (Brad and Lee) and then doing a watch of the MPE egret roost in 
the evening 7:10-8:35 PM (Lee only): 

Wood Duck 5
Mallard 4
Double-crested Cormorant 190   morning tally
Least Bittern 1    calling in cattails, morning
Great Blue Heron X      did not count
GREAT EGRET 883    individually counted at the evening roost, see notes below
SNOWY EGRET 3    in view together at the evening roost
Cattle Egret 1      only 1 seen at the evening roost
BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERON 37 20 adults, 15 juveniles, 2 nestlings (some of the 
BCNHs were also in MPW), all recorded in the morning with Brad 

Pectoral Sandpiper 131    a severe under count
Gray Catbird 1
Field Sparrow 5
Indigo Bunting 4
Red-winged Blackbird  X   large evening flocks not counted

Yesterday evening I used a different angle for watching the evening roost. This 
move allowed me to get more comprehensive numbers on the increasing Great 
Egrets but it did not afford as good a view of the smaller white birds on the 
lower east side of the the roost. I found only 1 Cattle Egret, 3 Snowy Egrets 
together, and no Little Blue Herons. At 7:33 PM I counted 688 Great Egrets 
already at the roost. The rest of the Great Egrets were counted in flight as 
they arrived over the next hour. 


Next week we should start counting Great Blue Herons too. Their numbers are 
increasing 


GPFWA FIELD B, Brad and Lee:
American Kestrel 1

GPFWA UNIT GP6W:
Red-tailed Hawk 1

GPFWA UNITS GP8 and GP7, Brad, Ross, Breck, and Lee:
Northern Harrier 1    dark juvenile, looked like one of the local birds

GPWA UNIT GP13, Ross, Breck, and Lee:
Turkey Vulture 3

GPFWA UNIT GP9, Ross, Breck, and Lee:
Wood Duck 5
Pied-billed Grebe 4
Sedge Wren 1

GPFWA UNIT GP10N, from the north levee mid-day, Ross, Breck, and Lee. Very bad 
glare and thermal distortion conditions by the time we arrived prevented us 
from doing many of the shorebirds: 

Semipalmated Plover 7   high in view at the same time
Lesser Yellowlegs 1
Least Sandpiper 2
Pectoral Sandpiper 130
Bell's Vireo 1  singing

All the rest of the Units were by Lee only.

GPFWA UNIT GP5N, the stock pond, evening:
Wood Duck 14    flying out toward Main Pool East
Eastern Kingbird 3

GPFWA FIELD J (new numbering system) along CR 300 S, east of CR 1100 W, early 
evening: 

Northern Bobwhite 2
Mourning Dove 84

GPFWA UNIT GP1, mostly looking in from the Unit GP4 south levee:
Canada Goose 73
Wood Duck 10  
Mallard 7
Northern Shoveler 10
Least Sandpiper 2
Tree Swallow 40   on power wires along CR 1100 W
Bank Swallow 80   ditto
Gray Catbird 1

Note: 42 Northern Shovelers were loafing in Unit GP1 in the early evening. 
These could possibly have included the 32 seen earlier in Main Pool East across 
the Black Creek tree line in the morning. I therefore opted for caution and 
only counted 10 of the 42 seen in GP1 as new on the day. 


GPFWA UNIT GP2, in the ditch separating the Unit GP2 and GP14:
Bell's Vireo 1    singing

GPFWA UNIT GP5S:
Wood Duck 33

--Lee Sterrenburg, Bloomington, Brad Feaster, Linton, Ross Brittain, Greenwood, 
& Breck Robinson, Linton 


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**********************************************************
Subject: Lakefront 25 Aug '10
From: "Kenneth J. Brock" <kj.brock AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 13:28:55 -0500
Today (24 August ’10) Joel Greenberg, John Kendall, and I conducted a  
lakewatch at Miller Beach (7:00-11:00AM).

The wind was NNW at 15 and diminished a bit prior to our termination.   
The sky was clear with temperatures in the low 70s.  Despite these  
promising conditions there was little movement on the lake and the  
hoped for jaeger did not appear.

HIGHLIGHTS

MILLER BEACH
Blue-winged Teal (106)
Double-crested Cormorant (8)
T. Vulture (1)
Cooper’s Hawk (1)
Am. Kestrel (1)
Peregrine Falcon (2 flew past together)
WILLET (5)
Sanderling (17- 1 adult, 8 juvs, & 8 not aged)
Semipalmated Sandpiper (3 juvs)
Baird’s Sandpiper (1 juv)
Bonaparte’s Gull (11- 1 ad & 10 juvs)
Caspian Tern (3 adults)
Black Tern (70- in two large flocks)
Common Tern (71- well offshore)
Chimney Swift (12)
Hummingbird (1)
Barn Swallow (9)

Ken Brock
Chesterton, IN


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**********************************************************
Subject: Dunes Area, 8/25/10
From: Brad Bumgardner <bumgbj01 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 13:02:32 -0500
Greetings,


I spent a few hours this morning checking a few sites. Only some modest 
movement and no real passerine numbers migrating after the dry, cold front. 




INDIANA DUNES SP: (pavilion 6:45am-9am)

Mallard- 2

Blue-winged Teal- 60

DC Cormorant- 2

Turkey Vulture- 8

Red-shouldered Hawk- 1 (imm)

Bonaparte's Gull- 69 (~80% were juvs)

Ring-billed Gull- 110

Herring Gull- 15

Caspian Tern- 8

Black Tern- 9

Chimney Swift- 21

Barn Swallow- 28
 
STRIEBEL POND:
RING-NECKED DUCK- 1
Great-blue Heron- 3
Great Egret- 1
Spotted Sandpiper- 1
Semipalmated Sandpiper- 2 (juvs)
Least Sandpiper- 2 (juvs)
Caspian Tern- 2

BEVERLY SHORES: (quick drive)
Great-blue Heron- 1
Great Egret- 2
Red-shouldered Hawk- 5 (including 1 imm perched on telephone wire)
Ruby-throated Hummingbird- 1
Red-headed Woodpecker- 3
N MOCKINGBIRD- 2 (Beverly, just west of Broadway)

Brad Bumgardner
Chesterton, IN

 		 	   		  
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**********************************************************
Subject: Eagle Marsh ducks, shorebirds
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 11:51:15 EDT
I hiked out from the Boy Scout building and checked the impoundments on  
each side of the pumphouse dike this Wednesday morning.  My reward was a  
notable influx of ducks and a fair shorebird variety.  There is shorebird  
habitat on both sides of this dike.
 
Canada Goose
Wood Duck    
AMERICAN WIGEON 1 earliest fall record for NE IN by 9 days
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal 13
Northern Shoveler 18
Green-winged Teal 1
Pied-billed Grebe 10 or so
Great Blue Heron 30 or so
Great Egret 22
Green Heron 1
Am. Kestrel 1
Sora 2
Common Moorhen 8 (1ad., 7 juv.)
Am. Coot 20+
Semipalmated Plover 1
Killdeer
Solitary Sandpiper 6
Lesser Yellowlegs 4
Semipalmated Sandpiper 3
Least Sandpiper 1
Pectoral Sandpiper 14
Ring-billed Gull 3
Belted Kingfisher 2
Tree Swallow 3
Eur. Starling
Song Sparrow 1
Indigo Bunting 1
Bobolink 9
Red-winged Blackbird
 
Jim Haw
 

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**********************************************************
Subject: Eagle Creek Tuesday Aug. 24th 2010
From: Spike Selig <spikeselig AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 06:34:46 -0700
Just a couple of notes. I spent about an hour at the SE end of Eagle Creek and 

the adjacent South end of the Eagle Creek Airport. At the airport, near the top 

of the tallest dead branch in the tallest tree, 2 Kestrels sat perched about 3 
feet apart.  It would have made a spectacular picture but I havn't gotten my 
camera back for my scope yet.  Ring-billed Gulls were present in large numbers 
totaling 128, a high count for me this summer.  I suspect a herring Gull might 
have come in and joined the crowd, but after much searching of the flock. I 
could not find any.  The Osprey was still in the area.   today  was  beautiful 
day, winds light and visibility good, the temperature cool enough to keep the 
Cicadas from mounting their drone. This last spring's and early summer's high 

rain levels from state line to state line in central Indiana flooded  many 
mudflats and other shorebird habitats . This month, Indianapolis is coming 
close 

to breaking the record for driest August ever and the mud flats should be 
reopening at Eagle Creek. With the opening of some mudflats, cool northely 
winds, and increases in migrating warblers, this Sunday's Eagle Creek Bird Walk 

should be a great one.   


Great birding,
Spike  

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**********************************************************
Subject: Lake Monroe shorebirds, RUGR, OSFL
From: Mike Clarke <redeyegravy AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 09:27:56 -0400
On Monday morning, I birded a few spots around Lake Monroe.
An abbreviated list of highlights:

North Fork:

Great Egret- 17
Greater Yellowlegs- 1
Lesser Yellowlegs- 3
Solitary Sandpiper- 4
Semi-palmated Sandpiper- 6
Spotted Sandpiper- 2
Stilt Sandpiper- 1

At the HEE clearcut on Deckard Ridge Rd.:

Olive-sided Flycatcher- 2

Crooked Creek  area (LOTS of shorebird habitat, but only a smattering of
shorebirds):

Ruffed Grouse- 1 drumming not far from the access road about 1/2 mile south
of the boat ramp
Great Egret- 8
Semi-palmated Plover- 3
Solitary Sanpiper- 8
Pectoral Sandpiper- 13
Spotted Sandpiper- 6
Semi-palmated Sandpiper- 14

Also saw a number of passerines, but no obvious migrants (other than the
OSFL).


-Mike Clarke
Bloomington

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**********************************************************
Subject: Eagle Marsh, Ft Wayne
From: zzedpowers AT AOL.COM
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 22:50:05 -0400
I hadn't walk the entire Trail 1 for a while, so I did that today. As has been 
my experience lately, there wasn't a lot of activity away from the Pump Road. I 
did come upon a dead Double-crested Cormorant in the middle of the trail; I 
didn't do a forensic examination, but there was no apparent evidence of foul 
play (notice how I restrained myself from saying "fowl play"). Cause of death 
unknown. 


Number of species:     26

Canada Goose     1 (!)
Wood Duck     2
Mallard     100
Blue-winged Teal     2
Pied-billed Grebe     3
Double-crested Cormorant     2
Great Blue Heron     31
Great Egret     37
Common Moorhen     8
American Coot     19
Killdeer     4
Lesser Yellowlegs     3
Semipalmated Sandpiper     2
Pectoral Sandpiper     2
Mourning Dove     1
Chimney Swift     11
Belted Kingfisher     1
Downy Woodpecker     1
Eastern Kingbird     2
Barn Swallow     6
European Starling     300
Song Sparrow     3
Indigo Bunting     6
Red-winged Blackbird     200
American Goldfinch     6
House Sparrow     15

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

Ed Powers
Allen County


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**********************************************************
Subject: Fairfax area
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 19:40:36 -0400
This morning I visited Fairfax, hoping for shorebirds - again, little 
luck. The highlights:

Canada Goose - 42
Mallard - 35
Great Blue Heron - 3
BLACK VULTURE - 31 (numbers increasing day by day)
Turkey Vulture - 36
Red-sh. Hawk - 1 (imm)
Killdeer - 2
Ring-billed Gull - 87
Caspian Tern - 2
E. Wood-pewee - 1
E. Phoebe - 1
E. Kingbird - 4
Barn Swallow - 18
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 4
Magnolia Warbler - 1 (FOS)

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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**********************************************************
Subject: Goose Pond FWA/Beehunter Marsh
From: Eric Ripma <eripma AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 19:26:27 -0400
Marty Williams, Rob Ripma, Mary Lou Stark, and I birded around Goose Pond 
most of the day today.  The highlights included good looks at Buff-breasted 
and Baird's Sandpiper.

Highlights:
GP Main Pool West (From the Tern Island and dike south of the check-in 
station):
Northern Shoveler-4
Green-winged Teal-1
American White Pelican-1
Snowy Egret-1  (from Tern Island)
Little Blue Heron-4  (from Tern Island)
Black-necked Stilt-27  (counted in one sweep from the check-in station dike)
Stilt Sandpiper-6

GP10N (from the N dike):
Osprey-1
Stilt Sandpiper-12
Short-billed Dowitcher-2
Prothonotary Warbler-1 (along the dike, my first on the Goose Pond property)

BH5S:
Baird's Sandpiper-2
Stilt Sandpiper-8
Buff-breasted Sandpiper-1

Eric Ripma
Carmel and Zionsville, IN

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**********************************************************
Subject: Limberlost shorebirds
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 16:35:07 EDT
Sandy Schacht, Marisa Windell and I enjoyed another fine morning of  
shorebirding at Limberlost Swamp Wetland Preserve, Adams Co. Water continues to 

fall, total number of shorebirds (other than Killdeer) was down a  bit, but 
variety was up with thirteen shorebird species tallied.  The list  from 
Limberlost; shorebird numbers reflect an actual count but are not exact as  
birds move around:
 
Canada Goose
Mallard
Great Blue Heron 11
Red-tailed Hawk 1
AMERICAN GOLDEN PLOVER 1
Semipalmated Plover 5
Killdeer 520
AMERICAN AVOCET 1
Spotted Sandpiper 1
Greater Yellowlegs 3
Lesser Yellowlegs 67
Semipalmated Sandpiper 59
Least Sandpiper 8
BAIRD'S SANDPIPER 3
Pectoral Sandpiper 77
STILT SANDPIPER 4 juv.
Wilson's Snipe 1
Mourning Dove
Am. Crow 4
Horned Lark 2
European Starling
Bank Swallow 2
Barn Swallow 15
Savannah Sparrow 5
Bobolink 12
 
The Woods Rd. mudflat in Darke County, Ohio added Solitary Sandpiper and  
Short-billed Dowitcher, making 15 shorebird species for the day, plus more of 
 the commoner species listed above and 5 Baird's Sandpipers.
 
Jim Haw

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Subject: eBird Report - Marian College Ecolab , 8/24/10
From: G L Chastain <glcbirds AT MSN.COM>
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 11:04:35 -0400
A beautiful day for my first trip to the Ecolab in months, and I was rewarded 
with lots of residents and some migrants - Philadelphia Vireo, 2 Chestnut-sided 
Warblers, Ovenbird, and 2 Magnolia Warblers. 

 
Gordon Chastain
Indianapolis
 

> Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 11:00:32 -0400
> From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org
> To: glcbirds AT msn.com
> Subject: eBird Report - Marian College Ecolab , 8/24/10
> 
> 
> 
> Location: Marian College Ecolab
> Observation date: 8/24/10
> Number of species: 37
> 
> Canada Goose 1
> Wood Duck 9
> Great Blue Heron 1
> Mourning Dove 4
> Common Nighthawk 1
> Chimney Swift 1
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird 1
> Red-bellied Woodpecker 3
> Downy Woodpecker 2
> Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted) 3
> Eastern Wood-Pewee 1
> Willow Flycatcher 1
> Eastern Kingbird 3
> White-eyed Vireo 3
> Warbling Vireo 1
> Philadelphia Vireo 1
> Red-eyed Vireo 1
> Blue Jay 1
> Carolina Chickadee 7
> Tufted Titmouse 1
> White-breasted Nuthatch (Eastern) 3
> Carolina Wren 4
> House Wren 3
> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 5
> American Robin 100
> Gray Catbird 35
> Brown Thrasher 2
> European Starling 30
> Chestnut-sided Warbler 2
> Magnolia Warbler 2
> Ovenbird 1
> Song Sparrow 5
> Northern Cardinal 6
> Indigo Bunting 1
> Red-winged Blackbird 1
Baltimore Oriole 5 - 1 carrying nest material!
> American Goldfinch 60
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
 		 	   		  
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Subject: Case of the missing godwits
From: "Kenneth J. Brock" <kj.brock AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2010 06:40:58 -0500
Years ago, after numerous embarrassing experiences with the  
identification of young jaegers, I finally adopted the maxim, “never  
call a juvenile jaeger until it is safely out of sight.”  In view of  
today’s pervasive digital photography it now seems appropriate to  
create a similar tenet for the counting of passing bird flocks.

On 21 August I reported a record-tying flock of 52 Hudsonian Godwits  
that thrilled birders at Miller Beach. The birds were first detected  
circling over the impoundment and after milling about a bit they flew  
eastward about 200m off the beach.  Members of my group (at the Lake  
Street lot) monitored their flight from the impoundment until they  
disappeared to the east.  At no point were any birds noted breaking  
off or departing the flock.

During this event the birder nearest the godwits, who also had the  
longest and closest look, counted 52 birds, twice (this observer made  
a conscience effort to avoid counting birds while they were bunched in  
the flock).  As the roiling flock passed Lake Street one birder  
counted 50 and another 48.  At the time the record looked like a slam- 
dunk. In view of several previous 52 godwit tallies in the state, I  
even suggested that godwits could count.

The morning was gloomy-dark and light rain was falling, rendering  
photography virtually hopeless.  However, as the flock passed the Lake  
Street lot I snapped some 20 shots.  Michael Topp also took a few  
pictures.

Alas, every photo revealed significantly fewer that 52 godwits.   
Indeed, the highest number I came up with was 43.  Michael Topp  
reached a similar conclusion with his photos.  The other birders  
present subsequently examined the photos and no one was able to find  
52 birds.  So we did not tie the Indiana record (which, by the way,  
was not photographed) and will have to settle for 43 godwits.

It is very disconcerting that counts of 52, 52, 51, and 48 godwits by  
three separate observers, were uniformly off by such a wide margin,  
but who can argue with the pixels.  An explanation for these precise,  
but inaccurate tallies, is wanting.

Though it remains debatable whether godwits can count, it is painfully  
obvious that birders cannot.

Ken Brock
Chesterton
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Subject: L. Shaum's photos
From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM>
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 20:58:22 EDT
Leland Shaum has taken some very good photos at the Wakarusa Wastewater  
Treatment Facility and one of a Baird's Sandpiper may be of special  interest:
_http://www.flickr.com/photos/28248328 AT N05/4921259611/_ 
(http://www.flickr.com/photos/28248328 AT N05/4921259611/) 
 
If you have trouble accessing it let me know.
 
Dan Stoltzfus
Elkhart county

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Subject: Flatwoods Park Henslow's and Dickcissels
From: Cathy Meyer <cmeyer AT KIVA.NET>
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 16:58:23 -0400
Returned to Flatwoods Park this afternoon with Sandy Belth and was pleased to 
hear 2 whistling Bobwhites, 2 singing Dickcissels, and several ( at least 6-7) 
singing Henslow's Sparrows in the west field that extends to County Line Road. 
The trail in this area is very rough but these birds could have been heard from 
County Line Road if anyone wants to find them. There are hundreds of 
butterflies there, which Sandy will report to in-bugs. We also flushed a few 
small rodents, so this may be a good hunting ground this winter for raptors. 


Cathy Meyer
Bloomington

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Subject: yellow-throated vireo
From: Vince Gresham <dempsey618 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 13:20:17 -0400
Yellow-throated vireo at Rum Village. 

Pic:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/rum_village/4916601851/

South Bend, IN
St. Joseph County

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Subject: The IBA south of Waterford
From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM>
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 13:16:33 EDT
I birded this area to keep some continuity for the Elkhart River Corridor  
Important Bird Area. This is about 1/4 of the IBA


Location:     Turkey Creek and Elkhart  River
Observation date:     8/23/10
Notes:   I walked the church path, then along the Elkhart river which  was  
heavily overgrown and difficult to walk. Magnolia Warber first warbler  of 
the fall season for me.  
Number of species:      37

Mute Swan     2
Wood Duck      8
Great Blue Heron     7
Great Egret      1
Turkey Vulture     2
Red-tailed Hawk      2
Solitary Sandpiper     1
Ring-billed Gull   2
Mourning Dove     11
Ruby-throated  Hummingbird     2
Red-bellied Woodpecker      1
Downy Woodpecker     4
Hairy Woodpecker   1
Northern Flicker     2
Eastern  Wood-Pewee     3
Eastern Phoebe     2
Great  Crested Flycatcher     1
Warbling Vireo      3
Red-eyed Vireo     2
Blue Jay      2
Northern Rough-winged Swallow     31
Bank Swallow   4
Barn Swallow     14
Black-capped  Chickadee     2
Tufted Titmouse      1
White-breasted Nuthatch     4
Carolina Wren   1
House Wren     1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher   4
Eastern Bluebird     3
American Robin   14
Gray Catbird     5
Cedar Waxwing   18
Magnolia Warbler     1
Northern  Cardinal     6
Indigo Bunting     1
American  Goldfinch     7

This report was generated automatically by  eBird v2(_http://ebird.org_ 
(http://ebird.org) )
 
Dan Stoltzfus
Elkhart county

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Subject: Eagle Creek count Sunday Aug 22, 1010
From: Spike Selig <spikeselig AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 09:29:49 -0700
I spent most of Sunday morning checking out the airport and Ricks Cafe/dam area 

of Eagle Creek Park. Highlights of the day included  watching a Coopers Hawk 
sitting on the fence right over 2 fox squirrels. The hawk watched them intently 

but the squirrels, a long way from a safe tree ignored the hawk.  Finally, the 
hawk made a half hearted swoop at one of the squirrels then left.  During the 
Eagle Creek Sunday Walk brunch, we were treated with Broakwinged hawks, the 
first groug of five reacting to an adult Blad Eagle.  Later, possibly the same 
group appeared again making spectacular dives at each other. In their third and 

last appearance, the Broad-wings dived at a red-shouldered hawk.  Hard to 
determine the exact count so I am leaving it at 5. The Bird walk group had a 
great count of 79 species. I saw only 2 bird in the afternoon that would add to 

that count bringing it up to 81, Great Egret and Tree Swallow. Great visibility 

and cooler temperatures. My count hit 46 with no warblers. My thought is that 
next week, the ducks will start coming in to the lake area.

Great birding,
Spike

Double-crested Cormorant 50? Not accurate count probable many 

more.
Great Blue Heron                                11
Green Heron 1 Immature with yellowish 

legs,brown
 throat striping. 

American Egret                                  8
Turkey Vulture                                   6
Canada Goose                                   40
Wood Duck                                       1
Mallard                                             38
Osprey                                             1      Rick's Cafe.  2 were 
seen there by another
                                                               birder the same 
morning.
Bald Eagle                                         4     2 first year, 2 adult.
Cooper's Hawk                                  1
Red-shouldered Hawk                        1
Broad-winged Hawk 5 May have been as many as 10. 

                

Killdeer                                             29
Solitary Sandpiper                              4      First shorebird besides 
Killdeer and      

                                                               spotted this 
summer at Eagle Creek.
Ring-billed Gull                                  90    Some second year, some 
adult.
Mourning Dove                                  10
Chimney Swift                                   1
Ruby-throated Hummingbird               5
Belted Kingfisher                                2
Red-bellied Woodpecker                     2
Eastern Wood Peewee                        1
Red-eyed Vireo                                  1
Blue Jay                                            3
American Crow                                  5
Barn Swallow                                     30
Tree Swqllow                                     2
Carolina Chickadee                             5
Tufted Titmouse                                 2
Whitei=breasted Nuthatch                   2
Carolina Wren                                    1
House Wren                                       2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher                         1
American Robin                                 15
Gray Catbird                                      5
European Starling                               75
Cedar Waxwing                                  9
Eastern Towhee                                 1
Chipping Sparrow                              3
Northern Cardinal                              8
Indigo Bunting                                  1
Red-winged Blackbird                        20
Eastern Meadowlark                           4         Eagle Creek Airport.
Brown-headed Cowbird                      25
American Goldfinch                           6
House Sparrow                                 16
Northern Cardinal                              

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Subject: No Subject
From: Bill Poindexter <bpoindex AT CINERGYMETRO.NET>
Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 10:44:34 -0500
A couple of hours ago I was on Madison's riverfront.  A T.V. landed on a
light pole twenty feet away.  Shortly afterward out of the corners of my
eyes I saw the profile of a smaller bird come down on the top of the T.V.  I
turned my head and it appeared it was coming down upon the vulture with its
feet spread out.

I assumed it was a kestrel.  The vulture flew away and the bird landed on
the pole.  It was a mockingbird, not a kestrel.  I've never seen a mocker
act like that before.

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