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7 Nov JP Sandhills [Beverly Richardson ] 6 Nov N.W.Indiana 11/05,11/06 - Swallows, Warblers, Pelicans [Michael Topp ] 6 Nov Jasper Pulaski - Sandhill Cranes [Birder ] 6 Nov Fairfax RED-THROATED LOON [Amy Kearns ] 6 Nov Sandhill Cranes [Ed Peter ] 6 Nov Golden Eagle at Pigeon River FWA and Steuben Co. birds [Dan Stoltzfus ] 6 Nov Hawthorn Mine, Beehunter ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 6 Nov Re: What is torpor? ["Allen T. Chartier" ] 6 Nov Re: What is torpor? [Ron & Judy Green ] 6 Nov What is torpor? ["Allen T. Chartier" ] 6 Nov Northern Shrike at Beehunter Marsh [Lee Sterrenburg ] 6 Nov Birding in Gibson County [Vicky Whitaker ] 5 Nov Le Cont's, Solitaire, and Surf Scoters photos [Dan Stoltzfus ] 5 Nov Keeping House Sparrows away from bird feeders (no sightings) ["B.G. Sloan" ] 5 Nov Lake Monroe, Stillwater ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 5 Nov Eared Grebe at Eagle Creek [Steve Pancol ] 5 Nov Eagle Creek Park , 11/5/09 [G L Chastain ] 5 Nov Keeping "Our" Whooping Cranes Wild [Dan Kaiser ] 5 Nov Washington Co. ["Castrale, John" ] 5 Nov Whooping Crane Sightings ["Feaster, Brad" ] 4 Nov near Gibson Lake, Gibson County [Y Harris ] 4 Nov Ewing Bottoms Sandhill Crane [Dan Kaiser ] 4 Nov Hawthorn Mine, Goose Pond, Beehunter ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 4 Nov Lk. Lemon - BLSC [Jim Hengeveld ] 4 Nov GRAY CATBIRD ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 4 Nov FW: eBird Report - Falls of the Ohio (IN) , 11/4/09 [Ed Peter ] 4 Nov Marian College Ecolab , 11/4/09 [G L Chastain ] 4 Nov Re: Hummingbird 10-17-09 ["Allen T. Chartier" ] 4 Nov Hummingbird 10-17-09 [Brian Taylor ] 4 Nov Midwest Birding Symposium Audio Clips [WERNER KARL ] 3 Nov Pigeon River & Steuben Co. [] 3 Nov Lake Monroe (Fairfax, Paynetown) ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 3 Nov Eagle Marsh, Ft Wayne [] 3 Nov Red breasted Nuthatch [Russell Allison ] 3 Nov Birding in Gibson County [Vicky Whitaker ] 3 Nov Wild turkey [Spring Ryding ] 3 Nov Posey Co.: Hovey Lake FWA, Twins Swamps Preserve [Charles Crawford ] 3 Nov Eagle Creek Park - 11/2 and 11/3 [Steve Pancol ] 3 Nov Goose Pond FWA waterfowl count Nov 3 2009 ["Brittain, Ross Alan" ] 3 Nov Unknown photographer [Richard Patterson ] 3 Nov Christmas and Winter Feeder Count Information [Richard Patterson ] 2 Nov Eastern Screech Owl [Spring Ryding ] 2 Nov Birding in Gibson County [Vicky Whitaker ] 2 Nov Birding Report 11/2/09 [Ed Peter ] 2 Nov Re: Odd Cooper's Hawk behavior ["B.G. Sloan" ] 2 Nov Townsend's Solitaire - NO [Canyon Wren ] 2 Nov Lk. Lemon - 11/1 [Jim Hengeveld ] 2 Nov Pipits [David Crouch ] 2 Nov Winter Wren in Elkhart [Trice Berkley ] 2 Nov Re: Odd Cooper's Hawk behavior [Tom Leggett ] 2 Nov Re: Odd Cooper's Hawk behavior [Matthew Enos ] 2 Nov Norton automatic renewal Cancelled [Rick Read ] 2 Nov Lake Monroe ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 2 Nov IAS feeder count ["Castrale, John" ] 2 Nov Lake Monroe [Mike Clarke ] 2 Nov November Pewees at Pine Creek GHA [Ed Hopkins ] 2 Nov Scissor-tailed Flycatcher - NO ["B.G. Sloan" ] 2 Nov GPFWA Ibis sp and Cattle Egret [Lee Sterrenburg ] 2 Nov West Beach Solitaire [Clint Maddox ] 2 Nov Lakeshore supplement, 31 Oct 2009 ["Dunning, John B" ] 2 Nov Townsend's Solitaire [Canyon Wren ] 2 Nov Suday:West Beach Townsend's Solitaire...no Cattle Egret yes [Bob Huguenard ] 1 Nov Elkhart Co. Le Conte's, Lincoln's, & Fox Sparrows [Leland Shaum ] 1 Nov Close Encounter of Avian Kind [Greg Oskay ] 1 Nov FW: eBird Report - Charlestown SP , 11/1/09 [Ed Peter ] 1 Nov Zimmerman Wetlands - 110109 [Jeff Riegel ] 1 Nov Muscatatuck NWR [Tom and Colleen Becker ] 1 Nov Cental NW IN, Pewees, 11/1/09 [Ed Hopkins ] 1 Nov Celery Bog ,Hayes St. feeders [Russell Allison ] 1 Nov Downtown Indy - a Coot! [Don Gorney ] 1 Nov Scissor-tailed Flycatcher info (no sighting) ["B.G. Sloan" ] 1 Nov Scissor-tail; Red-thr. Loon ["Whitehead, Donald R." ] 1 Nov Re: Lakefront 31Oct09 Red Phal., T. Solitaire, Red X-bill [Jeff McCoy ] 1 Nov notes for the archives: Beverly Shores 24 Oct- 30 OCWA's [Jeff McCoy ] 1 Nov Wabash Co. yardbirds: brown creepers [Lynnanne ] 1 Nov Scissor-tailed Flycatcher - yes [Susan Hengeveld ] Subject: JP Sandhills From: Beverly Richardson <beverlybird1217 AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Sat, 7 Nov 2009 07:22:47 -0500 An IDNR website lists a count of 10,200 on 11-3-09. ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: N.W.Indiana 11/05,11/06 - Swallows, Warblers, Pelicans From: Michael Topp <mtopp7927 AT AOL.COM> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 22:40:59 -0500 I checked some spots in N.W. Indiana the last couple of mournings.
I also posted some new pictures.
*Photos
11/06
MILLER BEACH:
Highlights include Barn Swallows, Snow Buntings, Loons, Scoters.
12-C.Loons * (Flight shot)
15-Horned Grebes
8-D.C.Cormorants
15-Canada Geese (Flying in off the Lake)
2-Cackling Geese (With the Canada Geese)
10-Mallards
1-Black Duck (With the Mallard flock)
3-N.Pintail
5-N.Shovelers
20-Ring-necked Ducks
10-Greater Scaup
30-Scaup (Sps.)
2-Redhead
5-Surf Scoters (Diving off Lake Street)
3-Bufflehead
1-Red-tailed Hawk
3-Great Black-backed Gulls (1-Adult)
1-Red-bellied Woodpecker
2-BARN SWALLOWS (Juvs.) * (Bad photos- they were out a ways)
1-Red-breasted Nuthatch
2-E.Bluebirds
4-Lapland Longspurs (Landed on the beach)
180+ Snow Buntings
9-Horned Larks (On the beach)
GIBSON WOODS (Hammond0
1-Coopers Hawk *
3-W.T.Sparrows
11/5
MILLER Beach:
5-C.Loons
17-Horned Grebes
5-D.C.Cormorants
40-Scaup (Sps.)
1-A.Kestrel
17-Bonaparte's Gulls (14 Adults, 3-Juvs.) * (Flight Shots)
1-Dunlin
1-Sanderling (Juv.)
6-A.Crows
1-N.Flicker
15-Blue Jays
2-E.Blubirds
17-Snow Buntings
2-Horned Larks
FORSYTHE Park:
19-Mute Swans
1-ORANGE-CROWNED Warbler (This bird had quite yellow undersides -
perhaps a Western subspecies) * Bad photos
1-PALM Warbler
Hammond Bird Sanctuary :
1- Coopers Hawk
1-N.Flicker
1-Belted Kingfisher
3-G.C.Kinglets
1-R.C.Kinglet
1-Y.R.Warbler
1-Winter Wren
2-Fox Sparrows
3-W.T.Sparrows
10/31
Forsythe Park :
2-A.Pelicans *
1-Y.R.Warbler
also at my feeded (11/01) - Red-breasted Nuthatch
Michael Topp
Highland IN.
New Pictures : Townsend's Solitaire, White Pelican, Common Loon,
Barn Swallow, Orange-crowned Warbler, Cooper's Hawk,
Bonaparte's Gulls.
Photos:
http://community.webshots.com/user/mtopp101
In the "New Pictures" album.
**********************************************************
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Subject: Jasper Pulaski - Sandhill CranesFrom: Birder <birding1983 AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 20:43:18 -0500 Has anyone been up to Jasper Pulaski lately to see the Sandhill Cranes? I'm thinking of going up tomorrow, but wanted to know if it'd be worth it yet. Thanks, Stephen Lafayette ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Fairfax RED-THROATED LOON From: Amy Kearns <greenpertplus AT HOTMAIL.COM> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 20:51:40 -0500 I birded around Monroe County today. The highlight was an adult RED- THROATED LOON in basic plumage at the Fairfax marina. Lake Lemon was nice with several Ruddy Ducks, some Horned Grebes and a few Bonaparte's Gulls. Stillwater, Paynetown & Cutright were pretty dull. I did find a Dark-eyed Junco that had florescent bands on its legs (right leg orange, left leg pink over silver). Anyone know what those florescent color bands are all about? Amy Kearns Mitchell ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Sandhill Cranes From: Ed Peter <e.peter AT INSIGHTBB.COM> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 20:28:16 -0500 Beautiful day for birding! Drove north today to check on Sandhill Cranes. Stopped at Starve Hollow on the way to Medora (I have observed Sandhills near Medora in the past.). Did not see any Sandhills until were close to Ewing Bottoms. Ewing Bottoms is just west of Brownstown in Jackson County. Scanned the flock with my scope but did not observe any cranes other than Sandhills. Stopped at Muscatatuck on the way home. Location: Ewing Bottoms Observation date: 11/6/09 Number of species: 2 Red-tailed Hawk 1 Sandhill Crane 700 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Location: Starve Hollow SRA Observation date: 11/6/09 Number of species: 21 Canada Goose 60 Mallard 4 Ring-necked Duck 5 Northern Bobwhite 1 Common Loon 1 Pied-billed Grebe 2 Turkey Vulture 2 Killdeer 18 Mourning Dove 4 Downy Woodpecker 1 Northern Flicker 1 Pileated Woodpecker 2 Blue Jay 2 American Crow 3 Carolina Chickadee 2 American Robin 2 Northern Mockingbird 2 European Starling 2 White-throated Sparrow 4 Dark-eyed Junco 8 Northern Cardinal 2 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Location: Muscatatuck NWR Observation date: 11/6/09 Number of species: 30 Canada Goose 200 American Black Duck 6 Mallard 6 Ring-necked Duck 15 Ruddy Duck 1 Pied-billed Grebe 1 Great Blue Heron 2 Turkey Vulture 2 American Coot 5 Killdeer 4 Mourning Dove 6 Downy Woodpecker 1 Northern Flicker 1 Pileated Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 4 American Crow 3 Carolina Chickadee 2 Tufted Titmouse 2 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 Eastern Bluebird 2 American Robin 2 Northern Mockingbird 2 European Starling 4 Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 1 Song Sparrow 3 Dark-eyed Junco 3 Northern Cardinal 2 Purple Finch 2 House Finch 2 American Goldfinch 2 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Ed Peter Floyds Knobs ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Golden Eagle at Pigeon River FWA and Steuben Co. birds From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 19:25:01 EST Today Leland Shaum, Perry Miller, Gary Chupp and I went to find a reported Whooping Crane in Steuben Co. without success. However we had a productive day. First we saw a Rough Legged Hawk near Perry Miller's home in Elkhart County and then went to Pigeon River Fish and Wildlife Area and while driving east on 300N a Juvenile Golden Eagle flew north across 300N just ahead of us just before we reached 1100E. The white patches on the underside of the wings were clearly seen and the white base of the tail. Leland spotted it north of us again when we went east into Steuben County. So it can be counted for both counties. We stopped at the Waterfowl Resting Area at the Steuben County line and saw: 8 White Fronted Geese 8 Mute Swans 300 or more Canada Geese Mallards 2 Blue-winged Teal 1 Wild Turkey We crossed route 327 about a 1/2 mile and stopped to see Sandhill Cranes and recorded: 241 Sandhill Cranes 1 Red-tailed Hawk 6 approximately Horned Larks 2 E. Blue Birds 700 + Red-winged Blackbirds 3 Am. Tree sparrows At about 4:30 the Cranes began leaving and Canada Geese moved in.So we went north to the Fawn River Fish Hatchery and found: 1 Great Blue Heron 2 Hooded Mergansers 31 Killdeer 1 Greater Yellowlegs 1 Dunlin 9 Wilson's Snipe 6 Mourning Doves 2 Am. Tree Sparrows Also of note was Gary Chupp's observation of a Redstart at his house in Elkhart Co yesterday and Perry Miller's observation of an Adult Bald Eagle flying over his place several days ago. Dan Stoltzfus Goshen Elkhart county ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Hawthorn Mine, Beehunter From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 13:57:56 -0500 This morning I took two Alabama birders, Lorna West and Caroline Snow
(now from TN) to Hawthorn and points in between. The objective of our
venture was to find Rough-legs, Tree Sparrows, and Northern Shrike. For
the morning we scored 2 out of 3 - amazingly, we failed on Tree
Sparrows. Had them at Hawthorn a week ago, but nowhere today. The
morning's highlights:
Hawthorn:
Rough-legged Hawk - 4 (2 dark phase - one an adult female; 2 light phase -
one adult female - the two other birds were both immatures)
No. Harrier - 14 (5 males, 9 imm)
Red-tailed Hawk - 6
Tree Sparrows - ZERO!
Beehunter - on way home:
Northern Shrike - 1 (at about 10:05 - perched in small tree on S side of
CR100S - just W of the drive to the old house - flew further E to the
N side of 100 - then flew a little further E - each time landing in
a low tree. Then took off and flew N - still about 50 yds W of the
drive. could not see where it landed.)
Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu
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Subject: Re: What is torpor?From: "Allen T. Chartier" <amazilia1 AT COMCAST.NET> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 13:54:31 -0500 Judy, Normally hummingbirds go into torpor perched on branches and don't fall off. The perches on feeders are slippery and when the bird is in torpor it is no longer consciously maintaining its balance so occasionally can slip off the perch or even rarely upside down. Allen T. Chartier amazilia1(at)comcast.net Inkster, Michigan, USA ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ron & Judy Green"Subject: Re: What is torpor? From: Ron & Judy Green <rjgreen123 AT EIWIFI.COM> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 13:18:08 -0500 Last year in two separate incidences I had a couple of hummers fall off of the perches at the feeder from extreme torpidity. I was teased and told I might be feeding them fermented sugar water, but that was not the case. The hummers were leaning backwards and fell to the ground. I went outside, put gloves on and was able to pick the hummer up into my hands to warm it. When it was warm it flew away. This seemed to happen near dusk when the sun was disappearing. I have a couple of pictures of me holding the hummer. Judy Green Grant Co. -----Original Message----- From: Bird discussion list for Indiana [mailto:IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] On Behalf Of Allen T. Chartier Sent: Friday, November 06, 2009 12:44 PM To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] What is torpor? Birders, I got this inquiry privately asking about torpor, and thought more people might be interested so I have forwarded it here with the permission of the original poster... ----- Original Message ----- From: raytroyer AT comcast.net To: Allen T. Chartier Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 9:01 AM Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Hummingbird 10-17-09 Allen, Is torbor a state of shock or rest, and is there a recovery rate? I assume it's caused by over exertion? [snip]Thanks, Ray Troyer Goshen, Elkhart, IN ----- Original Message ----- From: Allen T. Chartier To: raytroyer AT comcast.net Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 9:47 AM Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Hummingbird 10-17-09 Ray, Torpor is an adaptation in most hummingbirds, and some other bird families, that allows them to conserve energy on cold nights. They reduce their metabolism, slowing their heart and breathing rates considerably. This is similar to what bats do when they hibernate in caves. Rufous Hummingbirds have been known to survive nighttime temperatures as low as 1-5 degrees farenheit, while Ruby-throats are probably somewhat less cold tolerant. So, I would not use any of the terms you used, as it is not "shock" or "rest" really, and since they do it on purpose it isn't really accurate to call it a "recovery rate". I hope this helps. Allen T. Chartier amazilia1(at)comcast.net Inkster, Michigan, USA ----- Original Message ----- From: "Allen T. Chartier"Subject: What is torpor? From: "Allen T. Chartier" <amazilia1 AT COMCAST.NET> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 12:43:39 -0500 Birders, I got this inquiry privately asking about torpor, and thought more people might be interested so I have forwarded it here with the permission of the original poster... ----- Original Message ----- From: raytroyer AT comcast.net To: Allen T. Chartier Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 9:01 AM Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Hummingbird 10-17-09 Allen, Is torbor a state of shock or rest, and is there a recovery rate? I assume it's caused by over exertion? [snip]Thanks, Ray Troyer Goshen, Elkhart, IN ----- Original Message ----- From: Allen T. Chartier To: raytroyer AT comcast.net Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 9:47 AM Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Hummingbird 10-17-09 Ray, Torpor is an adaptation in most hummingbirds, and some other bird families, that allows them to conserve energy on cold nights. They reduce their metabolism, slowing their heart and breathing rates considerably. This is similar to what bats do when they hibernate in caves. Rufous Hummingbirds have been known to survive nighttime temperatures as low as 1-5 degrees farenheit, while Ruby-throats are probably somewhat less cold tolerant. So, I would not use any of the terms you used, as it is not "shock" or "rest" really, and since they do it on purpose it isn't really accurate to call it a "recovery rate". I hope this helps. Allen T. Chartier amazilia1(at)comcast.net Inkster, Michigan, USA ----- Original Message ----- From: "Allen T. Chartier"Subject: Northern Shrike at Beehunter Marsh From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 10:53:11 -0500 Don Whitehead called a few minutes ago to report a NORTHERN SHRIKE at Beehunter Marsh at Goose Pond FWA. The shrike as along CR 100 S, west of the farmhouse driveway. It eventually flew northward up the driveway toward the ruined farmhouse in Unit BH5. --Lee Sterrenburg Bloomington ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Birding in Gibson County From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET> Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 08:44:21 -0500 I had a Ruby-throated hummingbird at my feeder. 11-5-09 Visited three times before to dark to see. 11-6-09 Have seen her once this moring already. ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Le Cont's, Solitaire, and Surf Scoters photos From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 22:58:52 EST My computer is working again and I am giving a bird list from Leland
Shaum's home place and a Webshots site to see his pictures taken Oct 31 and
Nov.
1
Check this web site for the pictures:
_http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/575371403hPVRTO_
(http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/575371403hPVRTO)
Our bird list from Leland Shaum's home place Nov. 1 2009
Location: L. Shaum homestead
Observation date: 11/1/09
Notes: Leland Shaum discovered the LeCont's Sparrow and called me. We
(his wife Sharon and his children went back and refound it and Leland got
very good photos of it which I put on Webshots and can be shared.
Number of species: 23
Canada Goose 30
Mourning Dove 14
Downy Woodpecker 2
Hairy Woodpecker 1
Northern Flicker 1
Blue Jay 2
Horned Lark 3
Black-capped Chickadee 2
Tufted Titmouse 1
White-breasted Nuthatch 2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2
Eastern Bluebird 3
American Robin 10
Yellow-rumped Warbler 1
Le Conte's Sparrow 1
Fox Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 2
Lincoln's Sparrow 2
White-crowned Sparrow 3
Northern Cardinal 5
Red-winged Blackbird 40
House Finch 2
American Goldfinch 6
This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
**********************************************************
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Subject: Keeping House Sparrows away from bird feeders (no sightings)From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 17:06:20 -0800 Â
Almost seven weeks ago I posted a request to a couple of birding lists, asking
for advice on how to keep House Sparrows (HOSPs) away from backyard bird
feeders.
Evidently this is a popular topic. I received nearly 50 replies to my question,
by far the most responses I’ve ever received for an e-mail question. Thanks
to all who took the time to reply!
The responses ranged from despair ("It is a lost cause") to resignation ("We
have decided that if we are going to have birds, we can't select what we
feed. Take what comes."). Several people suggested violent but tempting
solutions. For example: "How about a sawed-off shotgun?" and "I'm convinced
that there is only one way to keep them from your feeder. Two letters...BB."Â
:-)
The advice people offered can be broken down into two categories: 1) The type
of feed to use (and/or NOT use), and 2) Equipment.
The most interesting aspect of the "type of feed" advice is that people
have experienced contradictory results, i.e, what worked for some people did
not work for others. For example, where one person said they got rid of
sparrows by offering safflower seed, another remarked that their sparrows got
used to safflower and started eating it. Where one person said they solved
their problem by only using feed with no millet or cracked corn, another
related that this did not solve their HOSP problem. A couple of folks said
HOSPS didn’t like peanut pieces, while another said their HOSPs liked them
("we have 45 or so House Sparrows at our feeder and they consume everything,
including peanut pieces"). And one person even said that black oil sunflower
seed worked for them at one residence, but when they moved to another house the
HOSPs there LOVED black oil sunflower. A couple of people suggested
"diversionary feeding" (feeding cracked corn and white millet on
the ground away from the feeders), while others tried that without success.
In my original note I also said I was considering feeding peanut pieces.
Several people encouraged me to do so, saying it would attract many desirable
species. But others warned of possible dire consequences: "If a squirrel or
raccoon can get to the feeder it WILL be destroyed" and "The squirrels will
tear your feeders apart trying to get to the peanuts. I really would
discourage feeding peanut pieces for that reason." More on my experiences with
squirrels and raccoons in a bit.
As far as equipment is concerned, several people suggested various solutions
that used monofilament fishing line. They all said it worked like a charm in
keeping the HOSPs away from the feeder. But two of them had experiences with
other species getting tangled in the lines and decided it was not worth the
risk. Another birdwatcher said the monofilament tends to tangle with itself on
a windy day. While it sounds like it has potential, I’d rather not risk the
chance of having to untangle a bird from monofilament. From my experience with
fishing, it’s bad enough when monofilament gets tangled with itself, let
alone with a bird.
Very few people had suggestions with regard to bird feeders. There were
suggestions about how to keep squirrels away from feeders if I decided to feed
peanut pieces, but very little about the feeders themselves. But the overall
best piece of advice I received was about feeders. One backyard
birdwatcher gave some great advice when she said: "The perches are the problem
– get rid of the perches." Apparently HOSPs don’t like feeders without
perches.
Intrigued by this suggestion I went into my storage shed and found two feeders
that would let me conduct a "no perches" experiment (note: I stopped putting
out bird feed for about six weeks prior to beginning this experiment a month
ago, so this might have some bearing on my success so far).
1. This feeder from Wild Birds Unlimited has perches, but they can be flipped
up. I tied them up with garbage bag twisty ties, just in case an enterprising
HOSP figured out how to flip them down. Birds cling to a metal mesh to get at
the feeding ports. I filled this one with sunflower hearts.
http://tinyurl.com/y87zpy8
2. This Duncraft feeder has no perches. I filled this one with a woodpecker
feed mix (shelled peanuts, sunflower kernels, corn, pecans, pistachios, shelled
pumpkin seed, and dried cherries).
http://tinyurl.com/yewynl8
Both of these feeders have the added advantage of being squirrel-proof. I’ve
never seen a squirrel get anything out of them in the past. And I found out
that they are raccoon-proof as well. The night after I added the woodpecker mix
a raccoon destroyed my ceramic birdbath while trying to reach the feeder. It
must have perched on the edge of the birdbath and tipped it over. The next
night a raccoon knocked over the stand that holds the feeders and scattered the
feeders across the patio. The feeders were fine and lost very little feed. I
weighted down the base of the stand and have had no problems since.
The HOSPs definitely do NOT seem to like the perch-less feeders. The Tufted
Titmice, Carolina Chickadees, White and Red-breasted Nuthatches, Hairy and
Downy and Red-bellied and Red-headed Woodpeckers all LOVE the setup. I will
occasionally scatter some seed on the ground to keep the juncos and other
winter sparrows interested, so I do have a few HOSPs around, but not on the
feeders.
Â
I've only been doing this for a month, so I think the jury's still out on this
experiment, but so far, so good (fingers crossed tightly!).
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
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Subject: Lake Monroe, StillwaterFrom: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 15:51:40 -0500 This morning I visited both Paynetown and Cutright on Lake Monroe and
then, later in the morning, wandered to Stillwater. The highlights;
Paynetown:
Ring-necked Duck - 4
Common Loon - 31
Am. Coot - 18
Great Blue Heron - 2
Bald Eagle - 4 (adults - two of them over mid-lake, stooping on coot)
Red-tailed Hawk - 2
Turkey Vulture - 35
Golden-cr. Kinglet - 4
Am. Robin - 16
Cutright:
Canada Goose - 3
Ring-billed Gull - 8
Bonaparte's Gull - 2
Turkey Vulture - 69
Black Vulture - 3
Am. Robin - 11
Stillwater:
Canada Goose - 36
Green-winged Teal - 2
Am. Coot - 21
Killdeer - 2
Ring-billed Gull - 6
Bald Eagle - 2 (adult)
Red-tailed Hawk - 1
Our Yard today:
Cooper's Hawk - 1 (imm)
E. Phoebe - 1 (on fence around our garden)
Chipping Sparrow - 2
Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu
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Subject: Eared Grebe at Eagle CreekFrom: Steve Pancol <s.pancol AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 12:40:21 -0500 Haley Samuelson-Couchman and I found an EARED GREBE at Eagle Creek Park, Indianapolis, on Thursday. The bird was seen from the marina within the park. WHen we saw it was at about 1 o'clock from the martin house off the marina point. It was loosely associating with two Horned Grebes. Steven Pancol refound the bird at about 12:15pm but it was at 10 o'clock from the point and in poor light. It was still with the horned grebes so youi can tell the Eared Grebe by shillouette. Sent by Don Gorney from Steve Pancol's e-mail account -- Steve Pancol Anderson,Indiana Madison County Website:http://stevepancol.com New photos on Bird Alerts page ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Eagle Creek Park , 11/5/09 From: G L Chastain <glcbirds AT MSN.COM> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 11:23:26 -0500 On my way to the park this beautiful morning a male merlin flew across the road in front of me on Lafayette Road just south of 56th St. On the way back home a Kestrel with a mouse in its talons flew across in front of me on Lafayette Road south of 71st. Unfortunately I didn't see a Peregrine to make it a 3 falcon day. But it did start me wondering how many people have had a 3 falcon day, and if anyone has ever seen all 3 plus Gyrfalcon for a 4 falcon day. There was also a male Redhead hiding among one of the 2 huge rafts of Coots. Gordon Chastain Indianapolis > > Location: Eagle Creek Park > Observation date: 11/5/09 > Number of species: 35 > > Canada Goose 8 > Gadwall 5 > Mallard 16 > Redhead 1 > Lesser Scaup 10 > Pied-billed Grebe 5 > Double-crested Cormorant 11 > Great Blue Heron 7 > Great Egret 1 > Red-shouldered Hawk 1 > American Kestrel 1 > Merlin 1 > American Coot 550 > Killdeer 1 > Ring-billed Gull 77 > Rock Pigeon 18 > Mourning Dove X > Downy Woodpecker 3 > Pileated Woodpecker 2 > Blue Jay 8 > American Crow 13 > Carolina Chickadee 12 > Tufted Titmouse 7 > White-breasted Nuthatch (Eastern) 5 > Brown Creeper 1 > Carolina Wren 3 > Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 > Northern Mockingbird 3 > European Starling X > White-throated Sparrow 4 > Dark-eyed Junco 5 > Northern Cardinal 12 > Common Grackle 30 > American Goldfinch 6 > House Sparrow X > > This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Keeping "Our" Whooping Cranes Wild From: Dan Kaiser <dhkaiser AT SPRYNET.COM> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 10:41:57 -0500 Keeping "Our" Whooping Cranes Wild Although not a crane expert by any means, as a volunteer I do have first hand experience with the Whooping Cranes as they migrate through Indiana. Helping track, ID and monitor the birds has made me very aware of their fragile existence and the need to keep them wild. As noted earlier the Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership, WCEP, the people who are responsible for the reintroduction of the Whooping Crane (WHCR) to the eastern US, have requested reports of sightings be limited to the county level, not more specific. There are very good reasons for this. The eastern WHCR population currently consists of 86 birds, not counting the 20 ultralight led 2009 birds, who recently started their migration to Florida from Wisconsin. Many of the eastern population do migrate through Indiana and it is important we keep them safe. Should the location of one or more of these birds become too public they will certainly draw crowds. Uninformed people will then approach too close, even feeding the birds. Indeed this has happened recently in Florida and the result was one bird being removed from the wild due to it leading other birds to populated areas. Fortunately when the errant bird was removed the others returned to better behavior. Young naive birds are particularly susceptible, I have photos of young WHCR dancing along the side of a highway. These birds were seen approaching automobiles, as if to beg for food. One easily sees the dangers here. I know how exciting it is to see these magnificent birds, and one naturally wishes to share the excitement. However we must consider the birds safety. Hopefully in years to come the Whooping Cranes will be plentiful and a joy for all of us to see as they pass through the Hoosier state. For more information see... www.savingcranes.org and www.operationmigration.org Dan Kaiser Columbus ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Washington Co. From: "Castrale, John" <JCastrale AT DNR.IN.GOV> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 08:21:20 -0500 A flock of approximately 100 sandhill cranes (FOS) were catching thermals and heading south around noon yesterday just south of the Muscatatuck River and SR 135. Amy Kearns and I also stopped at a large private lake/marsh along SR 56 southwest of Salem around 3:00PM and noted: resident mute swans (9) Canada geese (~8) Ring-necked duck (5) Pied-billed grebe (~20) Ruddy duck (1) Belted kingfisher (1) Northern harrier (1) Plus a number of waterfowl decoys. Just to the north near West Washington schools, a flock of approximately 200 starlings and 75 brown-headed cowbirds was feeding by the road. John Castrale ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Whooping Crane Sightings From: "Feaster, Brad" <BFeaster AT DNR.IN.GOV> Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 08:19:32 -0500 Over the course of the next few months Whooping Cranes will once again be passing through Indiana. I want to take this opportunity to remind everyone that the Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership (WCEP) requests that details of sightings not be posted more precise than the county level while the cranes are present. Goose Pond Fish and Wildlife Area has always asked, and continues to ask, that visitors honor this WCEP request. If you are fortunate enough to see a Whooping Crane in Indiana you may report the sighting to http://www.fws.gov/midwest/whoopingcrane/sightings/sightingform.cfm . Reports to this address provide useful tracking information to the WCEP. You may also follow the progress of the ultra-light led migration at http://www.operationmigration.org/Field_Journal.html or at http://www.savingcranes.org/whoopingcranereintroductionupdates/8.html Thank you. Brad Feaster Certified Wildlife Biologist Property Manager; Goose Pond Fish and Wildlife Area R.R.#1 Box 431 Linton, IN 47441 Office Tx (812)659-9901 ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: near Gibson Lake, Gibson County From: Y Harris <jyharris1 AT VERIZON.NET> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 22:07:39 -0500 November 4, a bright sunny afternoon in Southern Indiana Activity was noted with the birds. A pair of BALD EAGLES were at the nest and then flew away. An immature BALD EAGLE was also seen south of Gibson Lake. There was more activity with DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS flying in and out of their usual area. Of note in the little lake with the cormorants were 15 HOODED MERGANSERS, FOS. The Mallard population seems to be increasing as does the RING-BILLED GULL population. Only two GREAT EGRETS were seen at Cane Ridge. Pictures of the Bald Eagles have been posted on flickr. http://www.flickr.com/photos/jyharris Yvonne Harris ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Ewing Bottoms Sandhill Crane From: Dan Kaiser <dhkaiser AT SPRYNET.COM> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 20:46:30 -0500 Stopped by the Ewing bottoms, just outside of Brownstown, this evening at sunset. I thought the north winds may have brought something in and they had. 800+ sandhill were seen, many near Ewing road, also known as slab road. Also had a nice surprise in a Great Horned Owl landing on a telephone pole right in front of me, great looks! Dan Kaiser Columbus ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Hawthorn Mine, Goose Pond, Beehunter From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 20:15:58 -0500 This morning Bob Dodd, John Eakin, Don Allen, Jim Mitchell and I
ventured to Hawthorn, stopping at Beehunter on the way (and on the way
back) and at Goose Pond 9/10/11 on the way home. An initially cloudy
day with showers turned into a beautiful sunny day with a nice wind for
raptors. The highlights:
Beehunter:
Canada Goose - 18
Mallard - 6
Black Duck - 4
Ring-necked Duck - 12
Great Blue Heron - 3
Sandhill Crane - 1 (in BH5N)
Whooping Crane - 2 (in cornfield just W of Beehunter at 8:30 - they were
not there later in the day)
No. Harrier - 3 (2 imm, 1 male)
Red-tailed Hawk - 2
Savannah Sparrow - 6
Hawthorn Mine:
Canada Goose - 35
Gadwall - 4
Mallard - 17
Ring-necked Duck - 310
Pied-billed Grebe - 13
Great Blue Heron - 4
Am. Coot - 11
No. Harrier - 23 (6 males, 1 fem, 16 imm)
Sharp-shinned Hawk - 2
Cooper's Hawk - 1
Red-sh. Hawk - 1 (imm)
Red-tailed Hawk - 9
Rough-legged Hawk - 8 (1 dark adult fem, 7 light-phase imm)
Am. Kestrel - 4
No. Bobwhite - 12
Killdeer - 2
No Flicker - 15
Tree Swallow - 56
E. Bluebird - 4
Am. Robin - 290 (huge flocks flying over)
Am. Pipit - 25
Cedar Waxwing - 16
E. Towhee - 2
Vesper Sparrow - 1
Red-winged Blackbird - 250
E. Meadowlark - 25
Co. Grackle - 5000 (huge flocks)
Goose Pond 9/10/11:
Canada Goose - 26
Gadwall - 75
Mallard - 50
No. Shoveler - 2
Ring-necked Duck - 35
Great Egret - 3
Great Blue Heron - 4
Am. Coot - 110
Pied-billed Grebe - 7
No.Harrier - 3 (1 male, 2 imm)
Red-sh. Hawk - 1
Red-tailed Hawk - 5
Bald Eagle - 8 (2 adult, 2 basic I or II, 4 juv)
Tree Swallow - 35
Savannah Sparrow - 8
Don Whitehead
bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu
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Subject: Lk. Lemon - BLSCFrom: Jim Hengeveld <jhengeve AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 20:15:56 -0500 This evening from the base of Shuffle Creek on Lake Lemon: -4 Mallards -2 Am. Black Ducks -9 Gadwall -3 Redheads - FOS -7 Ring-n. Ducks -1 BLACK SCOTER (fem.) - with Ring-n. Ducks -36 Ruddy Ducks -12 Com. Loons -16 Pied-b. Grebes -12 Horned Grebes -260 Am. Coots -18 Bonaparte's Gulls -48 Ring-b. Gulls ******************** Jim & Susan Hengeveld Unionville, IN ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: GRAY CATBIRD From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 16:30:20 -0500 Got home from a fine trip to Hawthorn, Goose Pond, and Beehunter (will post later) and found a GRAY CATBIRD foraging under the spruce tree in our front yard. Don Whitehead Bloomington whitehea AT indiana.edu ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: FW: eBird Report - Falls of the Ohio (IN) , 11/4/09 From: Ed Peter <e.peter AT INSIGHTBB.COM> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 16:17:24 -0500 Black Scoter was a life bird for me. First time I have observed Wild Turkeys at the Falls. Location: Falls of the Ohio (IN) Observation date: 11/4/09 Notes: Wild Turkeys were in a tree on Shipping Port Island. Black Scoter was on Ohio River above MacAlpine Dam. Number of species: 21 Canada Goose 4 Mallard 4 Black Scoter 1 Wild Turkey 5 Double-crested Cormorant 32 Great Blue Heron 24 Ring-billed Gull 6 Rock Pigeon 14 Mourning Dove 16 Downy Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 2 American Crow 4 Carolina Chickadee 2 Tufted Titmouse 2 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 American Robin 2 European Starling 12 Northern Cardinal 4 House Finch 2 American Goldfinch 2 House Sparrow 2 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Marian College Ecolab , 11/4/09 From: G L Chastain <glcbirds AT MSN.COM> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 10:32:15 -0500 The Wed am hike at Marian College Ecolab this morning found Rusty Blackbirds, Orange-crowned Warbler, and a Sharp-shinned Hawk. Gordon Chastain Indianapolis > > Location: Marian College Ecolab > Observation date: 11/4/09 > Number of species: 24 > > Mallard 1 > Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 > Mourning Dove 2 > Red-bellied Woodpecker 3 > Downy Woodpecker 3 > Blue Jay 3 > American Crow X > Carolina Chickadee 3 > White-breasted Nuthatch (Eastern) 4 > Carolina Wren 3 > Winter Wren 1 > Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 > Eastern Bluebird 2 > American Robin 8 > European Starling 12 > Orange-crowned Warbler (celata) 1 > Eastern Towhee 1 > Song Sparrow 5 > White-throated Sparrow 1 > Dark-eyed Junco 4 > Northern Cardinal 3 > Rusty Blackbird 4 > Common Grackle 12 > American Goldfinch 30 > > This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Re: Hummingbird 10-17-09 From: "Allen T. Chartier" <amazilia1 AT COMCAST.NET> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 09:52:17 -0500 Brian, This is the classic pose for a hummingbird in torpor. Thanks for posting! Allen T. Chartier amazilia1(at)comcast.net Inkster, Michigan, USA ----- Original Message ----- From: "Brian Taylor"Subject: Hummingbird 10-17-09 From: Brian Taylor <brian.taylor AT PAR-RESEARCH.COM> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 07:45:55 -0600 http://www.flickr.com/photos/27643609 AT N07/4074175058/ This bird was observed in Rockville, IN - Parke Co. It stayed motionless all evening and night long. It took off sometime around 6am and was not seen again. Brian Taylor Evansville ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Midwest Birding Symposium Audio Clips From: WERNER KARL <karlwerner AT SBCGLOBAL.NET> Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 04:21:35 -0800 I attended the symposium last Sept. in Lakeside Ohio. They now have the audio clips on-line from most of the speakers. Obviously, you miss something by not being able to see the speaker or the slides used, but still it's a cheap and easy way to hear a lot of outstanding birding speakers. Here is the website https://www.birdwatchersdigest.com/mwb/clips.php Karl Werner ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Pigeon River & Steuben Co. From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 20:39:04 EST Art Dahl (visiting birder, Colorado) and I found 59 species, 55 in Indiana, today at Pigeon River FWA, various locations in Steuben County, and the Kinderhook MI sewage ponds. Waterfowl continue to be very scarce, but we came up with Rusty Blackbirds and the first Am. Tree Sparrow and Lapland Longspurs of the season. Our Indiana list, at Pigeon R. unless noted: Canada Goose Mute Swan Wood Duck Mallard Hooded Merganser 2 Red-breasted Merganser 1, Crooked L., Steuben Pied-billed Grebe 8 (4 Pigeon R., 4 L. Gage) Horned Grebe 7 Crooked L. Great Blue Heron Turkey Vulture 1 Cooper's Hawk 1 Red-shouldered Hawk 1 Red-tailed Hawk Am. Coot 20 pond on SR 327 S of Orland Sandhill Crane Killdeer Wilson's Snipe 4 Fawn R. Fish Hatchery Ring-billed Gull Rock Pigeon Mourning Dove Belted Kingfisher Woodpecker: Red-headed 2 Pokagon SP, Red-bellied, Downy, Hairy, N. Flicker, Pileated 2 Blue Jay Am. Crow Horned Lark Steuben Co. Black-capped Chickadee Tufted Titmouse Red-breasted Nuthatch 1 White-br. Nuthatch Brown Creeper 3 Golden-cr. Kinglet 1 Ruby-cr. Kinglet 1 E. Bluebird Am. Robin Eur. Starling Cedar Waxwing Sparrow: Am. Tree 1, Fox 3, White-throated 2 Dark-eyed Junco Lapland Longspur 2 with larks on Steuben Co. 300N just E of hwy 327 N. Cardinal Red-winged Blackbird Rusty Blackbird 3 Common Grackle Brown-headed Cowbird Purple Finch 2 Pigeon R., 1 Pokagon feeders House Finch Am. Goldfinch House Sparrow Jim Haw ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Lake Monroe (Fairfax, Paynetown) From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 19:04:53 -0500 This morning I visited both Fairfax and Paynetown on Lake Monroe -
another gorgeous morning - no fog today. The highlights:
Fairfax:
Common Loon - 14
Pied-billed Grebe - 1
Am. Coot - 5
Ring-billed Gull - 42
Bonaparte's Gull - 10
Killdeer - 12
Great Blue Heron - 2
Turkey Vulture - 57
BLACK VULTURE - 2
Red-tailed Hawk - 1
American Pipit - 2
Dark-eyed Junco - 15
Paynetown:
Canada Goose - 66
Lesser Scaup - 45
Am. Coot - 26
Common Loon - 5
Ring-billed Gull - 10
Bonaparte's Gull - 2
Great Blue Heron - 2
Turkey Vulture - 17
Am. Robin - 15
Dark-eyed Junco - 12
Our Yard:
Cooper's Hawk - 1 (imm fem)
E. Towhee - 2
Chipping Sparrow - 2
White-thr. Sparrow - 6
Dark-eyed Junco - 14
Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu
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Subject: Eagle Marsh, Ft WayneFrom: zzedpowers AT AOL.COM Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 18:04:04 -0500 I visited Eagle Marsh this afternoon. Waterfowl variety continues to disappoint, though the American Coot count set a Marsh record. Also notable was a WINTER WREN and Eagle Marshes first November record (!) of Red-winged Blackbird. Mute Swan 3 Mallard 140 Pied-billed Grebe 5 Great Blue Heron 2 American Coot 330 Blue Jay 1 Winter Wren 1 Eastern Bluebird 1 European Starling 100 Song Sparrow 4 White-crowned Sparrow 2 Red-winged Blackbird 35 American Goldfinch 2 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Ed Powers Allen County ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Red breasted Nuthatch From: Russell Allison <grounds11 AT VERIZON.NET> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 17:51:19 -0500 I had my first of the season Red breasted Nuthatch at 4:00pm today. Also at feeders: American Goldfinch-21-they love those cloth hanging feeders!! Tufted Titmouse-2 Carolina Chickadee-2 House Sparrow-5 House Finch-7 I filled all my feeders, suet, water, rubbed one suet cake on my White Pine tree bark, Filled all of my Thistle feeder bags with new seed. I am feeding Black oil Sunflower seed, Safflower, Thistle seed and suet. Fresh water in four areas. The Cornell feeder Watch begins on Nov. 14 for me. The Indiana Audubon Winter Bird feeder count starts on Nov. 20 The Operation Migration group of (20) Whooping Cranes went 45 miles today. A total of 95 miles so far on the way to Florida. BRING ON THE WINTER! Good birding Russ Allison, West Lafayette ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Birding in Gibson County From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 17:34:47 -0500 11-3-09 1 Dark-Eyed junco (fos) ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Wild turkey From: Spring Ryding <smelryd AT BLUEMARBLE.NET> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 15:09:22 -0500 I saw a wild turkey on my way home from work this afternoon. It was in the grass to the west of the road along South Old State Road 37 across the road from the business with all the trucks just past (while heading south) the sharp curve after crossing Highway 37. I had no idea wild turkeys were so big and colorful. Spring ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Posey Co.: Hovey Lake FWA, Twins Swamps Preserve From: Charles Crawford <cr4d AT INSIGHTBB.COM> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 13:24:28 -0600 Posey County, extreme SW Indiana Location: Hovey Lake FWA Observation date: 11/3/09 Notes: Hovey Lake lake and dikes will be closed for duck hunting beginning 11/23/09 Number of species: 38 Hooded Merganser 2 Pied-billed Grebe 3 Double-crested Cormorant 750 Great Blue Heron 4 Great Egret 24 Turkey Vulture 15 Bald Eagle 2 Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 Ring-billed Gull 5 Belted Kingfisher 1 Red-bellied Woodpecker 5 Downy Woodpecker 5 Hairy Woodpecker 1 Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted) 3 Blue Jay 10 American Crow 700 Mass of crows in a corn field Tree Swallow 500 Carolina Chickadee 3 Tufted Titmouse 5 White-breasted Nuthatch 3 Brown Creeper 1 Carolina Wren 1 Winter Wren 2 Marsh Wren 1 Photos Golden-crowned Kinglet 1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 Eastern Bluebird 12 European Starling 50 Yellow-rumped Warbler 1 Song Sparrow 5 Swamp Sparrow 8 White-throated Sparrow 10 Dark-eyed Junco 1 Northern Cardinal 1 Red-winged Blackbird 500 Eastern Meadowlark 1 Common Grackle 100 American Goldfinch 11 Location: Twin Swamps Nature Preserve Observation date: 11/3/09 Twin Swamps will not be closed for visits, but....Deer hunting will occur on the Nature Preserve from 11/14 to 11/29 and 12/5 to 12/20. Number of species: 24 Turkey Vulture 7 Red-headed Woodpecker 12 Red-bellied Woodpecker 5 Downy Woodpecker 5 Northern Flicker 7 Pileated Woodpecker 2 Blue Jay 3 American Crow 11 Carolina Chickadee 5 Tufted Titmouse 10 White-breasted Nuthatch 12 Brown Creeper 3 Carolina Wren 2 Golden-crowned Kinglet 6 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2 Yellow-rumped Warbler 2 Eastern Towhee 4 Field Sparrow 3 Song Sparrow 4 Swamp Sparrow 6 White-throated Sparrow 11 White-crowned Sparrow 9 Northern Cardinal 2 Common Grackle 150 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Charlie Crawford Henderson KY ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Eagle Creek Park - 11/2 and 11/3 From: Steve Pancol <s.pancol AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 13:38:39 -0500 Eagle Creek Park - Coffer Dam - west channel 11/2 Two Peregrine Falcons were on the island to the southwest of the handicapped parking area. One was taking a bubble bath in the west channel while the other falcon was perched on the horizontal dead tree on the island. This is close to where the gull roost was before rain took away the mudflats. I assume these are the Peregrines which nest downtown. I zoomed in with my Swarovski and saw bands on both legs on one of them. The bands flashed red on both. I could not detect any other colors. Too far away. After bathing, the Peregrine stooped on the Ring-billed Gulls multiple times. 11/3 2 Dunlin 1 Greater Yellowlegs 1 Bonaparte's Gull many Ring-billed Gulls -- Steve Pancol Anderson,Indiana Madison County Website:http://stevepancol.com New photos on Bird Alerts page ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Goose Pond FWA waterfowl count Nov 3 2009 From: "Brittain, Ross Alan" <rabritta AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 13:35:01 -0500 Hello All, Lee had some pressing engagements today so was unable to conduct the weekly waterfowl count at Goose Pond FWA for 11/3/2009. So I helped Brad Feaster do the count in his stead... "Lee Light" if you will. The first part is the official waterfowl count and the last bit is a list of incidental birds seen during the count time (6:45 - 9:00am) and birds seen after the count time. There were no real surprises and the Ibis seen by Dennis Workman over the weekend was not seen by us today. Interestingly, the Great Egrets have abandoned the Main Pools and were all seen in the vicinity of GP11S where they are replacing the culvert to the parking area. The only mud flats were also in GP11S, which is where the GRYEs were seen. GPFWA Weekly Waterfowl Count: Beehunter Marsh: Wood Duck - 14 Mallard - 34 Green-winged Teal - 7 Canada Goose - 12 GP 1 & 2: Wood Duck - 87 Mallard - 32 Canada Goose - 8 Main Pool West: Canada Goose - 97 Wood Duck - 14 Mallard - 114 American Coot - 559 (conservative, the vegetation hid many more, no doubt) Northern Pintail - 8 Pied-billed Grebe - 20 Redhead - 11 Ring-necked Duck - 58 Gadwall - 39 Green-winged Teal - 80 American Wigeon - 11 Northern Shoveler - 2 Double-crested Cormorant - 1 (yes, just one!) Non-waterfowl incidentally seen/heard during the count time at Goose Pond: Red-winged Blackird - 2000+ (at least 5 were advertising males) Other Icterid sp. - 5000+ (mixed flocks of mostly grackles with at least some Brewer's Blackbirds heard twice) Song Sparrow - 3 White-throated Sparrow - 2 Killdeer - 2 American Goldfinch - 22 Tree Swallow - 1000+ Northern Harrier - 6 Sharp-shinned Hawk - 1 Red-tailed Hawk - 3 Cooper's Hawk - 1 American Kestrel - 1 Great Blue Heron - 61 Bald Eagle - 2 Ring-billed Gull - 5 Eastern Meadowlark - 14 Birds seen outside of the count time: GP9: Gadwall - 63 Mallard - 11 Canada Goose - 31 American Coot - 56 Bald Eagle - 2 Great Egret - 1 GP11S (walking the dike along GP10N): Greater Yellowlegs - 9 Great Egret - 11 American Pipit - 1 (flyover) Swamp Sparrow - 3 Field Sparrow - 4 Yellow-rumped Warbler - 1 Bald Eagle - 5 Northern Harrier - 4 Other taxa: Butterflies seen: American Lady - 1 Orange Sulphur - 1 Cabbage White - 1 Seasonally confused frogs: spring peeper - 1 chorus frog - 5 southern leopard frog - 2 Happy Birding, Ross Brittain Greenwood, IN ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Unknown photographer From: Richard Patterson <rpatters AT MATH.IUPUI.EDU> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 09:56:23 -0500 There is a nice picture of a Hairy and a Downy Woodpecker together that was posted on flickr by destabee. Would this person please contact me? Or if you know who this is could you put me in touch? Dick Patterson rpatters AT math.iupui.edu ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Christmas and Winter Feeder Count Information From: Richard Patterson <rpatters AT MATH.IUPUI.EDU> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 09:53:26 -0500 Information and dates for Christmas Counts in Indiana and also Winter Feeder Count Forms can be found on the website of the Indiana Audubon Society, www.indianaaudubon.org under Activities. Some dates are not known yet, but will be posted as soon as I receive the information. Dick Patterson Marion County ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Eastern Screech Owl From: Spring Ryding <smelryd AT BLUEMARBLE.NET> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 23:41:09 -0500 Last night (Sunday night) Dad and I walked in the moonlight from about 7 - 9 p.m. at Jackson-Washington State Forest in the area around Knob Lake. We walked only the paved roadways. Clear skies and full moon or about full. Very still. Temperature at 7 p.m. was about 60-65 degrees. Had dropped significantly by 9:00 p.m., possibly down into the 40's. About 8:30-8:45 p.m., I heard an owl. The bird was more easily heard farther from the lake in the general vicinity of the picnic pavilions where I couldn't even see the lake. I have spent quite some time today listening to owl calls and have identified it as an Eastern Screech Owl. Spring ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Birding in Gibson County From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 23:36:52 -0500 Didn't have alot of time today, but late this afternoon was able to walk part of property. 3 Northern Cardinals 1 Fox Sparrow (fos) 100+ Starlings 10+ Blue Jays 3 White-Throated Sparrows 10+ American Robins 1 Turkey Vulture, see everyday early afternoon Also the last 3 days have been seeing a small hawk I think is a Coopers. Great Birding to all Vicky Whitaker ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Birding Report 11/2/09 From: Ed Peter <e.peter AT INSIGHTBB.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 21:41:17 -0500 Beautiful day for birding. Birding was better at home than at Mt Saint Francis. Blue Jays loved the peanuts (in shell) I put in my feeder tray, they ate a pint of peanuts in under 15 minutes. The Pileated Woodpecker came to the my feeder tray which surprised me as it is less than ten feet from my house. Location: Home - Floyds Knobs, IN Observation date: 11/2/09 Number of species: 21 Canada Goose 14 Mourning Dove 6 Red-bellied Woodpecker 2 Downy Woodpecker 2 Hairy Woodpecker 1 Pileated Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 5 American Crow 5 Carolina Chickadee 4 Tufted Titmouse 8 White-breasted Nuthatch 2 Carolina Wren 1 American Robin 20 European Starling 4 Cedar Waxwing 6 White-throated Sparrow 2 Dark-eyed Junco 2 Northern Cardinal 7 Red-winged Blackbird 6 House Finch 4 American Goldfinch 11 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Location: Mt Saint Francis, IN Observation date: 11/2/09 Number of species: 17 Turkey Vulture 1 Red-tailed Hawk 1 Killdeer 2 Ring-billed Gull 1 Mourning Dove 3 Pileated Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 4 American Crow 3 Carolina Chickadee 2 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 American Robin 2 Field Sparrow 2 White-throated Sparrow 1 Dark-eyed Junco 4 Northern Cardinal 2 Red-winged Blackbird 60 American Goldfinch 3 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Re: Odd Cooper's Hawk behavior From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 18:01:23 -0800 Tom Leggett said: "Regarding Liz's Cooper's Hawk...". Actually, it was my Cooper's Hawk. Let me give some context as to why I thought it was odd behavior for a Cooper's Hawk. My suburban neighborhood has had quite a few Cooper's over the past several years. There are plentiful perches, both natural and manmade. Lots of tree branches, fences, and wooden posts. The other Cooper's Hawks have used these perches regularly. But this Cooper's sits on the flat roofs of parked cars as it hunts, which is different. I'm thinking of calling it "Mustang Cooper". :-) Bernie Sloan Bloomington --- On Mon, 11/2/09, Tom LeggettSubject: Townsend's Solitaire - NO From: Canyon Wren <canyonwren AT COMCAST.NET> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 19:30:29 -0600 A visit to West Beach this afternoon failed to yield the Townsend's Solitaire. We searched for the bird in the area where it was last seen for more than an hour beginning at about 3:20pm. Other species observed at West Beach included: DE Junco 40 Ea Bluebird 2 (M) Blue Jays (4) Am Crow (8) Red-tailed Hawk Belted Kingfisher (Long Lake) Hooded Mergansers 8 (Long Lake) Pied-billed Grebes (2) (Long Lake) Am Coot (60) (Long Lake) Lynea Hinchman Michigan City, Indiana Heart of the Indiana Dunes CanyonWrenatComcastdotnet http://www.flickr.com/photos/canyon_wren "The beauty and genius of a work of art may be reconceived though its first material expression be destroyed. A vanished harmony may yet again inspire the composer, but when the last individual of a race of living beings breathes no more, another heaven and another earth must pass before such a one can be again." William Beebe ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Lk. Lemon - 11/1 From: Jim Hengeveld <jhengeve AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 20:02:01 -0500 Birds that were on the lake yesterday included: -1 GR. WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE (heard overhead at the base of Shuffle Ck.) -1 Common Loon -29 Pied-b. Grebes -1 (juv.) DC Cormorant -- the banded bird ~110 Am. Coots -1 Gr. Yellowlegs -1 (1st-cycle) Herring Gull -21 Ring-b. Gulls -4 Bonaparte's Gulls ******************** Jim & Susan Hengeveld East Lake Lemon Observatory Southshore Drive Unionville, IN 47468 ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Pipits From: David Crouch <david AT PROGRADE.NET> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 19:56:31 -0500 While exploring Crane habitat conditions in the Ewing bottoms on Saturday I had my FOS American Pipits in a couple of the few harvested fields along Jackson County Road 300N. For the records: American Pipit -20 Flocks of 12 and 8 foraging on edges of wet fields. Northern Harrier -1 An especially colorful Juvenile. American Kestrel -3 All three hunting and two were successful. American Crow -11 All congregated in one field. Eastern Meadowlark-3 Dave Crouch Seymour ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Winter Wren in Elkhart From: Trice Berkley <Cellistharpsichordist AT YAHOO.CA> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 19:40:37 -0500 While walking the whippet in the alley between Maple Row and Laurel on Elkhart's west side this morning, John Davis saw a small brown wren with a very short and erect tail (about7am). When we left for work and hour later, it was still there and gave us a great view of a Winter Wren. It was hanging around the thick brush, honeysuckle and Virginia creeper vines behind our neighbor's house. Hopefully it will hang around a few days. Haven't seen one in northern Indiana for quite some time. ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Re: Odd Cooper's Hawk behavior From: Tom Leggett <tom_leggett2001 AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 16:15:51 -0800 Regarding Liz's Cooper's Hawk I concur with Matt that he was simple there. As in Glenview in kentwood by Grand Rapids another surbarban area they seem to do well, last winter I had 2 often come to feeder in same day, a male and female. This year a female is visiting. When I lived in Indiana would have at least one every year. It seems they are increasing with the City life! Also House Sparrows and Starlings and Mourning Doves are they perferred target, so maybe premium bird seeds that cut down on these types may not be good for the feeder birds that we perfer. Happy Birding! I do miss my weekly Indiana birding! Tom Leggett Kentwood,Michigan(Formerly Argos,In) --- On Mon, 11/2/09, Matthew EnosSubject: Re: Odd Cooper's Hawk behavior From: Matthew Enos <matthewenos AT MAC.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 17:07:23 -0600 Regarding Liz's question, the answer might be simply "because it is there." Here in Glenview Coopers hunt suburban neighborhoods and perch where they can see and dive at sparrows and feeders (one snatched a Goldfinch from our sock feeder recently). Across the street I saw a Coopers perch on the overhead light rack of a pick-up truck, the better to spot sparrows in the shrubbery. "Our" Coopers, a juvenile bird that comes around regularly, hops on and around sculpted bushes trying to flush out the terrified sparrows hiding inside. I have seen it jump down and run around a bush trying to get at the sparrows. I think it also hunts from the top of our roof. Somewhere recently I read that Coopers are increasing. Suburban life is pretty good! P.S. To qualify as superstitious learning, something should be truly unrelated to achieving the positive consequence -- e.g., the "lucky" socks star basketball player Pete Maravich refused to wash. Matt Enos matthewenos AT mac.com 319 Crescent Drive Glenview, IL 60025 847-983-0746 847-373-8908 Cell Phone On Oct 26, 2009, at 8:28 PM, Liz Day wrote: > >Over the last few weeks I've often encountered a large Cooper's Hawk > >perched on top of parked cars. The bird seems to be using the cars as > >a hunting platform..... This seemed a little odd to me. > > Never heard of that, but they do have to learn a lot of their > hunting technique, so maybe one day he sat on a car, got a > chipmunk, and decided to keep sitting on cars.... animal > behaviorists call this "superstitious learning". Possible? > > Liz > Indy > > ********************************************************** > Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent > archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/ > in-bird-l.html > To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. > To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: > listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu > With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L > FIRSTNAME LASTNAME > where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. > To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l- > request AT listserv.indiana.edu > ********************************************************** ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Norton automatic renewal Cancelled From: Rick Read <richardaread AT HOTMAIL.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 14:01:17 -0500 I'm logging into Granny mac's email account weekly. She received notification of an automatic renewal of Norton anti-virus software for $55 for the next 12 months. I was able to cancel it and received confirmation (attached). No telling what other surprises await us. Rick Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 10:55:30 -0800 From: katmacneill AT att.net Subject: Fw: Norton Internet Security will not be automatically renewed To: richardaread AT hotmail.com --- On Mon, 11/2/09, Symantec RenewalsSubject: Lake Monroe From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 13:52:06 -0500 This morning I preceded Mike Clarke to Paynetown (saw him coming down
446 as I was heading home!). I visited only Paynetown - fog was just
lifting. The highlights:
Common Loon - 14 (some taking off)
RED-THROATED LOON - 1 (juv) - with 2 Common Loons fairly far out
on a line with the tip of the Allen's Creek peninsula.
Am. Coot - 35 (small raft far out to the W)
Canada Goose - 16
Mallard - 16
Lesser Scaup - 4
Ring-billed Gull - 27
Bonaparte's Gull - 14
Great Blue Heron - 4
Red-tailed Hawk - 2
Cooper's Hawk - 1 (imm)
Turkey Vulture - 51
No. Flicker - 5
E. Bluebird - 6
Am. Robin - 25
Chipping Sparrow - 4
Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu
Dark-eyed Junco - 14
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Subject: IAS feeder countFrom: "Castrale, John" <JCastrale AT DNR.IN.GOV> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 13:41:59 -0500 I will again be compiling the Indiana Audubon Society's Winter Feeder Count. If you would like to participate and need forms/instructions, drop me an e-mail. The first of 4 count periods is November 20-25. John Castrale ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Lake Monroe From: Mike Clarke <redeyegravy AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 13:03:58 -0500 This morning I made a trip to Paynetown, Cutright and Pine Grove on Lake Monroe. Very little on the lake and not very birdy overall. Highlights included a MERLIN flying over the ridge above the pumping station across from Paynetown, my first sapsuckers and Hooded Merganser of the year and a late NASHVILLE WARBLER at Cutright, and an AMERICAN WOODCOCK that I flushed in the woods just above the boat ramp at Pine Grove. Totals for the morning: Location: Paynetown SRA Canada Goose 47 Mallard 8 Common Loon 2 Great Blue Heron 1 Turkey Vulture 29 Red-tailed Hawk 1 MERLIN 1 Killdeer 2 Bonaparte's Gull 1 Ring-billed Gull 9 Mourning Dove 13 Belted Kingfisher 1 Red-bellied Woodpecker 2 Downy Woodpecker 1 Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted) 3 Blue Jay 2 American Crow 12 Horned Lark 2 Carolina Chickadee 1 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 Carolina Wren 1 American Robin 4 European Starling 9 Yellow-rumped Warbler 1 Song Sparrow 2 Dark-eyed Junco 9 Northern Cardinal 1 Red-winged Blackbird 6 Common Grackle 22 Location: Cutright SRA Canada Goose 16 Ring-necked Duck 3 Hooded Merganser 1 Common Loon 1 Great Blue Heron 1 Turkey Vulture 42 Bald Eagle 2 Red-tailed Hawk 1 Bonaparte's Gull 7 Ring-billed Gull 4 Red-bellied Woodpecker 1 Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 2 Hairy Woodpecker 1 Northern Flicker 2 Pileated Woodpecker 1 American Crow 5 Horned Lark 1 Carolina Chickadee 2 Tufted Titmouse 1 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 Carolina Wren 1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 American Robin 6 Cedar Waxwing 12 Nashville Warbler 1 Yellow-rumped Warbler 2 Field Sparrow 1 (had a large growth on top of its head) Song Sparrow 2 Swamp Sparrow 2 White-throated Sparrow 5 Dark-eyed Junco 15 Northern Cardinal 2 Brown-headed Cowbird 2 American Goldfinch 4 Location: Pine Grove Great Blue Heron 1 Turkey Vulture 13 Bald Eagle 2 American Woodcock 1 Belted Kingfisher 1 Red-headed Woodpecker 1 Red-bellied Woodpecker 2 Northern Flicker 2 Pileated Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 6 American Crow 7 Carolina Chickadee 1 Tufted Titmouse 2 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 Carolina Wren 1 Golden-crowned Kinglet 1 American Robin 5 Cedar Waxwing 5 Yellow-rumped Warbler 1 Song Sparrow 3 White-throated Sparrow 2 Dark-eyed Junco 9 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) -Mike Clarke Bloomington ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: November Pewees at Pine Creek GHA From: Ed Hopkins <birder4in AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:07:36 -0500 I looked in Brock’s Birds of Indiana and saw only one November record of Eastern Wood-Pewee (EAWP). Therefore, I will describe the two EAWPs that I saw on 1 November 2009 at Pine Creek Gamebird Habitat Area in NE Benton County. About 11:10 AM, I noticed a dark olive flycatcher in some young saplings near a grove of larger trees along Big Pine Creek. I, almost, didn’t follow up and planned to call it an Eastern Phoebe, but it looked rather small. As I got closer, I noticed that the basal third of the lower mandible was yellow. It had no eye ring. The head, back, wings and tail were a dark olive. The rump was a brownish olive. The under parts were an off white. The wing bars were white, as well as, the trailing edge of the tertials. It had a slight crest on the rear portion of the crown. It, eventually, flew northward toward a line of trees that were connected to a block of privately owned woodlands. It interacted with another bird, which turned out to be a second EAWP. The second pewee was an obvious immature bird. It had a darker breast. It had brownish-white wing-bars with no noticeable light streaks on the tertials. It had yellow on the basal two thirds of the lower mandible. On one occasion, it landed above me within eight feet. When I was leaving, the second bird flew over to a tree and joined the first. Both EAWPs were quiet. Even though it had frosted the previous night, both birds were insect catching on the sunny edge of woodlands. I had carried a camera earlier in the morning searching for sparrows in the Feldt Marsh, but the bird action was low. I neglected to have it with me when I found these birds. ==== Ed Hopkins W Lafayette, IN ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Scissor-tailed Flycatcher - NO From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 07:40:29 -0800 Looks like Scissor-tailed Flycatcher season is officially over. I spent two
hours out on the IU XC course this morning checking out every possible roost
tree, and checking out the bird's favorite roosts multiple times. No luck. That
makes 24 hours with no sightings.
But there WAS a dead leaf in the bird's favorite tree that was cruelly
impersonating the flycatcher from a distance. :-)
The morning wasn't a complete loss. I encountered a few American Pipits. BIGBY
species #178 for the year.
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
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Subject: GPFWA Ibis sp and Cattle EgretFrom: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 10:30:13 -0500 Goose Pond FWA Property Manager Brad Feaster writes to report that Dennis Workman observed the PLEGADIS IBIS sp again in the south end of Main Pool West on Saturday October 31. Details on the location in MPW are the same as in my previous posting about the ibis. Also on Saturday October 31 Dennis saw 1 CATTLE EGRET in the south end of Main Pool West. Brad's email put the Cattle Egret out in MPW and about halfway between the double ditches peninsula and the Brewer Ditch levee at the far south end. There are some trees for roosting or perching out there. --Lee Sterrenburg Bloomington ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: West Beach Solitaire From: Clint Maddox <clint.maddox AT AIRHOP.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 08:28:18 -0500 Hello Birders, Dana & I spent the weekend birding the lakefront , and while at Miller Beach Sat. afternoon were told about the Townsend's Solitaire. We looked for it Sat. with no luck, but did find it Sunday morning about 11:30. It was behind (north) of the restrooms along the blacktop trail to the beach. It was eating juniper berries in the tree just up the hill from the fence. It also spent some time in the Oaks directly behind the restrooms as well as the cottonwoods on the east side by the wet area. Good birding & good luck, Clint & Dana Maddox W.P.C. ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Lakeshore supplement, 31 Oct 2009 From: "Dunning, John B" <jdunning AT PURDUE.EDU> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 08:40:14 -0500 Eleven members of the Sycamore Audubon Society and Purdue chapter of The Wildlife Society worked the lakeshore on Saturday from Michigan City Harbor through West Beach. We recorded many of the same species reported earlier by Ken Brock et al., with some differences. We also stopped at Jasper-Pulaski to see the cranes both at daybreak and in the afternoon. Clearly, the bulk of the cranes have not arrived yet. Highlights: Jasper-Pulaski State Management Area, daybreak Sandhill Crane AT 2000 Michigan City Harbor (very strong winds in early AM, some duck flocks were blown relatively close to shore. We didn't ID the bulk of the waterfowl moving further out) Mallard 27 Northern Shoveler 5 Black Scoter 4 Surf Scoter 3 Scoter species 20 LONG-TAILED DUCK 3 (flying by with 4 of the unIDed scoters) Common Loon 1 Peregrine Falcon 1 (carrying a small waterbird probably a Green-winged Teal) Beverly Shores (11 AM, winds much reduced, again IDs mostly of the close flying flocks) Mallard 15 Green-winged Teal 2 Lesser Scaup 30 Peregrine Falcon 1 Indiana Dunes State Park (feeders) Purple Finch 3 Dark-eyed Junco 3 White-throated Sparrow 2 Long Lake Mallard 5 Green-winged Teal 5 Ring-necked Duck 55 Pied-billed Grebe 1 Greater Yellowlegs 6 West Beach (looked for the solitaire, but winds were strong again and no luck) Horned Grebe 3 Lesser Scaup AT 300 Red-breasted Merganser 15 Jasper-Pulaski (4-5 PM) Sandhill Crane 450 Barny Misner13 AT verizon.net ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Townsend's Solitaire From: Canyon Wren <canyonwren AT COMCAST.NET> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 07:09:35 -0600 Hi All, If anyone has or does re-find the Townsend's Solitaire since Bob Huguenard last looked for it on Sunday at 10:15PM, please let me know. You may reach me at my day time phone number in my signature below. A visiting birder needs this species for a Lifer and would like to see it while here on Monday or Tuesday providing it is re-found. Thanks much, Lynea Lynea Hinchman Michigan City, Indiana Daytime after 9AM: 219/879-0686 Heart of the Indiana Dunes CanyonWrenatComcastdotnet http://www.flickr.com/photos/canyon_wren "The beauty and genius of a work of art may be reconceived though its first material expression be destroyed. A vanished harmony may yet again inspire the composer, but when the last individual of a race of living beings breathes no more, another heaven and another earth must pass before such a one can be again." William Beebe ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Suday:West Beach Townsend's Solitaire...no Cattle Egret yes From: Bob Huguenard <roberthuguenard AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 07:58:42 -0500 Hi, I cruised up to West Beach to try for the Townsend's yesterday morning. I was there from 7:15 - 10:15 local time. At about 8:00 I walked to the beach house and got 2 Western Grebes fishing and drifting slowly east to west. When I returned up the hill to the Juniper trees, a few other birders had arrived. No sign of the Solitaire, but we did have a few interesting birds. Had a juvie Cooper's being chased by a Peregrine. (Which might explain the lack of the Townsend's) I spoke to another birder from Michigan for a while (Allison, a Berrien County Birder). She walked down to the beach house a little later and got a Cattle Egret perched atop the beach house. It then flew to a nearby tree. She came back and alerted me and we both got good scope looks. It took off and flew towards Long Lake, not relocated. (Allison also had a Great Black Backed Gull.) Other birds noted: Eastern Meadowlark - 1 Flyover off the lake Red Shouldered Hawk - 1 Hunting the parking area as I arrived. Purple Finch - 2 Goldfinch - 17 Juncos- everywhere N. Cardinal - 3 Blue Jay - 5 White Throated Sparrow - 2 A. Robin- 3 A. Crows - 12 E. bluebird - 4 Parking area House Finch - 5 Bob North Liberty ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Elkhart Co. Le Conte's, Lincoln's, & Fox Sparrows From: Leland Shaum <sleepyck AT MAPLENET.NET> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 22:05:29 -0500 Today I found a Le Conte's Sparrow at my house. Dan Stolzfus came over and we were able to refind the bird and get great looks of it and some photos. We also found a rather late Lincoln's Sparrow and a Fox Sparrow. Dan may post a complete list and photos later. Leland Shaum Goshen, IN ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Close Encounter of Avian Kind From: Greg Oskay <oskay13 AT NETSCAPE.NET> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 20:26:48 -0500 Shortly after we arrived at our Parke County farm on Saturday afternoon I walked past our feeder and noticed a Red-breasted Nuthatch searching for crumbs in the empty seed hopper. I grabbed some seed to refill the feeder and as I neared the feeder the little Nuthatch stayed put. I took a hand full of sunflower seed and held it out toward it and it looked interested. I slowly approached and when my hand was about 2 inches from it, it grabbed a seed and flew off to a nearby tree. I have never had a wild bird eat out of my hand before. Since it was a Red-breasted Nuthatch made the experience that much more special. Sunday afternoon we had 8 Purple Finches at the feeder. 4 male and 4 female/imm. Greg Oskay Indianapolis ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: FW: eBird Report - Charlestown SP , 11/1/09 From: Ed Peter <e.peter AT INSIGHTBB.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 20:19:59 -0500 Beautiful day for birding! Day started out with an American Kestrel perched about ten feet outside one of my sunroom windows. What a beautiful bird. There were robins all over the north end of Charlestown SP, 125 is probably a very conservative estimate. Saw the Red-tailed hawk perched in a tree in the southern part of the park. Another beautiful bird. Location: Charlestown SP Observation date: 11/1/09 Number of species: 18 Black Vulture 2 Turkey Vulture 4 Red-tailed Hawk 1 American Kestrel 1 Mourning Dove 4 Red-headed Woodpecker 1 Red-bellied Woodpecker 2 Northern Flicker 2 Pileated Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 8 American Crow 12 Carolina Chickadee 2 White-breasted Nuthatch 1 American Robin 125 Northern Mockingbird 1 White-throated Sparrow 10 Northern Cardinal 6 American Goldfinch 8 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) Ed Peter Floyds Knobs ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Zimmerman Wetlands - 110109 From: Jeff Riegel <jkriegel AT BIRDCOUNTRY.US> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 16:59:24 -0800 Ann Maxwell, Phil and Jo Kelly, and I birded the Bill Zimmerman Wetland Preserve at Stonehead (Brown County) today from about 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. Numbers were considerably lower than in past trips there presumably due to our late start, thanks to some very vocal saw-whet owls at Yellowwood State Forest last night. Here's the list: Turkey Vulture - 14 Red-shouldered Haw - 4 Red-tailed Hawk - 3 Killdeer - 2 Belted Kingfisher - 1 Red-bellied Woodpecker - 2 Downy Woodpecker - 1 Blue Jay - 4 American Crow - 15 Carolina Chickadee - 1 Tufted Titmouse - 1 White-breasted Nuthatch - 3 Carolina Wren - 5 Eastern Bluebird - 2 Cedar Waxwing - 12 Yellow-rumped Warbler - 2 Eastern Towhee - 2 Field Sparrow - 12 Song Sparrow - 5 Swamp Sparrow - 8 White-throated Sparrow - 5 White-crowned Sparrow - 9 Northern Cardinal - 5 House Finch - 3 American Goldfinch - 13 Jeff, Ann, Phil, and Jo -- Jeff Riegel PO Box 6194 Bloomington, IN 47407 812-275-5708 jkriegel AT birdcountry.us www.BirdCountry.US www.eaglesatlakemonroe.com ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Muscatatuck NWR From: Tom and Colleen Becker <Cbirding AT AOL.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 19:22:16 -0500 Location: Muscatatuck National Wildlife Refuge Observation date: 11/1/09 Notes: Would like to note that the Brewer's Blackbirds were flying over and Colleen noticed a call note different than that of Red-winged Blackbirds and immediately whipped out the Ipod and deduced they were in fact, Brewer's. As a side note: Many of the crops have been harvested in Ewing Bottoms and as expected lots of standing water. Conditions appear good for the anticipated visit of Sandhills, etc.... 3 Northern Harriers, 2 Red-tailed Hawks and 2 American Kestrel were the only birds of interest. Number of species: 41 Canada Goose 87 Wood Duck 4 American Black Duck 2 Mallard 39 Blue-winged Teal 14 Northern Shoveler 2 Green-winged Teal 36 Ring-necked Duck 10 Hooded Merganser 1 Pied-billed Grebe 67 Great Blue Heron 3 Great Egret 1 American Coot 53 Killdeer 11 Wilson's Snipe 8 Mourning Dove 6 Red-bellied Woodpecker 3 Downy Woodpecker 2 Northern Flicker 4 Pileated Woodpecker 1 Blue Jay 5 American Crow 12 Carolina Chickadee 5 Tufted Titmouse 7 White-breasted Nuthatch 5 Carolina Wren 3 Eastern Bluebird 7 American Robin 5 Cedar Waxwing 7 Eastern Towhee 2 Chipping Sparrow 2 Fox Sparrow 2 Song Sparrow 12 White-throated Sparrow 7 White-crowned Sparrow 1 Dark-eyed Junco 5 Northern Cardinal 7 Red-winged Blackbird 80 Brewer's Blackbird 23 Purple Finches 2 American Goldfinch 15 Tom and Colleen Becker Floyd County This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org) ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Cental NW IN, Pewees, 11/1/09 From: Ed Hopkins <birder4in AT GMAIL.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 18:55:27 -0500 Cental NW IN, 11/1/09 I spent four hours or so at PCGHA. I did some walking in the NE section. About 11:10 AM, I stumbled across an E Wood-Pewee along Big Pine Creek. I followed it around for awhile. It, eventually, flew N to the edge of a privately owned woodland where it joined a second pewee. This sighting is two weeks later than my previous latest record. I was looking for sparrows, but their numbers seemed down. Pine Creek Gamebird Hab. Area Benton CR200N E of CR850E Canada Goose,353 Wood Duck,1 Gadwall,5 Mallard,10 Green-winged Teal,10 Ring-necked Pheasant,6 Wild Turkey,1 Northern Harrier,1, Fem. Red-tailed Hawk,3, adults American Kestrel,1 American Coot,10 Killdeer,4 Mourning Dove,1 Red-bellied Woodpecker,1 Downy Woodpecker,1 Northern Flicker,2 Eastern Wood-Pewee,2 Blue Jay,4 American Crow,44 Horned Lark,4 Red-breasted Nuthatch,1 Brown Creeper,1 Golden-crowned Kinglet,7 Ruby-crowned Kinglet,3 Eastern Bluebird,1 American Robin,30 European Starling,18 American Pipit,48 Cedar Waxwing,47 Yellow-rumped Warbler,5 Eastern Towhee,1 Fox Sparrow,2 Song Sparrow,5 Swamp Sparrow,16 White-throated Sparrow,1 White-crowned Sparrow,20 Dark-eyed Junco,8 Lapland Longspur,32 Northern Cardinal,6 Red-winged Blackbird,510 Eastern Meadowlark,5 Common Grackle,25 Purple Finch,1 House Finch,6 American Goldfinch,13 Mulvey Pond Tippecanoe CR500N at US231 N of Montmorenci Ring-necked Duck,7 American Coot,4 Red-winged Blackbird,6 Brown-headed Cowbird,1 ==== Ed Hopkins W Lafayette, IN ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Celery Bog ,Hayes St. feeders From: Russell Allison <grounds11 AT VERIZON.NET> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 15:14:17 -0500 I arrived at the Celery Bog at 9:30am. Temp.31 degrees , some frost. The water contained Hundreds of American Coot. All weedy areas had many American Goldfinch. Birds seen: American Coot-500 est. Black Duck-1 Ring necked Duck-18 Gadwall-14 Canada Goose-20 Pied billed Grebe-12 Mallard-70+ Northern Shoveler-8 Mute Swan-3 Green winged Teal-3 Great blue Heron-10 Bald Eagle-1-Adult bird sailing West to East over Bog at 12:00 noon. Red shouldered Hawk-1 Red tailed Hawk-1 American Crow-3 Northern Cardinal-3 Carolina Chickadee-8 House Finch-3 American Goldfinch-35+ Blue Jay-3 Dark eyed Junco-5 Golden crowned Kinglet-3 House Sparrow-9 European Starling-25 Tufted Titmouse-2 Yellow rumped Warbler-1 Mourning Dove-7 Northern Flicker-1 Downey Woodpecker-3 Red bellied Woodpecker-2 Hayes St feeders. Cornell Feeder watch starts in 2 weeks. Northern Cardinal-2 Carolina Chickadee-3 House Finch-5 American Goldfinch-16 Rose breasted Grosbeak-1- adult female has been coming to Sunflower feeder for 3 weeks Tufted Titmouse-2 Mourning Dove-2 White breasted Nuthatch-2 Red bellied Woodpecker--1 Downey Woodpecker-1 Good birding Russ Allison, West Lafayette ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Downtown Indy - a Coot! From: Don Gorney <dongorney AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 10:20:17 -0800 Radar showed very strong migration overnight through Indiana so I visited downtown Indianapolis early on November 1 to look for downed birds. I found 15 dead or injured birds. I assume those out birding today will see an increase in bird numbers. There is unlikely to be too many more big migration pushes like last night. Dead birds included: Downy Woodpecker - 1, female (second one this weekend found dead) Hermit Thrush - 1 Tennessee Warbler - 1 Ovenbird - 1 White-throated Sparrow - 4 Live, but injured, birds were: AMERICAN COOT - 1, taken to rehabber, appears in decent shape American Woodcock - 1, not doing well, Swamp Sparrow - 1, taken to rehabber, unlikely to live Song Sparrow - 1, eluded capture The coot was a surprise and I was concerned about being able to capture. But, it turned out to be an easy catch. Assume it was a building-strike (versus road-strike) since it was in the area with the worst building-strike problem and it was huddled next to the building. I also found a live bat which was taken to the rehabber. Have no idea as to species (most look alike to me). Wes Homoya found a live Silver-haired Bat (easy ID) this past week which I took to a rehabber. The one I found today I believe is a building-strike due to location found. Very active in my car and was very perky at the rehabber's. Don Gorney Indianapolis, IN dongorney AT yahoo.com ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Scissor-tailed Flycatcher info (no sighting) From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 10:09:49 -0800 While over on the IU XC course this AM I got to wondering where your average
Scissor-tailed Flycatcher should be at this time of year. From my reading of
BNA Online's fall migration info, while this poor guy is in Indiana dealing
with freezing nighttime temps and frost, his buddies are living the good life
in southern Mexico.
Also, from reading BNA's account of the species' distribution, vagrant
Scissor-tailed Flycatchers are less common in the fall than in the spring: "a
rare but recurrent straggler throughout much of North America from s. British
Columbia and Nova Scotia south, especially during spring; scarcer during fall".
A quick look at Brock's Birds of Indiana indicates fewer than 20 records for
the state. This morning's sighting would constitute a new Indiana record late
date by one day. (Brock lists a late date of October 31, 1931).
Finally, a couple of Horned Larks flew overhead while I was walking the
northern section of the XC course to see if the flycatcher might have moved
there. New BIGBY species for 2009, bringing my total up to 177!
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
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Subject: Scissor-tail; Red-thr. LoonFrom: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 11:11:40 -0500 This morning Betsy and I visited the IU Cross-country course to look
for the Scissor-tailed Flycatcher and then went to Paynetown and
Cutright on Lake Monroe - an incredibly beautiful morning - with much
of interest.
X-country course:
Sharp-shinned Hawk - 1
Red-tailed Hawk - 1
SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER - 1 (on same tree as yesterday)
Cedar Waxwing - 250
E. Bluebird - 8
Am. Robin - 16
Paynetown (initially much fog, returned after visiting Cutright):
Canada Goose - 65
Mallard - 2
Ring-necked Duck - 2
Common Loon - 1 (flying)
RED-THROATED LOON - 1 (JUVENILE) - relatively close to parking area
for marina - about 300 yards offshore on a line to the Boy Scout
camp on the S shore - close to 2 Ring-necked Ducks)
Pied-billed Grebe - 3
Ring-billed Gull - 3
Bonaparte's Gull - 1
Killdeer - 11
Great Blue Heron - 3
Bald Eagle - 1 (adult)
No. Harrier - 1 (imm)
Cooper's Hawk - 1 (imm)
Red-tailed Hawk - 1
Red-sh. Hawk - 1
Turkey Vulture - 66
Am. Robin - 26 (feeding on honeysuckle and sumacs)
Dark-eyed Junco - 25
Cutright:
Canada Goose - 2
No. Shoveler - 8
Ruddy Duck - 1
Am. Coot - 45
Turkey Vulture - 76
BLACK VULTURE - 3 (sitting in parking lot with Turkey Vultures)
E. Phoebe - 1
E. Towhee - 1
White-thr. Sparrow - 19
Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu
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Subject: Re: Lakefront 31Oct09 Red Phal., T. Solitaire, Red X-billFrom: Jeff McCoy <jeffmccoy AT EMBARQMAIL.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 12:03:31 -0400 Saturday 31 October, 2009 The waterfowl flight was so good in the morning that a few of us (John Cassady, Jamie Claus, John Kendall, and Michael Topp) returned to Miller Beach after a mid-day run to view the very cooperative TOWNSEND'S SOLITAIRE at West Beach. Much thanks to Jamie for calling me about this bird (#303 for the year - the RED CROSSBILL and RED PHALAROPE were 301 and 302). It was a lifer for most of Leland Shaum's large group of birders. John Cassady and I then moved to Beverly Shores for a mid-afternoon lakewatch and found the ducks still moving. A check of the weather history for the day for Gary showed west winds 15-20 gusting to 35mph and a high of 48'F. Miller Beach (lakewatch 12:30-2:00pm) - All numbers are in addition to Ken's previously reported tallies. Gadwall 5 American Wigeon 3 American Black Duck 2 Mallard 60+ Blue-winged Teal 4 Northern Shoveler 15+ Northern Pintail 6 Green-winged Teal 13 Redhead 10+ Ring-necked Duck 25+ Greater Scaup 15+ Lesser Scaup 250+ (mostly in large rafts and milling about) BLACK SCOTER 1 (scoters were notably absent today from the hordes of passing divers) Bufflehead 6 Hooded Merganser 3 Red-breasted Merganser 1 (also notable for its nearly complete absence) Ruddy Duck 6 (a rare fly-by of this normally nocturnal migrant) RED-THROATED LOON 3 (1ad swimming & 2 unaged fly-by's) Horned Grebe 8 (21 total in 3 rafts, an increase from the 13 tallied earlier) Double-crested Cormorant 18 Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 (ad) American Coot 1 AMERICAN GOLDEN PLOVER 1 (late) Sanderling 1 Dunlin 75 Bonaparte's Gull 4 Beverly Shores (lakewatch 2:30-5:00pm from Tropical House restoration site) - Gadwall 9 American Wigeon 12 American Black Duck 3 Mallard 50+ Blue-winged Teal 2 Northern Shoveler 13 Green-winged Teal 4 Redhead 10+ Ring-necked Duck 35+ Greater Scaup 20+ Lesser Scaup 400+ SURF SCOTER 3 Bufflehead 4 Horned Grebe 8 Bonaparte's Gull 20 (all ad) Note: They say that most birders under-estimate numbers when counting large flocks and this was proven today. I carefully counted by tens the number of birds in our largest Dunlin flock of the day and arrived at 60 each of 5 times I counted them as the birds coursed back-and-forth along the beach. John Kendall's photo showed 68 birds. This summer when we estimated the Willet megaflock at Michigan City while in flight over the lake we had 150-200, but when they landed a careful count revealed 358 actual birds. Good birding, Jeff McCoy ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kenneth J. Brock"Subject: notes for the archives: Beverly Shores 24 Oct- 30 OCWA's From: Jeff McCoy <jeffmccoy AT EMBARQMAIL.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 11:58:28 -0400 Saturday 24 October, 2009 After birding with Ken Brock's group and getting my much sought-after CLAY-COLORED SPARROW at West Beach, I joined Brendan Grube at Beverly Shores. The large numbers of passerines evidenced at West Beach were also present here, perhaps a mass grounding caused by overnight rains. Brendan had been birding for here for several hours before I met up with him and I continued birding here for an hour after he left. We made a number of quick stops at select locations all the way to Mt. Baldy, employing the screech-owl tape at each stop. Following are combined totals of the highlights. Beverly Shores: Hairy Woodpecker 1 Northern Flicker 1 EASTERN WOOD-PEEWEE 1 (ties latest record for northern tier) Eastern Phoebe 12 BLUE-HEADED VIREO 7 (3rd highest lakefront and 5th highest state count) Red-breasted Nuthatch 1 Brown Creeper 7 Carolina Wren 2 (had not been seeing them since early spring) Winter Wren 9 Golden-crowned Kinglet 47 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 43 Hermit Thrush 91 (3rd highest state count) American Robin 60+ GRAY CATBIRD 5 (largest late fall count - post 15 Oct. - for lakefront) BROWN THRASHER 1 (late) ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER 30 (State record count; Brendan had 23 and I had 12, some of them shared; state record prior to this year was 10 on 12 Oct, 2002, but last week Brendan had 18 on the lakefront 16 Oct. and 14 on 11 Oct.) Nashville Warbler 5 Yellow-rumped Warbler 21 Palm Warbler 8 American Tree Sparrow 8 Chipping Sparrow 3 Field Sparrow 1 Fox Sparrow 5 LINCOLN'S SPARROW 2 (late) Swamp Sparrow 35+ White-throated Sparrow 180+ White-crowned Sparrow 35+ Dark-eyed Junco 45+ PURPLE FINCH 2 Good birding, Jeff McCoy Columbia City, Indiana jeffmccoy AT embarqmail.com ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Wabash Co. yardbirds: brown creepers From: Lynnanne <leavesofthefall AT EMBARQMAIL.COM> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 10:03:03 -0500 The yard is abuzz with birds this morning (amazing what can happen when one decides to fill feeders, huh?!). Nothing much out of the usual to report, but my two brown creepers are back, a yellow-rumped warbler flew in, a male bluebird has now arrived, and my first junco just emerged from the neighboring cornfield. Lynnanne ~ southern Wabash Co. ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu **********************************************************Subject: Scissor-tailed Flycatcher - yes From: Susan Hengeveld <shengeve AT INDIANA.EDU> Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 09:40:31 -0500 Don Whitehead called to report that the Scissor-tailed Flycatcher was being seen this morning between 8:00-8:30am. There were a number of folks looking for it and it was seen in the original tree. From yesterday: > From 10th & the 45/46 Bypass, go East on 10th / SR 45 to the first > stop light & go left on Range road. At the first curve, continue > straight to the gravel road, through the gate (closes at 3:00 P.M.) > & go straight past where the road forks & has a curve to the right. > The road will force you to go left. You can park at another locked > gate and search the field to the south. You can park outside of the first gate and walk into the field also. ____________________________________ Dr. Susan Hengeveld 1001 E. 3rd Street Department of Biology Indiana University Bloomington, IN 47405 shengeve AT indiana.edu office -- Morrison Hall 203 office phone -- 812-855-5239 ********************************************************** Need to read an older IN-BIRD-L Posting? Try the permanent archives search interface at: http://listserv.indiana.edu/archives/in-bird-l.html To post to this mailing list, you must be subscribed. To subscribe, send a PLAIN TEXT (not HTML) email to: listserv AT listserv.indiana.edu With a message body (not subject line!) of: subscribe IN-BIRD-L FIRSTNAME LASTNAME where FIRSTNAME and LASTNAME are your real first and last names. To contact the listowner, send an email to in-bird-l-request AT listserv.indiana.edu ********************************************************** |