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Updated on Tuesday, February 9 at 09:19 AM ET
The most recently received Mail is at the top.


Northern Potoo,©Jan Wilczur

9 Feb Great Backyard Bird Count/Amos Butler Audubon events [Don Gorney ]
8 Feb Close encounter of the Sharp-shinned kind, good raptors, lotsa crows ["B.G. Sloan" ]
8 Feb Orange, Dubois Co [Amy Kearns ]
8 Feb Lake Monroe sites ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
8 Feb new photos from Whiting [Jeff Moore ]
8 Feb Northern Harrier, Allen County []
8 Feb weekend birding ["Wilkins, Vern W" ]
8 Feb Savannah Sparrow Liberty IN - Sandhill Cranes ["T. K. Tolford" ]
8 Feb Snowy Owl - Carroll County-NO [Rick Read ]
8 Feb Snowy Owl - Carroll County [Rick Read ]
7 Feb Gull photos 2/6/10 [John Cassady ]
7 Feb Newton Co: Purple Finch (42) + Merlin [Jed Hertz ]
7 Feb Cane Ridge in Gibson County [Y Harris ]
7 Feb Ft. Wayne terminal ponds []
7 Feb Mating Barred Owls, Vigo County [Jim Sullivan ]
6 Feb Warrick Co: Lynnville Mines, Blue Grass FWA [Amy Kearns ]
6 Feb Cline Ave. Bridge out of service over Indiana Harbor [John Kendall ]
6 Feb Directions - Portage Lakefront Park and Roxana "Pond" [Randy Pals ]
6 Feb Canada Geese [Spring Ryding ]
6 Feb directions in N.W. IN [Jeff Moore ]
6 Feb Gull Photos from Whiting gullfest [John Kendall ]
6 Feb oops [Russell Allison ]
6 Feb Re: Pileated Pronounciation [Morris Gevirtz ]
6 Feb Re: Goshen Dam [John Harley ]
6 Feb Steuben Couny Bald Eagle [Holly Meyers ]
6 Feb Lakefront 6 Feb '10 Gulls Galore ["Kenneth J. Brock" ]
6 Feb No Subject [Russell Allison ]
6 Feb ?2nd Year Golden Eagle?, Vigo County [Jim Sullivan ]
6 Feb A few photos of the OREGON JUNCO from 2-3-10. [Timily Hill ]
6 Feb Re: Pileated Pronunciation? [Timily Hill ]
6 Feb Birds on Goshen Dam [John Harley ]
5 Feb Re: Pileated Pronunciation? ["B.G. Sloan" ]
6 Feb BIRDING IN GIBSON COUNTY. [Vicky Whitaker ]
6 Feb Ross's Goose, Vigo County [Jim Sullivan ]
5 Feb Pronunciations [terry ballenger ]
5 Feb Need advice on finding migrating waterfowl at Summit Lake in March [Ron & Judy Green ]
4 Feb strange little sparrow? [Teresa Moorman ]
4 Feb Pine Creek, Benton County ["Dunning, John B" ]
4 Feb Pigeon River Northern Shrike []
5 Feb 2-3-10...Oregon Junco [Timily Hill ]
4 Feb Re: Pileated Pronunciation? [Tom and Colleen Becker ]
4 Feb Re: Pileated Pronunciation? ["Michael L. P. Retter" ]
4 Feb Pileated Pronunciation? [terry ballenger ]
4 Feb Sandhills and Trumpeters [David Crouch ]
4 Feb Clarification about my "out-of-place Pileateds" posting, plus Blue Jays and Cardinals ["B.G. Sloan" ]
4 Feb Eagles in Indpls [Karen Wade ]
4 Feb Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? [Bob Royalty ]
4 Feb Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees ["Dunning, John B" ]
3 Feb Three Urban Kestrels, seven Pileateds, Crow behavior ["B.G. Sloan" ]
4 Feb Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees [Sue and Ted Ulrich ]
3 Feb Lakefront birding quick stops [Bob Zaremba ]
3 Feb Surf Scoter [Russell Allison ]
3 Feb Spencer County Chipping Sparrows [David Ayer ]
3 Feb Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees [Larry Miller ]
3 Feb Fwd: eBird Report - Shanklin Park , 2/3/10 [Dan Stoltzfus ]
3 Feb Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees [Tom ]
3 Feb Birding in Gibson County [Vicky Whitaker ]
2 Feb Christmas Counts - update [John Cassady ]
2 Feb Eagle Marsh, Ft Wayne []
2 Feb Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees [Ray Troyer ]
2 Feb Harbingers of Spring?? [Bob Huguenard ]
2 Feb Wabash R from W Lafayette, 2/2/10 [Ed Hopkins ]
1 Feb Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees ["B.G. Sloan" ]
1 Feb Birding in Gibson County. [Vicky Whitaker ]
1 Feb Re: Surf Scoter Pictures [Ning Wu ]
1 Feb Re: Merlins going Urban? 2/1/10, W Lafayette [John Cassady ]
1 Feb Surf Scoter Pictures [Ning Wu ]
1 Feb FOY Redbreasted Nuthatch [terry ballenger ]
1 Feb Merlins going Urban? 2/1/10, W Lafayette [Ed Hopkins ]
1 Feb my four raptor commute [Bob Royalty ]
1 Feb Re: Surf Scoter on the Wabash, Tippecanoe Co. ["Dunning, John B" ]
1 Feb Surf Scoter on the Wabash, Tippecanoe Co. [Ning Wu ]
31 Jan Rusty Blackbird Blitz: 1/30 - 2/15 [Jim Hengeveld ]
31 Jan Neighborhood birds - Black Vulture, plus Robins and Crows ["B.G. Sloan" ]
31 Jan Zimmerman Wetlands - 1/31/10 [Jeff Riegel ]
31 Jan Tippecanoe Co., Possible Scoter on Wabash [Ning Wu ]

Subject: Great Backyard Bird Count/Amos Butler Audubon events
From: Don Gorney <dongorney AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 9 Feb 2010 07:19:17 -0800
Ross Brittain's presentation for Amos W. Butler Audubon, Central Indiana, 
scheduled for tonight, February 9, in Indianapolis has been canceled due to the 
weather.  We will reschedule Ross, who serves as the National Audubon Society 
Director of Bird Conservation for Indiana, for a later time.  


Hey, the Great Backyard Bird Count is this weekend, February 12-15!  It doesn't 
matter if you stay at home or make a birding trip, everyone should submit 
checklists.  Submit a checklist each day for each location you bird.  Let's see 
if we can get Indiana in the list of top states submitting checklists.  You can 
find out more about the Great Backyard Bird Count and submit your checklists, 
beginning on Friday, at http://www.birdsource.org/gbbc/ 


There are events being held here in Indianapolis to celebrate the Great 
Backyard Bird Count.  Two events that are especially aimed at families with 
children will be held on Saturday, February 13. 


Amos W. Butler Audubon will be hosting a feeder-watching event at Holliday 
Park, 6363 Spring Mill Road, Indianapolis from 9am to noon on February 13 at 
the nature center.  Visit any time between those hours to enjoy the birds 
coming to the feeders, learn more about them, and to take a short hike around 
the nature center to see what birds might be out and about but not coming to 
the feeders.  Everyone is welcome, especially children.  The event is free and 
there is no park admission fee.  Amos W. Butler has other events scheduled for 
the weekend and you can view those at our soon to be replaced website at 
www.amosbutleraudubon.org 


The Indiana Audubon Society's Young Birders Club will be hosting a 
feeder-watching event at the Ornithology Center at Eagle Creek Park, 
Indianapolis, from noon to 3pm on February 13.  Visit any time between those 
hours to watch the buzz of activity at the feeders and to see what ducks and 
geese might be on the frozen reservoir.  Register to win a field guide by Kenn 
Kaufman.  Everyone is welcome.  The event is free but there is a park admission 
fee.  


Remember to watch the birds and submit your checklists February 12-15!


Don Gorney

Amos W. Butler Audubon Society, President

Indianapolis, IN

dongorney AT yahoo.com

amosbutleraudubon.org

lightsoutindy.org

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**********************************************************
Subject: Close encounter of the Sharp-shinned kind, good raptors, lotsa crows
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 15:13:01 -0800
 
Had an interesting experience with a Sharp-Shinned Hawk this morning. I was 
walking along a sidewalk and noticed some motion in a hedge about 50 feet ahead 
of me. The hedge was some kind of deciduous bush right next to the sidewalk and 
maybe three feet high. As I got closer I realized the motion I saw was a 
Sharp-shinned Hawk sitting on top of the hedge. It would alternate sticking its 
feet down into the hedge with poking its head into the bush. When its head was 
in the hedge I would move forward, and then stop when its head popped out. As I 
got closer I could hear a House Sparrow calling frantically. The Sharpie was so 
engrossed in extricating the HOSP from the hedge that I was able to get within 
about five feet or so. Then the Sharpie succeeded in snagging the HOSP. At 
about the same time it realized I was nearby, so it flew away with its prey to 
enjoy a more private breakfast. Very cool experience! 

 
Yesterday was a good day at the IU XC course. Looked like there had been some 
freezing fog overnight...the tall grasses on the XC course had a coarse frost. 
From the right angle in the bright early morning sunlight, with a light breeze 
blowing, it looked like someome had dusted the XC grasses with diamonds. Very 
beautiful. And in addition to the regular Red-tailed, Red-shouldered and 
Cooper's Hawks I also saw: 

 
* Northern Harrier (out over the IU golf course)
* Rough-legged Hawk (perched in tree in northern section of XC course)
* Bald Eagle (high flyover, moving to the NNE)
 
I went looking for crows last night, right at sunset. I drove down 
Buick-Cadillac Boulevard, just south of Bloomington's College Mall. I wasn't 
disappointed. There were at least 1,000 crows massing in Latimer Woods and in 
some trees at the far south side of the mall. The noise was incredible. As I 
drove away to the north on Clarizz Drive. I spotted several more flocks of 
about 100 birds each, heading towards Latimer Woods.  

 
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
My birding blog: http://bird-bs.blogspot.com 
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/birdbs




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**********************************************************
Subject: Orange, Dubois Co
From: Amy Kearns <greenpertplus AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 22:06:57 -0500
I was hoping for Snow Bunting today while surveying for otters in Dubois, but 
no luck.  I still had a good variety of winter birds throughout the day, but 
nothing exceptional.

Orleans Reservoir and fields nearby
1 Red-tailed Hawk 
1 American Kestrel 
60 Mourning Dove 
30 Horned Lark - 1 leucistic bird that had the black face markings and a faint 
tawny wash over the shoulders but otherwise completely white.  It was very 
pretty and ghostlike in the snow.
20 American Tree Sparrow 
10 Savannah Sparrow 
2 Song Sparrow 
5 White-crowned Sparrow 
2 LAPLAND LONGSPUR
2 Northern Cardinal 

Patoka Lake causeway - 60% ice
2 Canada Goose 
3 Mute Swan 
1 Bufflehead 
6 Common Goldeneye - 5 males courting a female
15 Hooded Merganser 
8 Common Merganser 
1 Red-tailed Hawk 
25 Ring-billed Gull 
20 American Crow 
2 American Tree Sparrow 
10 Dark-eyed Junco 

Orange County - driving through on 37 + 150
5 Black Vulture 
2 Turkey Vulture 
1 Cooper's Hawk 
1 Red-tailed Hawk 
3 American Kestrel 
100 European Starling 

Patoka Lake  AT  164 Dubois Co
7 Common Goldeneye 
4 Hooded Merganser 
1 Bald Eagle - adult
4 Ring-billed Gull 
1 Belted Kingfisher 
4 American Crow 

Dubois County - driving from point to point, short hikes along river banks
45 Canada Goose 
38 Gadwall - Patoka Lake
1 Common Goldeneye - Patoka River
6 Hooded Merganser 
5 Common Merganser - Patoka Lake
30 Wild Turkey 
2 Great Blue Heron 
3 Black Vulture 
10 Turkey Vulture 
1 Bald Eagle - adult at Patoka Lake
5 Red-tailed Hawk 
1 Rough-legged Hawk - light phase over corn field
10 American Kestrel 
25 Ring-billed Gull 
2 Herring Gull 
70 Mourning Dove 
2 Barred Owl - pair duetting around noon
4 RED-HEADED WOODPECKER - at two locations, both small riparian corridors 
surrounded by farm fields 
3 Red-bellied Woodpecker 
4 Downy Woodpecker 
2 Hairy Woodpecker 
3 Northern Flicker 
1 Pileated Woodpecker 
2 Blue Jay 
50 American Crow 
50 Horned Lark 
3 Carolina Chickadee 
15 Tufted Titmouse 
5 White-breasted Nuthatch 
1 Brown Creeper 
2 Carolina Wren 
2 Golden-crowned Kinglet 
5 Eastern Bluebird 
2 American Robin 
1 Northern Mockingbird 
100 European Starling 
2 Yellow-rumped Warbler 
2 Eastern Towhee 
30 American Tree Sparrow 
25 Song Sparrow 
3 White-throated Sparrow 
15 Dark-eyed Junco 
50 Northern Cardinal 
15 Eastern Meadowlark 
2 American Goldfinch 
10 House Sparrow 

Amy Kearns
Mitchell

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**********************************************************
Subject: Lake Monroe sites
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 21:10:50 -0500
I made several stops at Lake Monroe sites this morning (a little 
bleary-eyed, as we didn't arrive back from FL until after one this 
morning - but worth it - 154 species - including Masked Duck, Harlequin 
Duck, Western Kingbird - and zillions of shorebirds and wading birds - 
and seafood!). Much of lake now frozen - with various-sized leads, but 
very few birds. The highlights:

Paynetown:
     Hooded Merganser - 2
     Bald Eagle - 2 (adults)
     Red-tailed Hawk - 2

Cutright:
     Bald Eagle - 2 (adult)
     Herring Gull - 1

Fairfax area:
     Canada Goose - 1
     Common Goldeneye - 3
     Common Merganser - 12
     Am. Coot - 1
     Ring-billed Gull - 76
     Herring Gull - 4
     Red-sh. Hawk - 1

Fairfax Road:
     Turkey Vulture - 3
     Black Vulture - 11

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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**********************************************************
Subject: new photos from Whiting
From: Jeff Moore <merlin46783 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 20:17:34 -0500
I made it up to the lakefront on Sunday and managed a few shots of the gulls at 
the Whiting warm water outflow. Was not able to entice any of the Iceland Gulls 
but did manage Thayer's and Glaucous photos. 


I stopped by Roxana and snapped a few shots of the Hoodies and Black-crowned 
Night-Herons, too. 


http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffmoore/

Jeff Moore
 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Powerful Free email with security by Microsoft.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469230/direct/01/
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**********************************************************
Subject: Northern Harrier, Allen County
From: zzedpowers AT AOL.COM
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 16:23:19 -0500
There have been very few reports of NORTHERN HARRIER in northeast Indiana this 
winter, but we saw one this afternoon about 3:30. 

The location was a weedy field west of the curve where Lower Huntington Road 
becomes Winters Road, on the north side of the road. This is near the GM truck 
plant. 


Ed Powers
Allen County




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**********************************************************
Subject: weekend birding
From: "Wilkins, Vern W" <vwilkins AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 13:23:51 -0500
A few highlights from the weekend.

Sat. 2/6

Ellettsville High School

Cedar Waxwing (16) Feeding on Hawthorn berries

Flatwoods Park area fields

Lapland Longspur (2) only picked two out of the Horned Larks but the flocks 
kept moving around 

Horned Lark (90+)
American Kestrel (1)
Northern Harrier (3)
Red-Tailed Hawk (2)

Owen-Putnam State Forest

Barred Owl (1)
Golden-Crowned Kinglet (6)
Usual assortment of more common birds.

Sun. 2/7

Tank Springs Nature Preserve

Nothing but titmice, chickadees, cardinals, and lots of Turkey tracks. A 
beautiful hike though. 


Bluffs of Beaver Bend

Hooded Merganser (1)
Barred Owl (1) heard only
Eastern Screech Owl (1) heard only

Williams Slough (mostly ice free)

Hooded Merganser (26)
Great Blue Heron (3)

Williams Dam

Dark-eyed Juncos and not much else

Vern

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Subject: Savannah Sparrow Liberty IN - Sandhill Cranes
From: "T. K. Tolford" <bandertt AT TOLFORD.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 08:58:55 -0500
Yesterday (Sunday) a Savannah Sparrow found its way into our mist nets 
during our Winter Avian Ecology  Study.

The banding station is just west of Liberty near the Dunlapsville 
Causeway at the northernmost tip of Brookville Lake.

Sandhill Cranes are still flying around overhead as of yesterday.

Tim
www.hbrcnet.org

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**********************************************************
Subject: Snowy Owl - Carroll County-NO
From: Rick Read <richardaread AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 12:03:26 -0500
I searched for about 1.5 hrs this morning but did NOT see the Snowy.
Rick Read
Monticello

-----Original Message-----
From: Bird discussion list for Indiana
[mailto:IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] On Behalf Of Rick Read
Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 9:10 AM
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Subject: Snowy Owl - Carroll County

A Snowy Owl was spotted yesterday about noon in Carroll County close to the
intersection of US-421 and 1100N, about 1.5 miles south of the Luse Bridge
(US-421 bridge) that crosses Lake Freeman.

 

Thanks to Marylou Pumroy. We'll see if it can be relocated today.

 

Rick Read

Monticello

 

From: Larry Pumroy [mailto:pumroy AT hotmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2010 6:21 PM
To: Rick Read
Subject: Home from church

 

Hi,
On our way home from church today. we were approaching our turn onto 1100N.
when a large shadow went over the car. On my side was a beautiful Snowy Owl.
It set its wings (pretty low) and glided into the woods toward the lake. It
was just beautiful. Thats the first one I've seen for about 20 years. Just
wanted to let you know. Marylou

  _____  

Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it
  now.


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**********************************************************
Subject: Snowy Owl - Carroll County
From: Rick Read <richardaread AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 09:09:58 -0500
A Snowy Owl was spotted yesterday about noon in Carroll County close to the
intersection of US-421 and 1100N, about 1.5 miles south of the Luse Bridge
(US-421 bridge) that crosses Lake Freeman.

 

Thanks to Marylou Pumroy. We'll see if it can be relocated today.

 

Rick Read

Monticello

 

From: Larry Pumroy [mailto:pumroy AT hotmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2010 6:21 PM
To: Rick Read
Subject: Home from church

 

Hi,
On our way home from church today. we were approaching our turn onto 1100N.
when a large shadow went over the car. On my side was a beautiful Snowy Owl.
It set its wings (pretty low) and glided into the woods toward the lake. It
was just beautiful. Thats the first one I've seen for about 20 years. Just
wanted to let you know. Marylou

  _____  

Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. Get it
  now.


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**********************************************************
Subject: Gull photos 2/6/10
From: John Cassady <jcassady AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 20:13:39 -0600
Here are some gull shots from Whiting Refinery Beach (Lake County)
yesterday:

 

THAYER'S GULL (2nd cycle in flight)
http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/thgu4.htm

 

GLAUCOUS GULL (adult in flight)
http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/glguFLY.htm

 

GLAUCOUS GULL (1st cycle in flight)
http://www.jkcassady.com/gallery/glgu1FLY.htm

 

 

 

John Cassady

Elkhart 

 


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**********************************************************
Subject: Newton Co: Purple Finch (42) + Merlin
From: Jed Hertz <jhh_60910 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 15:13:42 -0800
Hi all,
 
Friday 05-Feb-10: TNC Kankakee Sands/Willow Slough FWA, IN: 0745-1130H (2 W + 
25.3 D)_OC_32-37_ENE 5-15_Wt Deer (4)_Domestic Cat (2)_Open water in 
ditches_Slough iced-in except for harbor_Ice Fishing in progress. 

 
I took a tour of eastern Newton Co Friday and found 27 species, including my 
high count of Purple Finch (42) (my previous high count was 16 on 11/12/08 in 
Kankakee, IL) in two flocks: 29 near the sunflower field and 13 feeding on 
Honeysuckle berries.  

 
Also a Merlin flew across the road in the TNC Kankakee Sands area - my 6th 
sighting this year (twice at my feeders). 

 
Here's the run-down on 27 species:
 
Anatidae 3 
  ¨ ¨ 150 Canada Goose ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 1 Ring-necked Duck ¨ M 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Hooded Merganser ¨ M 
Ardeidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Great Blue Heron ¨   
Accipitridae 4 
  ¨ ¨ 2 Northern Harrier ¨ Imm + F 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Sharp-shinned Hawk ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 5 Red-tailed Hawk ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 3 Rough-legged Hawk ¨ 2LM + DM 
Falconidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Merlin ¨   
Rallidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 2 American Coot ¨   
Picidae 2 
  ¨ ¨ 2 Red-headed Woodpecker ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 5 Red-bellied Woodpecker ¨   
Corvidae 2 
  ¨ ¨ 19 Blue Jay ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 14 American Crow ¨   
Alaudidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 11 Horned Lark ¨   
Paridae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Tufted Titmouse ¨   
Sittidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 5 White-breasted Nuthatch ¨   
Regulidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Golden-crowned Kinglet ¨   
Mimidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 1 Northern Mockingbird ¨ Photo 
Emberizidae 4 
  ¨ ¨ 95 American Tree Sparrow ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 1 Song Sparrow ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 22 Dark-eyed Junco ¨   
  ¨ ¨ 52 Lapland Longspur ¨   
Cardinalidae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 10 Northern Cardinal ¨   
Fringillidae 2 
  ¨ ¨ 42 Purple Finch ¨ two flocks (29 - sunflower field + 13 - Honeysuckle); 
singing 

  ¨ ¨ 2 American Goldfinch ¨   
Passeridae 1 
  ¨ ¨ 110 House Sparrow ¨   


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

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

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

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Subject: Cane Ridge in Gibson County
From: Y Harris <jyharris1 AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 17:27:14 -0500
About 30 degrees and sunny, snow is coming in again tomorrow.
Diversity of ducks at Cane Ridge was greater this afternoon than normal. At 
the main pool there were:
Northern Pintail - 5
Bufflehead - 4
Hooded Merganser - 4
No Snow Geese were seen today

In the area around Gibson Lake:
Several Red-tailed Hawks 
Bald Eagles - the adult pair were near the nest
American Kestrel - on Cane Ridge Property
Northern Bobwhite - covey of 15, the most I've seen at one time

Earlier in the week at Cane Ridge there were:
Green-winged Teal

A couple pictures have been posted on flickr

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jyharris

Yvonne Harris

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Subject: Ft. Wayne terminal ponds
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 15:51:06 EST
A Sunday afternoon trek to the Ft. Wayne terminal ponds revealed about the  
same species mix that has been there for the past month, with the addition 
of  some Herring Gulls that arrived from places unknown.  Numbers of N.  
Shovelers and Gadwall were down a lot.
 
Canada Goose
Gadwall 6
Am. Wigeon 1
Am. Black Duck 6 or so
Am. Black Duck x Mallard 21 or so (it can be tricky to separate Blacks from 
 Hybrids; these numbers are my guess)
Mallard  maybe 500 or more
N. Shoveler 8
N. Pintail 2 males
Redhead 5
Ring-necked Duck 3
Greater Scaup 3 females
Lesser Scaup 5
Bufflehead 6
Common Goldeneye 11
Hooded Merganser 14
Common Merganser 3
Pied-billed Grebe 3
Great Blue Heron 4
Am. Coot 81
Herring Gull 11
 
Jim Haw
 

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Subject: Mating Barred Owls, Vigo County
From: Jim Sullivan <jb.sullivan AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 14:58:03 -0500
--Something screwy going on with the server... so I hope there are not 
multiple posts.  If there are... sorry!

Quickly becoming the "Larry Flint" of bird photography... I offer my latest 
installment of bird porn.
can be viewd at Flickr link "all sizes". It will take about 5-10 seconds for 
all 

frames to load in before animation starts.

The barred owls were calling. I zeroed in on one and could not see the other 
one.   The male flew in.  As he started mating, he saw me.  [OK!give me a 
break!!... I know I am butt ugly... but how would you like to go through life 

knowing your image is the best form of bird birth control!?!?!].   Yes it flew 
away.  
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimsullivan/4337680061/
If you look close enough, you can see the startled look in the Male owl's 
eye... 

 
The female either must have not seen me [or as I would like to think my 
animal magnetism attracted it], and ended up flying to a tree very close to 
me.  The female was too much... the male flew back for a second 
uninterupted fling.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimsullivan/4338429310/
 
For those of you who missed the first installement with Bald Eagles... here it 
is: 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimsullivan/4319996132/
 
 jim

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Subject: Warrick Co: Lynnville Mines, Blue Grass FWA
From: Amy Kearns <greenpertplus AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 23:57:11 -0500
Today Noah & I decided to go south and check out Blue Grass FWA in Warrick 
county.  It was our first time birding this area but we knew where to go 
thanks to Steven Pancol's SW Birding Tour and recent posts from IN-BIRDers.  
We had a FANTASTIC time.  Our highlights were 6 MERLINS (one of which was 
a either a prairie Merlin or a light intergrade - see notes below), 11 SHORT-
EARED OWLS and 8 BREWER'S BLACKBIRDS.

En Route: Patoka Lake causeway 9:00 AM, 70% open water, winds at 25-30 
MPH, 29 degrees - brr!
1 Canada Goose - flyover
3 Mute Swan 
3 Common Goldeneye 
16 Hooded Merganser 
2 Bald Eagle - 1 adult, 1 imm
2 Northern Harrier - actually .5 miles north of the causeway, flying over the 
woods (a rather strange sight)
20 Ring-billed Gull 
2 Rock Pigeon 

Lynnville Mine areas east of Weyerbacher Rd 10:30 AM 
20 Mallard 
8 Common Goldeneye 
6 Hooded Merganser 
32 Wild Turkey 
1 Great Blue Heron 
1 Turkey Vulture 
11 Northern Harrier 
10 Red-tailed Hawk 
1 Rough-legged Hawk  - light phase
2 American Kestrel 
25 Sandhill Crane - flyovers
8 Northern Flicker 
15 Eastern Bluebird 
6 American Robin 
1 Northern Mockingbird 
25 American Tree Sparrow 
20 Dark-eyed Junco 
20 Eastern Meadowlark 

Wasson Rd-Lilly Pad-Stanley-Weyerbacher 12:00 PM 
12 Gadwall 
4 American Black Duck 
8 Ring-necked Duck 
1 Turkey Vulture 
29 Northern Harrier - conservative count!
20 Red-tailed Hawk 
1 Rough-legged Hawk - light phase
4 American Kestrel 
1 Great Horned Owl - on nest .2 miles north of Wasson/New Harmony 
intersection on Wasson, just ear tufts and eyes visible over the rim of a large 

stick nest, seemed to be incubating
5 Northern Flicker 
1 Blue Jay 
6 American Crow 
2 Carolina Chickadee 
2 Tufted Titmouse 
20 Eastern Bluebird 
6 American Robin 
1 Northern Mockingbird 
10 American Tree Sparrow 
1 Northern Cardinal 
30 Eastern Meadowlark 

Blue Grass FWA 2:00 PM 
23 Canada Goose 
26 Gadwall 
1 Great Blue Heron 
8 Northern Harrier 
1 Cooper's Hawk - adult
6 Red-tailed Hawk 
2 Rough-legged Hawk - light phase, 1 eating a muskrat on the side of the road
1 Downy Woodpecker 
1 Hairy Woodpecker 
10 Northern Flicker 
6 Blue Jay 
10 Horned Lark 
10 American Robin 
1 Northern Mockingbird 
100 European Starling 
50 American Tree Sparrow 
10 Song Sparrow 
1 Swamp Sparrow 
7 White-crowned Sparrow 
4 Dark-eyed Junco 
15 Northern Cardinal 
50 Red-winged Blackbird 
25 Eastern Meadowlark 
8 BREWER'S BLACKBIRD - found by accident after we missed our turn.  In 
trees near a horse pasture on St. John's Rd between Ayrshire Rd and 
Millersburg Rd - there is a huge pile of poo here and a sign that says "Aged 
Horse Manure". The Brewers were mixed with Red-wings and Grackles, there 
were probably more than 8 but they flushed before I was done looking through 
the flock.  5 males and 3 females
10 Common Grackle 
2 American Goldfinch 

South end of Wasson - Hielman - New Harmony - Wasson - Seven Hills - 
Weyerbacher 4:15 PM - 6:30 PM
x Northern Harrier - Stopped counting in the high 20's.  We were focused on 
finding owls
2 Sharp-shinned Hawk  - adults
x Red-tailed Hawk 
6 Merlin - one female on Heilman Rd/300 N that suggested Prairie Merlin or 
perhaps a light taiga/prairie intergrade: extremely light colored overall, 
super 

faint mustache, pale gray back with 'scalloped' look (I don't know if this is a 

field mark or not), when she flushed the white on the tail bands was wider 
than typical taiga Merlin and she was very pale underneath.  I took some poor 
pictures through the scope, posted on my flicker 
(http://www.flickr.com/photos/37627358 AT N07/?saved=1) - would love to 
hear comments on this!  I'm also interested in learning more about female vs 
juvenile plumages.  I'd never seen such a light colored Merlin before.  The 
other Merlins were 2 males and 1 fem/juv on Wasson Rd, 1 on Stanley and 1 
on Weyerbacher
2 PEREGRINE FALCON - 1 juv on Wasson, 1 distant bird terrorizing blackbirds 
on Stanley
11 SHORT-EARED OWL - 8 on Weyerbacher Rd, 3 on New Harmony
20 American Tree Sparrow 
2000 Red-winged Blackbird - many huge flocks
10 Eastern Meadowlark 
15 Common Grackle 

We had such a wonderful time in this area today.  It was amazing to see 6 
Merlins in an hour and a half.  3 of these were lingering scope views of birds 
perched right on the side of the road.  When I was watching the first few 
Short-eared Owls we saw (on Weyerbacher Rd), there were Harriers 
everywhere, some swooping at the owls and each other, and then a Merlin 
zoomed by through my scope view.  And about 5 minutes later it happened 
again (I assumed this was the same bird and so only counted it once, but it 
may have been another - who knows?)  All this against a beautiful setting 
sun.  It was way cool.  Also, the roads I drove on today were immaculate for 
mine roads.  Hardly any potholes or corduroy.  So nice!  We will definitely be 
visiting this area again!

Amy & Noah Kearns
Mitchell

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Subject: Cline Ave. Bridge out of service over Indiana Harbor
From: John Kendall <jeffro595 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 22:31:52 -0500
It is very convoluted getting to this site. Recognize that the "high bridge" on 

Cline Ave. between East Chicago and Whiting is closed.  
 From the Indiana I-90 Toll Road, you can overshoot a bit and exit after the 
Wolf Lake toll booth at Indpls Blvd and drive in from the north side of 
Whiting, 

heading southeast into Whiting, turning left at 119th St. through the 
downtown business district. 
 Or, you can exit south of Whiting at Cline, and take the last exit available. 
following signs for Michigan Ave. Follow Michigan to the 3rd or 4th light, and 

turn right on Dickey Rd.  Cross the RR tracks, go under the "high bridge" on 
Cline and follow this all the way to the stop light at Indpls. Blvd. (BP office 

bldg on right) and turn right 1/2 mile north on Shrage Ave. after crossing the 
RR tracks as you clear the refinery. Follow that all the way to a right turn at 

119th St. 

Either way, from 119th, continue ahead a couple of blocks to front St. ("T") 
and turn left across the tracks, take an immediate right all the way up the 
incline and to the end where you park by the beach.  Look for the rocks and 
outfall on the left.  

John Kendall
Valparaiso

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Subject: Directions - Portage Lakefront Park and Roxana "Pond"
From: Randy Pals <rjpals AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 22:01:20 -0500
Here are Google maps to Portage Lakefront Park:

http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?
hl=en&ie=UTF8&msa=0&msid=101202394268560060594.00047ef98e4d1f1ef54c2
&ll=41.615442,-87.157974&spn=0.05711,0.110035&z=13

and Roxana "Pond"

http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?
hl=en&ie=UTF8&msa=0&msid=101202394268560060594.00047ef9c94ab87643d7
1&z=13


Randy Pals
Chesterton

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Subject: Canada Geese
From: Spring Ryding <smelryd AT BLUEMARBLE.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 21:56:24 -0500
This morning about 11:45 a.m. outside the Peoples State Bank in Winslow 
Plaza on the south side of Bloomington, I saw a flock of about 30 Canada 
geese heading northwest.  3 were in front some distance ahead of the 
others, the main flock had about 21 birds, and there were 6 more coming 
in behind.

Very cloudy, but thinning in places, and the sun actually breaking 
through at one point.  A brisk cold breeze.

Spring Ryding
Monroe County

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Subject: directions in N.W. IN
From: Jeff Moore <merlin46783 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 21:26:50 -0500
Could someone give me more specific directions to the Hammond Filtration plant 
and the Portage Lakefront Park mentioned in Ken's note today? 


Thank you,

Jeff Moore
Roanoke, IN
 		 	   		  
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Subject: Gull Photos from Whiting gullfest
From: John Kendall <jeffro595 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 21:22:20 -0500
As per Ken Brock's post, we ran into a high concentration of less common 
winter gulls feeding off the Refinery Beach today.
The photo opp's came courtesy of Jeff McCoy's hard work in bringing them in 
for killer views off the discharge:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jckendall/

Cheers,
John Kendall
Valparaiso

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Subject: oops
From: Russell Allison <grounds11 AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 20:19:03 -0500
There is an underscore between russ and allison (russ_allison)

 

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

 

Sorry about that.

 

Good birding 

Russ Allison, West Lafayette

 


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Subject: Re: Pileated Pronounciation
From: Morris Gevirtz <moegev AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 20:32:27 -0300
Dear Birding Friends,

I've never been contented with scientist's accounts of the meanings of the
Greek, Latin, and Parsi roots they use in the scientific naming. Here is the
real story on Pileated. The root of the word is ÐÉËÏÓ with an English
adjectival ending.

It comes from a Ancient Greek word meaning *felt* as in the pressed
wool/hair material. In fact, the very word felt comes from the word "ðéëoó"
-pilos. The Latin word is *Pilus* and the German: *Filtz  and both mean felt.
    In Turkey, the remains of felt have been found dating back at least
to 6,500 BC. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felt*
*
*
*The Pileated WP is wearing a felt tuft.*

See Liddell's 1846 translation of Passow's Etymology.
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/Ojld3l5_WUzZUXX5kw_aQA?feat=directlink


*But that ain't the whole story.*

Whereas the root of Pilos and felt is: O.E. felt, from W.Gmc. *feltaz (cf.
M.Du. vilt, O.H.G. filz, Da. filt), from P.Gmc. *peltaz "something beaten,"
from PIE *peldos- (cf. O.C.S. plusti), with a sense of "beating."  Source:
Etymonline.com


The Proto Indo-european root *peldos (to beat) is very common. Abattoir is
one of my favorite derivatives.


In modern Greek "ðéëïó" means "hat."  Those stately birds are the Chapeau
wearing types. Since ðéëïó is a participle then "Hat" in Greek literally
means "beaten" as in "I am wearing a beaten"  Knowing this i would feel
weird taxidermy-ing a Pileated WP.

The Pileated Woodpecker is the "Beaten Woodpecker". Maybe then: The
Beat-headed Beater?

Then to further analyse, "Wood + Pecker" are full of history. Wood is a word
with a murky past.  According to Lemon's Etymology of 1733, the word "wood"
is related to the Latin *silva* (Like the name Sylvia).The druids might have
used a similar word. According to Lemon, the root of wood and silva come
from the idea of "not-a-plain" "not open"

Pecker on the other hand is probably onomatopoeia. So picking one's nose and
pecking on wood have the same idea in mind.

So we have the *Beaten    Not-an-open-place-tapping-sound-maker *  Does that
sound like the Pileated to you?

Lewis and Clark knew the bird by a different name:

CLARK:

"The Magpy 
 

 is most commonly found in the open country and are the same with those
formerly discribed on the Missouri.    the large woodpecker or log cock
[Pileated Woodpecker], the lark woodpecker {N. Flicker]

 

 and the small white woodpecker with a read head [Red-breasted
Sapsucker] 
 

 are the same with those of the Atlantic states and are found exclusively in
the timbered country"


http://libxml1a.unl.edu/lewisandclark/read/?_xmlsrc=1806-03-04&_xslsrc=LCstyles.xsl#n28030405 


Cock, by the way seems also to be onomatopoeia from L. *gallus * Chicken

What is cool is the in French a woodpecker is a *"Pic"* and it crest is
called a *"huppe." *This latter word comes directly from the Latin
*upupa*Cf. Gr.
*"åðïðó" meaning *Hoopoe. These words also being onomatopoeia.
http://www.cnrtl.fr/etymologie/huppe The root of "pic" is obvious, right?




So while one language refers to the head of a bird as a "beaten", the other
refers to it by the noise another bird makes and yet a third language refers
to the bird as a whole the sound of another and the same bird: Cock, Peck.

Hoopoe + Cock + Peck = Piciformes

I believe that the more we know about what we call birds in human languages
the more we will know about the lives of these birds through human history
and our relationship to them.

Now, as to your little pronunciation issue. Webster's Accepts both:

LINK 

 But
what some have accorded as being the rules of English pronunciation seem to
disagree -go to point A2:
http://www.uni-greifswald.de/~anglam/staff/Material/Fanning/PronRules.pdf



Good Birding,


-Morris Gevirtz

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Subject: Re: Goshen Dam
From: John Harley <ekjwh68 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 18:03:25 -0500
All the birds listed were seen from our family room window, which overlooks a 
large part of the dam on the west side. We saw at least 5 Greenwing Teal later 
today just north of the bridge on CR 38, where you saw 7. I also counted 46 
Mute Swans. Earlier in the day we saw only 2 Common Mergansers, but about 2 
hours ago there were at least 5 males feeding outside our window--I was able to 
watch one swallow a small fish. There seems to be more activity than we had 
last year at this time. I also failed to mention Tufted Titmouse in our 
list--we have several here. 


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


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Steuben Couny Bald Eagle
From: Holly Meyers <HMeyersKbirder AT AOL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 17:47:15 EST
Was watching a pair of Red-tails that have decided to nest on our property, 
 when I saw 3 crows chasing one of them...or so I thought!  A Juv Bald  
Eagle, probably  a first year, was sitting in our tree!  Took some  pictures 
and passed the info on Fred Wooley and Brad Bumgardner for age  confirmation...
 
A First for our Property!!
 
 
Holly Meyers
Steuben County

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Subject: Lakefront 6 Feb '10 Gulls Galore
From: "Kenneth J. Brock" <kj.brock AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 16:34:17 -0600
Today (6 Feb’10) Susan Bagby, John Cassady, and I birded the lakefront  
from Michigan City to Whiting Park.

The cold northeast wind did not bode well for a good day on the  
lakefront; however, the easterly component moved the ice away from the  
eastern lakefront and generated the best gull movement in several  
years. For the day we counted seven species, including: three  
Thayer’s, two Iceland (ties 6th highest count), one Lesser Black- 
backed, eleven Glaucous (3rd highest count), and 39 Great Black-backed  
Gulls.  The latter is a record count (old maximum was 29).

HIGHLIGHTS

BEVERLY SHORES LAKEFRONT
As we arrived it was apparent that scores of gulls were flying  
eastward along the lakeshore.  In about 45 minutes we logged the  
following (all flying into the easterly wind):
Greater Scaup (2)
White-winged Scoter (1)
Common Goldeneye (69)
Common Merganser (45)
Red-breasted Merganser (165)
Herring Gull (480)
THAYER’S GULL (2- adult & 3rd-cycle)
Great Black-backed Gull (1- first-cycle)

MICHIGAN CITY HARBOR
A large gull flock was feeding along the outer breakwall as waves  
crashed over.
Com. Goldeneye (25)
Bufflehead (1)
Common Merganser (45)
Red-breasted Merganser (25)
Herring Gull (300)
Iceland (1 2nd-cycle)

COWLES BOG (on Mineral Springs Rd)
Missed the shrike (again)

PORT OF INDIANA (Met John Kendall)
Redhead (4)
Surf Scoter (1)
Common Goldeneye (25)
Bufflehead (8)
Com. Merganser (500 apx)
Herring Gull (150)
THAYER’S GULL (1- 2nd-cycle)
Glaucous Gull (2- first or 2nd-cycle)
Great Black-backed Gull (10- 5 ad, one 3rd, one 2nd, &3 1st)

PORTAGE LAKEFRONT PARK (with John Kendall)
Mute Swan (7- swimming in the harbor)
Com. Goldeneye (10)
Com. Merganser (27)
Red-breasted Merganser (1)

ROXANA AREA (adjacent to Hammond filtration plant water outlet)
Mute Swan (3)
Gadwall (3)
Am. Black Duck (4)
Mallard (50 est.)
Greater Scaup (1 male)
Hooded Merganser (3)
Pied-billed Grebe (2)
Black-crowned Night-Heron (4- 2 ad & 2 1st-cycle)

WHITING REFINERY BEACH (with John Kendall and Jeff McCoy)
White-winged Scoter (3 flyby)
Common Goldeneye (30)
Com. Merganser (10)
Herring Gull (80)
THAYER’S GULL (1- 2nd-cycle- watch for Cassady & Kendall photos)
ICELAND GULL (1 adult spent more than an hour flying about the outlet.  
Watch for Cassady & Kendall photos)
LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL (1 adult)
GLAUCOUS GULL (9- 5 adults, one 3rd, one 2nd, one 2nd/3rd, and one 1st)
Great Black-backed Gull (28- not aged)

WHITING PARK (iced in)

Ken Brock
Chesterton, IN

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Subject: No Subject
From: Russell Allison <grounds11 AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 17:33:14 -0500
Some action around bird feeders today with the new snow. The area had been
quiet for a few days. I still haven't had a Northern Cardinal at the Feeders
for several weeks. I have had as many as 12 in past winters. 

Birds seen today:

 Mourning Dove -16

House Finch -15-This is low compared to past winters.

Dark eyed Junco-7

Downey Woodpecker-2

House Sparrow-2

White breasted Nuthatch-2

Tufted Titmouse-1

Carolina Chickadee-2

Cooper's Hawk-1-almost a daily visitor. May answer the Cardinal question.

Red-bellied Woodpecker-1

 

 I have put an earlier photo of the Cooper's Hawk on Flickr.

 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/russ-allison

 

Good birding

Russ Allison, West Lafayette

 

 


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Subject: ?2nd Year Golden Eagle?, Vigo County
From: Jim Sullivan <jb.sullivan AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 12:47:37 -0800
3;11pm. Went to see if I could find the Ross's Goose since the sun was out and 
in a favorable position. Absolutely no luck. I was heading west on Dallas, 
about to turn around, when I noticed an outline of a raptor making several 
dives below the powerlines where the old Pfizer wetland parking is located. The 
outline appeared to be that of am eagle with a crow chasing it. When I got in 
position where it was no longer backlit, it appeared to be a juv bald eagle. 


I turned the car around to head east and started taking photos. This appeared 
to be the same "juv bald eagle" that I saw one adult bald eagle chasing away 
last week further south. Unfortunately, I only got backlit pictures last week 
due to dark gray skies. Last week Ifirst thought the adult was chasing a turkey 
vulture due to the dark and light underside of the wings. When I got the camera 
on it... It definitely was an eagle. 


This time the eagle had the same wing underside and a large white band.

It unded up soaring very high and drifted to the south.I lost visual contct 
with it when it was somewhere over CSN. 


I am still learning... So I will post pics when I get home so you can tell me I 
am nuts... But based on Sibley's, It appears to be a 2nd year Golden 
Eagle(although still has white patches on top of wing). 

Jim


      

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Subject: A few photos of the OREGON JUNCO from 2-3-10.
From: Timily Hill <timily888 AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 19:01:22 +0000
I FINALLY got around to throwing a few pics into my Flickr Photostream. The 
OREGON JUNCO a few days ago finally pushed me into it harder. I'll be adding a 
lot more photos from now on.....I have so many, I don't know where to start.  
--Tim Hill 






A FEW FLICKR PHOTOS...MORE TO COME..... 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/tim-hill/ 





~~~  Rock out with your binocs out!  ~~~ 

Tim & Emily Hill 
St. Joe County 






POTATO CREEK S.P.  & NW INDIANA 2009 SIGHT RECORD MAP    (NOW 
2 PAGES...CLICK ON PG. 2 AT COLUMN BOTTOM IF NEC): 


http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=108847996890583469508.00046d922fa334e8ca031&t=h&ll=41.55577,-86.354384&spn=0.018755,0.045276&z=15 



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Subject: Re: Pileated Pronunciation?
From: Timily Hill <timily888 AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 18:40:34 +0000
  
>>>>>>  I used to pronounce it "PILL-ee-ay-tid", but that was when I lived in 
a town with no Pileateds. Then I moved to a place that actually had the birds 
and I heard people saying "PIE-lee-ay-tid". So I changed. :-) 

  
Bernie Sloan 
Bloomington  <<<<<<<< 
  


Me too exactly Bernie........ 



Tim Hill

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Subject: Birds on Goshen Dam
From: John Harley <ekjwh68 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 12:46:58 -0500
An adult Bald Eagle flew over the Goshen Dam at least 3 times this morning. We 
also observed an adult Bald Eagle for 45 min last Sunday morning. It was 
perched in a tree just south of our property. It was likely watching the geese 
and ducks on the ice on the dam pond. Most of the ice has gone, and we are 
beginning to see more activity. Today we saw Common Mergansers, Common 
Goldeneye, Mallards, Bufflehead, Mute Swans and Canada Geese. Other birds from 
our window this morning were: Downy Woodpecker, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Blue 
Jay, Junco, Cooper's Hawk, Cardinal, Ring-billed Gulls, House Finch, Goldfinch, 
European House Sparrow, Song Sparrow, Mourning Dove, White-breasted Nuthatch, 
Carolina Wren, and Black-capped Chickadee. Our Red-breasted Nuthatch, which 
faithfully appeared daily all winter, suddenly stopped coming on 1/21/10. We 
suspect the Cooper's Hawk might be responsible. We have had fairly frequent 
visits from a Hairy Woodpecker this winter--unusual for us lately. 


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


 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft’s powerful SPAM protection.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469226/direct/01/
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Subject: Re: Pileated Pronunciation?
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 06:54:38 -0800
 
Tom Becker's Cornell source says: 
 
"PILEATED (Woodpecker) - PIE-lee-ay-tid, PILL-ee-ay-tid (having a pileus or 
cap). This and the next two are commonly pronounced as the two alternate 
versions listed from the dictionary. If it bothers you when people say it 
differently than you do, lighten up. They're just birds, for goodness sakes, 
and THEY don't care what you call them." 

 
I found a source that says, while they're both acceptable 
pronunciations, "PIE-lee-ay-tid" is the more common pronounciation: 

 
"So, what's the correct pronunciation? It's pronounced both ways, either 
'PIE-lee-ay-tid', or 'PILL-ee-ay-tid', with more folks leaning toward the first 
pronunciation. Both ways are acceptable." 

From: 
http://www.visitflorida.com/experts/outdoors_and_nature/action.blog/id.1513 

 
I used to pronounce it "PILL-ee-ay-tid", but that was when I lived in a 
town with no Pileateds. Then I moved to a place that actually had the birds and 
I heard people saying "PIE-lee-ay-tid". So I changed. :-) 

 
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
 


--- On Thu, 2/4/10, Tom and Colleen Becker  wrote:


From: Tom and Colleen Becker 
Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Pileated Pronunciation?
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Date: Thursday, February 4, 2010, 6:58 PM


I say we ought to refer to Cornell...
"I'm with you fellas"...

http://www.birds.cornell.edu/crows/birdname.htm

Tom Becker
Floyd County





-----Original Message-----
From: Michael L. P. Retter 
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Sent: Thu, Feb 4, 2010 6:41 pm
Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Pileated Pronunciation?


PILL-ee-ate-ed and PIE-lee-ate-ed are both correct. There is no accepted 
-syllable pronunciation.
Michael L. P. Retter
--------------------------------
. Lafayette, Tippecanoe Co., IN
lretter AT yahoo.com
ome:  765.838.3152
ell:  309.824.7317
ttp://xenospiza.com/
Tour Leader, Tropical Birding
ttp://www.tropicalbirding.com/
----------------------------------

-- On Thu, 2/4/10, terry ballenger  wrote:
> From: terry ballenger 
Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Pileated Pronunciation?
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Date: Thursday, February 4, 2010, 5:08 PM
Since we've been on the subject of
Pileated Woodpeckers lately, I have to admit I've always
been confused about the correct pronunciation of the bird.
  
Is it:  PIL-E-ATE-ED, PIE-LATED, OR PILL-ATED...or, is
there any "official" pronunciation at all?!  
  
I guess the bird doesn't actually care, but it would be
nice to know.
  
Thanks for all your suggestions.
  
Terry Ballenger
Noblesville, Ham. Co.

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Subject: BIRDING IN GIBSON COUNTY.
From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 12:34:41 -0500
WOW! 2-6-10
We have about 2" of snow so I went out driving.
I went out South of Oakland City on S Jackson and turned onto 525S
I hit paydirt! 
SHORT-EARED OWLS 30+ it was amazing and it was only about 10am.
Northern Harriers 20+
Red-tailed hawks 4+
If you are on 57 and 64 junction go 2.5 miles South turn East on 450S go 1.7 
miles turn South on South Jackson go .7 miles then turn East on 525S and 
start looking they were holed up right next to the road in places.
One time I counted 10 in one small area.
Happy Birding to all.

Vicky Whitaker

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Subject: Ross's Goose, Vigo County
From: Jim Sullivan <jb.sullivan AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 08:07:00 -0800
The Ross's Goose remains at the Pfizer Rec Center Pond. Albiet, much harder to 
find with the snow on the ground. 


With the planned closure of this plant... Visitors are no longer allowed to 
entewr the rec center property. 


Therefore, you have to view from your car on Carlisle road.




      

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Subject: Pronunciations
From: terry ballenger <t.ballenger AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 16:55:16 -0800
Thanks for all your advise on the "woodpecker" pronunciations.  Sounds like 
either Pill-e-ated or Pie-le-ated is correct.  Below is a very useful (and 
humorous) article that gives some pause for reflection! 

 
Good birding
Terry Ballenger
 
 
I say we ought to refer to Cornell...
"I'm with you fellas"...

http://www.birds.cornell.edu/crows/birdname.htm

Tom Becker
Floyd County


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Subject: Need advice on finding migrating waterfowl at Summit Lake in March
From: Ron & Judy Green <rjgreen123 AT EIWIFI.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 12:50:47 -0500
I am planning a March field trip to look for waterfowl.  I was wanting to
know if any of you have had luck in finding many species of waterfowl at
Summit Lake in mid-March.
 
Thanks
Judy Green
Mississinewa Audubon Club
Grant Co.

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Subject: strange little sparrow?
From: Teresa Moorman <unicorngabs AT AOL.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 23:37:37 -0500
I have a bird visiting my feeders almost everyday. He appears to be a sparrow 
with a beak deformity. He has learned to use the beak to his advantage, 
digging through the pile of seed to find just the right one he wants to eat.


http://www.flickr.com/photos/36417215 AT N08/4327622991/in/pool-iasphotos

Here is the link to my flickr photos if anyone wants to take a look and help 
identify him.
Teresa Moorman
Huntingburg, IN

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Subject: Pine Creek, Benton County
From: "Dunning, John B" <jdunning AT PURDUE.EDU>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 21:42:05 -0500
No waterfowl were present at Pine Creek Gamebird Habitat Area, eastern Benton 
County this afternoon - wetlands were all frozen. I was there with a visiting 
professor from Afghanistan, and we were both pleased to see a nice dark-phase 
ROUGH-LEGGED HAWK. 


Barny
misner13 AT verizon.net

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Subject: Pigeon River Northern Shrike
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 20:35:58 EST
A visit to Pigeon River FWA, Lagrange County, turned up a Northern Shrike  
this morning.  The bird was perched near the Osprey nest platform at the  
pool of the Pigeon River south of Curtis Creek Trout Rearing Station.   
Otherwise it was pretty quiet; nothing else different among 34 species  total.
 
Jim Haw

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Subject: 2-3-10...Oregon Junco
From: Timily Hill <timily888 AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 00:00:08 +0000
We had an Oregon Junco on our feeding deck Wednesday that must have blown in 
with all the clippers. Gorgeous bird...the first time we have ever seen one 
amidst the thousands of typical Juncos we all see over the years. I will try to 
get my Flickr page up in the next day or two as we captured several bright 
decent shots, even though the day was overcast. Ken Brock said it is Indiana's 
93rd documented account of the bird over the years. 






Tim & Emily Hill 
St. Joe County 






POTATO CREEK S.P.  & NW INDIANA 2009 SIGHT RECORD MAP    (NOW 
2 PAGES...CLICK ON PG. 2 AT COLUMN BOTTOM IF NEC): 


http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=108847996890583469508.00046d922fa334e8ca031&t=h&ll=41.55577,-86.354384&spn=0.018755,0.045276&z=15 


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Subject: Re: Pileated Pronunciation?
From: Tom and Colleen Becker <cbirding AT AOL.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 18:58:58 -0500
I say we ought to refer to Cornell...
"I'm with you fellas"...

http://www.birds.cornell.edu/crows/birdname.htm

Tom Becker
Floyd County





-----Original Message-----
From: Michael L. P. Retter 
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Sent: Thu, Feb 4, 2010 6:41 pm
Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Pileated Pronunciation?


PILL-ee-ate-ed and PIE-lee-ate-ed are both correct. There is no accepted 
-syllable pronunciation.
Michael L. P. Retter
--------------------------------
. Lafayette, Tippecanoe Co., IN
lretter AT yahoo.com
ome:  765.838.3152
ell:  309.824.7317
ttp://xenospiza.com/
Tour Leader, Tropical Birding
ttp://www.tropicalbirding.com/
----------------------------------

-- On Thu, 2/4/10, terry ballenger  wrote:
> From: terry ballenger 
 Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Pileated Pronunciation?
 To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
 Date: Thursday, February 4, 2010, 5:08 PM
 Since we've been on the subject of
 Pileated Woodpeckers lately, I have to admit I've always
 been confused about the correct pronunciation of the bird.
  
 Is it:  PIL-E-ATE-ED, PIE-LATED, OR PILL-ATED...or, is
 there any "official" pronunciation at all?!  
  
 I guess the bird doesn't actually care, but it would be
 nice to know.
  
 Thanks for all your suggestions.
  
 Terry Ballenger
 Noblesville, Ham. Co.
 
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Subject: Re: Pileated Pronunciation?
From: "Michael L. P. Retter" <mlretter AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 15:41:58 -0800
PILL-ee-ate-ed and PIE-lee-ate-ed are both correct. There is no accepted 
3-syllable pronunciation. 


Michael L. P. Retter
---------------------------------
W. Lafayette, Tippecanoe Co., IN
mlretter AT yahoo.com
home:  765.838.3152
cell:  309.824.7317
http://xenospiza.com/

Tour Leader, Tropical Birding
http://www.tropicalbirding.com/
-----------------------------------


--- On Thu, 2/4/10, terry ballenger  wrote:

> From: terry ballenger 
> Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Pileated Pronunciation?
> To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
> Date: Thursday, February 4, 2010, 5:08 PM
> Since we've been on the subject of
> Pileated Woodpeckers lately, I have to admit I've always
> been confused about the correct pronunciation of the bird.
>  
> Is it:  PIL-E-ATE-ED, PIE-LATED, OR PILL-ATED...or, is
> there any "official" pronunciation at all?!  
>  
> I guess the bird doesn't actually care, but it would be
> nice to know.
>  
> Thanks for all your suggestions.
>  
> Terry Ballenger
> Noblesville, Ham. Co.
> 
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Subject: Pileated Pronunciation?
From: terry ballenger <t.ballenger AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 15:08:50 -0800
Since we've been on the subject of Pileated Woodpeckers lately, I have to admit 
I've always been confused about the correct pronunciation of the bird. 

 
Is it:  PIL-E-ATE-ED, PIE-LATED, OR PILL-ATED...or, is there any "official" 
pronunciation at all?!  

 
I guess the bird doesn't actually care, but it would be nice to know.
 
Thanks for all your suggestions.
 
Terry Ballenger
Noblesville, Ham. Co.

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Subject: Sandhills and Trumpeters
From: David Crouch <david AT PROGRADE.NET>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 16:20:18 -0500
I found hundreds of Sandhill Cranes and five Trumpeter Swans in the  
Ewing bottoms area of Jackson County this morning. Cranes were in  
evidence in several sections and quite a few were on the wing making  
short moves from one patch of fields to another. The largest  
aggregations were East of CR250W and along CR225N with about 350  
Cranes and then at least 400 that were South of Slab road and along  
CR310W. There was a lot of socialization and dancing behavior being  
exhibited. The Trumpeter's were in one of the few thawed wet areas  
adjacent to a patch of woods East of CR310W. One bird appeared to be  
first year with the other four evidently adults. All had sharp margins  
between the bill and gape, pointed top bill borders and no yellow. I  
had seen and posted trumpeter sightings from this same area mid- 
February last year. The Bald Eagle was first visible from the Swan  
viewing area perched in a Sycamore tree on the banks of the gravel pit  
South of US50. Some of the following birds were seen in the  
Sheildstown area along the East fork and along US50 between Crane Hill  
and Seymour.

Trumpeter Swan -5
Canada Goose -6
Sandhill Crane -900
Bald Eagle -1	adult
Red-tailed Hawk -4
American Kestrel -15	including three pair sets
Red-bellied Woodpecker -1
Downy Woodpecker -3	two were working corn stubble stalks
Pileated Woodpecker -1
American Crow -12
Horned Lark -11
Eastern meadowlark -2
American Tree Sparrow -7


Dave Crouch
Seymour

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Subject: Clarification about my "out-of-place Pileateds" posting, plus Blue Jays and Cardinals
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 09:04:36 -0800
 
When I was talking about Pileateds being "out of place" I was mostly talking 
about the birds in the context of the particular spot where I live. I've lived 
in this location for five years. It's maybe a half mile from a couple of square 
miles of mostly uninhabited wooded hills. Pileateds are very common back in the 
woods. 

 
In past years it was uncommon to see Pileateds outside of the woods. This 
winter I see them quite often: in hedgerows and small patches of relatively 
young trees, flying across open grassy areas, etc. Even in town. And I'm seeing 
a lot more of them this winter than in past winters. I guess I just was 
wondering what makes this winter different from the past four winters, at least 
as far as Pileateds are concerned. 

 
A couple of people who responded to the Pileated thread mentioned low numbers 
of Blue Jays and Cardinals: 

 
* Around here it seems like there's been a bumper crop of Cardinals this year. 
I counted 42 on my four-mile walk this AM, hanging out in brushy areas along 
the IU XC course and the Indiana Railroad tracks. 

 
* When I first moved here there weren't many Blue Jays, which I attributed to 
West Nile. But they've rebounded nicely over the past few years.  I ran across 
at least 20 of them on the IU XC course this morning. And a few months ago 
(late October) I watched a flock of at least 250 Blue Jays fly over the IU XC 
course...I'm assuming they were migrants. 

 
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
 




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Subject: Eagles in Indpls
From: Karen Wade <karenwade1 AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 17:37:19 +0000
On our way to work this morning, Mike and I spotted a pair of bald eagles 
perched in a tree over the White River, near the Lilly Recreational Park and 
last year's nest. They both looked to be mature with full white heads and 
tails. 




Karen Wade 

Franklin, IN 

karenwade1 AT comcast.net 

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Subject: Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers?
From: Bob Royalty <royaltyr AT WABASH.EDU>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 10:34:35 -0500
We have at least one resident pair of Pileateds here in the SW part of the
village of Zionsville which I see almost daily.  They visit the
neighbor's suet feeder frequently.  We're nead the wooded Eagle Creek
area so this isn't too suprising.  

But what was
surprising was looking out of my office window on Jan. 20th, on the mall
at Wabash Campus, and seeing a Pileated on the maple tree and then flying
toward the library buildling.  This is a large open area with only a
few trees and the bird was heading away from the woods.

I don't
see a lot of bluejays on my feeder (fortunately!) but I heard some around
yesterday.  

Bob R.


> On Sunday
morning about 15-20 minutes after sunrise I was running on West 
>
Lafayette's Cattail Trail between Stadium Ave and Cherry Lane when I 
> watched a Pileated fly over lots of open country (appropriately
including, 
> considering who started this thread, the Purdue
cross country course) 
> going from McCormick Woods to Stewart
Woods. 
> 
> My parents first retirement home in Grove
City, Florida had Pileateds 
> around though there weren't any
trees that would be considered big enough 
> around here to
accommodate them. They were also considerably tamer than 
> the
ones around here. I think that might be a known regional difference 
> though. 
> 
> Here at my rural home with some good
sized trees, within the past week I 
> observed a Pileated wailing
away at a moderately large oak tree for a few 
> minutes. 
> 
> For the Celery Bog birders, keep your eyes open for
Coyotes if you're 
> interested in them at all. A week ago I was
running on the Cattail Trail 
> west of the bog near the Pothole
sign (which runners refer to as "the 
> podium" as it's
a landmark that's 2.5 miles from where the running club 
> starts
its runs) when something far to the west that could have been a 
>
coyote, a dog or a siren sounded. So many coyotes responded from the area

> of the pothole and the small clump or trees on high ground and
beyond, it 
> was a little unnerving. 
> 
> Larry
Miller 
> In SE Tippecanoe County 
> 
> On Wed, 03
Feb 2010 09:58:34 -0500, Tom  wrote: 
> 
>> That's curious. We have Pileateds on the suet,
sometimes as many as 
>> three on or near the post on which it
is mounted. This is basically the 
>> same as it has been the
past 9 winters since returning to Indiana. They 
>> do like to
pound on our log house. 
>> I have observed few if any Blue
Jays this winter. I don't have one on 
>> the list for this
year. Have they been nailed by West Nile or is there 
>>
another diagnosis or are my observations just a local population drop 
>> and others are seeing plenty of Blue Jays? 
>> The
latest on the lake has been a juvenile Bald Eagle dive bombing the 
>> Geese around the remaining open water. I haven't seen any of
our three 
>> Eagles succeed but have heard past stories of
them getting birds as big 
>> as Geese. 
>> on Lamb
Lake in SW Johnson Co 
>> Tom Hougham 
> 
>
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> 


Robert M. Royalty, Jr., Ph.D. 
Associate Professor of
Religion 
Wabash College 
http://persweb.wabash.edu/facstaff/royaltyr/ 


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Subject: Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
From: "Dunning, John B" <jdunning AT PURDUE.EDU>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 08:18:07 -0500
Blue Jays were one of the species nailed hard initially by West Nile Virus. 
Corvids (jays and crows) in general were hard hit as were some grouse. I just 
read a report on Yellow-billed Magpies in California suggesting that they were 
hit very hard. But we have had our resident Blue Jays at our home in northern 
Tippecanoe County all winter - 3-4 individuals at a time emptying my sunflower 
feeder. 


Barny
Misner13 AT verizon.net

-----Original Message-----
From: Bird discussion list for Indiana [mailto:IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] 
On Behalf Of Tom 

Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2010 9:59 AM
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of 
Chickadees 


That's curious.  We have Pileateds on the suet, 
sometimes as many as three on or near the post on 
which it is mounted.  This is basically the same 
as it has been the past 9 winters since returning 
to Indiana.  They do like to pound on our log house.
I have observed few if any Blue Jays this 
winter.  I don't have one on the list for this 
year.  Have they been nailed by West Nile or is 
there another diagnosis or are my observations 
just a local population drop and others are seeing plenty of Blue Jays?
The latest on the lake has been a juvenile Bald 
Eagle dive bombing the Geese around the remaining 
open water.  I haven't seen any of our three 
Eagles succeed but have heard past stories of 
them getting birds as big as Geese.
on Lamb Lake in SW Johnson Co
Tom Hougham
At 05:29 PM 2/2/2010, Ray Troyer wrote:
>That's exactly how I felt when I had a Pileated 
>at my place several weeks ago.  It's wooded 
>but, I thought the trees are too small.  Maybe 
>it was because he was very actively looking for 
>food.  He didn't come to the suite
>
>Ray Troyer
>
>Goshen,  Elkhart
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "B.G. Sloan" 
>To: IN-BIRD-L AT  LISTSERV .INDIANA. EDU
>Sent: Monday, February 1, 2010 8:52:16 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
>Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Out-of-place Pileated 
>Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
>
>Â
>This winter I've been seeing Pileated 
>Woodpeckers in places where I haven't usually 
>seen them over the five years I've lived in this house.
>Â
>But before I start talking about the Pileateds , 
>I just wanted to mention a large flock of 
>Carolina Chickadees I encountered along the IU 
>cross country course this morning. There were at 
>least 20-25 chickadees in this flock. They all 
>were chasing each other agitatedly. This is the 
>largest tightly knit flock of chickadees I have ever seen. Cool!!
>Â
>I'm lucky enough to live a half mile from 2.5+ 
>square miles of largely uninhabited wooded 
>hills. The habitat there is really good for 
>Pileated Woodpeckers. When I go deep into these 
>woods it's not at all unusual to see/hear Pileateds .
>Â
>But this past fall and this winter I've 
>consistently seen  Pileateds in less-than-optimal habitats:
>Â
>* I've had Pileateds at my suburban feeders numerous times this winter.
>* On at least three occasions I've had to chase 
>away Pileateds hammering the siding of my house, 
>presumably looking for carpenter bee nests. This 
>is an interesting experience in itself. When a 
>Pileated starts hammering on your siding it 
>sounds like some sort of maniac is trying to 
>hack through your wall with a ball-peen hammer. :-)
>* Pileateds have become quite common in 
>hedgerows and small patches of pole-sized timber 
>along the south edge of the IU cross country course.
>* Just in the past few days I've seen several 
>really out-of-place Pileateds . One was flying 
>over the Best Buy on 3rd Street. Another was 
>flying over the College Mall parking lot. And 
>just this morning I watched a pair of Pileateds 
>leisurely working their way through the Bell Trace retirement community.
>Â
>Bernie Sloan
>My birding blog : http ://bird-bs. blogspot .com
>Follow me on Twitter: http ://twitter.com/ birdbs
>My all-time favorite song about birdwatching: http :// tinyurl .com/yk8j6wr
>
>Â
>Â
>
>
>
>
>
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Subject: Three Urban Kestrels, seven Pileateds, Crow behavior
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 09:57:59 -0800
 
This morning I set a personal record for the number of American Kestrels in 
view simultaneously...three of them. My previous high count on numerous 
occasions was two birds in view at one time. The interesting thing about these 
birds was the location...a grassy vacant lot behind Best Buy on 3rd street. Two 
of the Kestrels were perched near each other in a small tree. The third Kestrel 
was in another small tree about 100 feet away.This lot is also bordered by 
Barnes & Noble, a church, an auto repair shop, and numerous apartment 
buildings. I can't recall seeing many Kestrels in an urban setting like that. 

 
I also recorded a personal high count of seven Pileated Woodpeckers on one 
outing. As I stood at the far north end of the IU cross country course I could 
hear four individuals calling from the woods to the north. As I headed south I 
flushed one from a tree out in the middle of the XC course. As I exited the XC 
course on its south side I saw two more in a patch of woods near the road. My 
previous record was five, set less than three weeks ago. Pretty cool! 

 
Finally, I've been observing some interesting crow behavior lately. A couple of 
neighborhood crows apparently recognize me now. I've been going out in the yard 
a couple of times a day to put bird feed on the ground for the juncos and 
winter sparrows. A small flock of crows has been showing up on occasion to eat 
some of the feed, usually right after I put it out. A couple of days ago I 
noticed that one or two of the crows will get excited when I walk out the door, 
even if I'm not carrying bird feed. They don't act this way when other people 
leave the house or walk by. This morning on my way home from my morning walk I 
cut through an apartment complex parking lot. I passed under a tree where a 
crow was perched and the bird started calling excitedly. It then proceeded to 
follow me home. Of course I put out some fresh bird feed. :-) 

 
For those of you who might be thinking I'm anthropomorphizing a bit about the 
crows, there is research that suggests that crows can differentiate between 
different humans. For example, see: 
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18429-if-you-think-a-crow-is-giving-you-the-evil-eye.html 

 

Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
My birding blog: http://bird-bs.blogspot.com Follow me on Twitter: 
http://twitter.com/birdbs 

 




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Subject: Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
From: Sue and Ted Ulrich <SueAndTedUlrich AT MSN.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 01:05:29 -0500
Hi,

We have had Pileateds coming to our feeders here in eastern Warren County 
for a number of years. For the first 20 or so years we lived her no dice, 
although they were in the woods around the house. After the first discovered 
the feeder they've been a regular visitor.

Our bluejay population is normal, however our cardinal population is the 
lowest I recall. Usually have 12-15 pairs when the weather gets bad, this 
year only 5 pairs.

Went to NICHES land trust's Shawnee Bottom property in Fountain County this 
morning. The eagles are already at their nest and there was a nice 
Rough-legged Hawk hanging around. Heard a Barred Owl call too. Saw several 
Kestrels and at least 4 Red-tails on the drive and a beautiful dark phase 
Rough-legged Hawk about a mile from the house. It's been hanging in the area 
for a couple of weeks now.

Susan Ulrich
eastern Warren County 

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Subject: Lakefront birding quick stops
From: Bob Zaremba <bobzarem AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 21:14:02 -0800
On my way to the airport this afternoon, I visited several lake front spots.  I 
stopped along Roxana Area, Whiting Park and beach, and finally Calumet Park.  

 
The highlights for me today were a Glacous Gull and adult Lesser Black-backed 
Gull and  Greater Black-backed Gulls seen from Calumet Park.  

 
Here are the sightings summay:
 
ROXANA AREA 
Gadwall - 5
Am. Black Duck - 6
Mallard 120+
Hooded Merganser 12
Black-crowned Night-Heron 3
Great Blue Heron 1
Pied-billed Grebe 3

WHITING PARK
Canada Goose  200+ (in ball fields)
Greater Scaup  35
Scaup sp. 150+ (two large rafts too distant)
Com. Merganser 2  Flyby
Hooded Merganser 3
Common Goldeneye  15
American Kestrel  1  (male)
 
CALUMET PARK, IL
Mute Swan  2
Redhead 5
Greater Scaup 35
Scaup sp   250+  Several large rafts in distance
Com. Goldeneye 18
Bufflehead  3
Com. Merganser 10
Glaucous Gull  1
Great Black-backed Gull 7 
Lesser Black-backed Gull 1  adult
Herring Gull  52
Ring-billed Gull  75
 
once again,  wish I had my scope and more time!
 
Bob Zaremba
Marietta, GA 

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Subject: Surf Scoter
From: Russell Allison <grounds11 AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 18:08:44 -0500
I found and got a few pictures of the Surf Scoter at the Williamsburg
Apartments. She was visible for over a half hour from 3:45pm to 4:15pm. Then
flew upstream out of my sight. Until then she had been going for short moves
up and down stream. She was never very far from shore, directly East of the
parking lot. Also seen were 3-4 Bald Eagles. One was an Adult the others
were sub-adult, age was not known for sure. May have seen one of them twice.
Also on the East side of the Wabash were (3) Common Goldeneye.Photos can be
seen on my Flickr  sight.

Thanks to Ning Wu for finding her for every one. 

 

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

 

Good birding

Russ Allison,West Lafayette


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Subject: Spencer County Chipping Sparrows
From: David Ayer <dayerd AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 12:08:40 -0800
Hello,
While out birding this mornig I found a small flock of 3 Chipping Sparrows near 
French Island Marina in SW Spencer County. 






                                                             David Ayer
                                                           Rockport, IN


      

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Subject: Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
From: Larry Miller <larry AT LAFINLARRY.NET>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 13:41:48 -0500
On Sunday morning about 15-20 minutes after sunrise I was running on West  
Lafayette's Cattail Trail between Stadium Ave and Cherry Lane when I  
watched a Pileated fly over lots of open country (appropriately including,  
considering who started this thread, the Purdue cross country course)  
going from McCormick Woods to Stewart Woods.

My parents first retirement home in Grove City, Florida had Pileateds  
around though there weren't any trees that would be considered big enough  
around here to accommodate them. They were also considerably tamer than  
the ones around here. I think that might be a known regional difference  
though.

Here at my rural home with some good sized trees, within the past week I  
observed a Pileated wailing away at a moderately large oak tree for a few  
minutes.

For the Celery Bog birders, keep your eyes open for Coyotes if you're  
interested in them at all. A week ago I was running on the Cattail Trail  
west of the bog near the Pothole sign (which runners refer to as "the  
podium" as it's a landmark that's 2.5 miles from where the running club  
starts its runs) when something far to the west that could have been a  
coyote, a dog or a siren sounded. So many coyotes responded from the area  
of the pothole and the small clump or trees on high ground and beyond, it  
was a little unnerving.

Larry Miller
In SE Tippecanoe County

On Wed, 03 Feb 2010 09:58:34 -0500, Tom  wrote:

> That's curious.  We have Pileateds on the suet, sometimes as many as  
> three on or near the post on which it is mounted.  This is basically the  
> same as it has been the past 9 winters since returning to Indiana.  They  
> do like to pound on our log house.
> I have observed few if any Blue Jays this winter.  I don't have one on  
> the list for this year.  Have they been nailed by West Nile or is there  
> another diagnosis or are my observations just a local population drop  
> and others are seeing plenty of Blue Jays?
> The latest on the lake has been a juvenile Bald Eagle dive bombing the  
> Geese around the remaining open water.  I haven't seen any of our three  
> Eagles succeed but have heard past stories of them getting birds as big  
> as Geese.
> on Lamb Lake in SW Johnson Co
> Tom Hougham

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Subject: Fwd: eBird Report - Shanklin Park , 2/3/10
From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 13:41:06 EST
This is a report of our mourning bird walk. The FOX SPARROW has been coming 
 to my feeder area since about the middle of January.     Dan  Stoltzfus
 
 
  
____________________________________
 From: DanHSt AT aol.com
To: Melissakinsey AT Goshencity.com
Sent: 2/3/2010  1:34:59 P.M. Eastern Standard Time
Subj: Fwd: eBird Report - Shanklin Park  , 2/3/10





  
____________________________________
 From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org
To: danhst AT aol.com
Sent: 2/3/2010 1:32:45  P.M. Eastern Standard Time
Subj: eBird Report - Shanklin Park ,  2/3/10




Location:     Shanklin  Park
Observation date:     2/3/10
Notes:   27 deg. cloudy, calm
Dan Stoltzfus, Larry Ford, elaine  Harley, Mary Martin, Melissa Kinsey.

The Fox Sparrow was at Dan  Stoltzfus's home. Count includes birds seen at 
Elaine Harley's  home
Number of species:     23

Canada Goose   500
Mallard     84
Common Goldeneye   9
Cooper's Hawk     3
Mourning Dove   3
Red-bellied Woodpecker     3
Downy  Woodpecker     4
Hairy Woodpecker      1
Blue Jay     6
American Crow      4
Black-capped Chickadee     6
Tufted Titmouse   2
White-breasted Nuthatch     5
Brown  Creeper     1
American Robin      15
European Starling     50
American Tree Sparrow   5
Fox Sparrow     1
Dark-eyed Junco   17
Northern Cardinal     14
House  Finch     4
American Goldfinch      16
House Sparrow     6

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




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Subject: Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
From: Tom <annntom AT EMBARQMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 09:58:34 -0500
That's curious.  We have Pileateds on the suet, 
sometimes as many as three on or near the post on 
which it is mounted.  This is basically the same 
as it has been the past 9 winters since returning 
to Indiana.  They do like to pound on our log house.
I have observed few if any Blue Jays this 
winter.  I don't have one on the list for this 
year.  Have they been nailed by West Nile or is 
there another diagnosis or are my observations 
just a local population drop and others are seeing plenty of Blue Jays?
The latest on the lake has been a juvenile Bald 
Eagle dive bombing the Geese around the remaining 
open water.  I haven't seen any of our three 
Eagles succeed but have heard past stories of 
them getting birds as big as Geese.
on Lamb Lake in SW Johnson Co
Tom Hougham
At 05:29 PM 2/2/2010, Ray Troyer wrote:
>That's exactly how I felt when I had a Pileated 
>at my place several weeks ago.  It's wooded 
>but, I thought the trees are too small.  Maybe 
>it was because he was very actively looking for 
>food.  He didn't come to the suite
>
>Ray Troyer
>
>Goshen,  Elkhart
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "B.G. Sloan" 
>To: IN-BIRD-L AT  LISTSERV .INDIANA. EDU
>Sent: Monday, February 1, 2010 8:52:16 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
>Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Out-of-place Pileated 
>Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
>
>Â
>This winter I've been seeing Pileated 
>Woodpeckers in places where I haven't usually 
>seen them over the five years I've lived in this house.
>Â
>But before I start talking about the Pileateds , 
>I just wanted to mention a large flock of 
>Carolina Chickadees I encountered along the IU 
>cross country course this morning. There were at 
>least 20-25 chickadees in this flock. They all 
>were chasing each other agitatedly. This is the 
>largest tightly knit flock of chickadees I have ever seen. Cool!!
>Â
>I'm lucky enough to live a half mile from 2.5+ 
>square miles of largely uninhabited wooded 
>hills. The habitat there is really good for 
>Pileated Woodpeckers. When I go deep into these 
>woods it's not at all unusual to see/hear Pileateds .
>Â
>But this past fall and this winter I've 
>consistently seen  Pileateds in less-than-optimal habitats:
>Â
>* I've had Pileateds at my suburban feeders numerous times this winter.
>* On at least three occasions I've had to chase 
>away Pileateds hammering the siding of my house, 
>presumably looking for carpenter bee nests. This 
>is an interesting experience in itself. When a 
>Pileated starts hammering on your siding it 
>sounds like some sort of maniac is trying to 
>hack through your wall with a ball-peen hammer. :-)
>* Pileateds have become quite common in 
>hedgerows and small patches of pole-sized timber 
>along the south edge of the IU cross country course.
>* Just in the past few days I've seen several 
>really out-of-place Pileateds . One was flying 
>over the Best Buy on 3rd Street. Another was 
>flying over the College Mall parking lot. And 
>just this morning I watched a pair of Pileateds 
>leisurely working their way through the Bell Trace retirement community.
>Â
>Bernie Sloan
>My birding blog : http ://bird-bs. blogspot .com
>Follow me on Twitter: http ://twitter.com/ birdbs
>My all-time favorite song about birdwatching: http :// tinyurl .com/yk8j6wr
>
>Â
>Â
>
>
>
>
>
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Subject: Birding in Gibson County
From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 12:53:20 -0500
I need to clarify something.
I always head my bird counts with birding in Gibson County.
I added the Blue Grass area, I forgot to add that it's in Warrick sorry.
Vicky Whitaker

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Subject: Christmas Counts - update
From: John Cassady <jcassady AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2010 19:34:14 -0600
 

With the Christmas Bird Count season behind us, I thought it would be a good
time to share an update of what has been reported in Indiana thus far.

 

Compilers for the following count circles have entered their bird data into
the National Audubon database: ELKHART, EVANSVILLE, FORT WAYNE, HAMILTON
COUNTY, IND DUNES, JOHNSON COUNTY, JAMESTOWN, LAFAYETTE, MICHAELA
FARM-OLDENBURG, MUNCIE, NE LaPORTE, OAKLAND CITY, POSEY COUNTY, POKAGON,
PATOKA LAKE, PIGEON RIVER, RICHMOND, SOUTH BEND, So. LAKE COUNTY, SPRING
MILL, SULLIVAN COUNTY, TRI-COUNTY ROCHESTER, TERRE HAUTE, TOPEKA, TURKEY
RUN, WARRICK COUNTY, W. GIBSON COUNTY, WHITEWATER ST. PK., WILLOW SLOUGH.

 

The following unusual or out of season species have been reported thus far: 

 

RED-THROATED LOON

GOLDEN EAGLE

SURF SCOTER

WHITE-WINGED SCOTER

BLACK SCOTER

VIRGINIA RAIL

LEAST SANDPIPER

INDIGO BUNTING

LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL

GLAUCOUS GULL

NORTHERN SHRIKE

VARIED THRUSH

RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRD

GREAT EGRET

Le CONTE'S SPARROW

CHIPPING SPARROW

VESPER SPARROW

WESTERN GREBE

PALM WARBLER

BARN OWL

LONG-EARED OWL

"OREGON" DARK-EYED JUNCO

BALTIMORE ORIOLE

 

Many circles have yet to report.

 

John Cassady

Elkhart

 

 

 


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Subject: Eagle Marsh, Ft Wayne
From: zzedpowers AT AOL.COM
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2010 18:25:33 -0500
There were two SWAMP SPARROWS at Eagle Marsh, along Trail 9A. This short trail 
circles the extreme east end of the marsh. Nearly all the birds were along the 
edge of the woods. 

 

Red-tailed Hawk     2
Downy Woodpecker     1
Hairy Woodpecker     1
American Crow     1
Carolina Chickadee     1
American Tree Sparrow     10
Song Sparrow     6
Swamp Sparrow     2
American Goldfinch     1

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

 Ed Powers
Allen County


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Subject: Re: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
From: Ray Troyer <raytroyer AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2010 22:29:55 +0000
That's exactly how I felt when I had a Pileated at my place several weeks 
ago.  It's wooded but, I thought the trees are too small.  Maybe it was 
because he was very actively looking for food.  He didn't come to the suite 


Ray Troyer 

Goshen,  Elkhart 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "B.G. Sloan"  
To: IN-BIRD-L AT  LISTSERV .INDIANA. EDU 
Sent: Monday, February 1, 2010 8:52:16 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees 


  
This winter I've been seeing Pileated Woodpeckers in places where I 
haven't usually seen them over the five years I've lived in this house. 

  
But before I start talking about the Pileateds , I just wanted to mention a 
large flock of Carolina Chickadees I encountered along the IU cross country 
course this morning. There were at least 20-25 chickadees in this flock. They 
all were chasing each other agitatedly. This is the largest tightly knit flock 
of chickadees I have ever seen. Cool!! 

  
I'm lucky enough to live a half mile from 2.5+ square miles of largely 
uninhabited wooded hills. The habitat there is really good for Pileated 
Woodpeckers. When I go deep into these woods it's not at all unusual to 
see/hear Pileateds . 

  
But this past fall and this winter I've consistently seen  Pileateds in 
less-than-optimal habitats: 

  
* I've had Pileateds at my suburban feeders numerous times this winter. 
* On at least three occasions I've had to chase away Pileateds hammering the 
siding of my house, presumably looking for carpenter bee nests. This is an 
interesting experience in itself. When a Pileated starts hammering on your 
siding it sounds like some sort of maniac is trying to hack through your wall 
with a ball-peen hammer. :-) 

* Pileateds have become quite common in hedgerows and small patches of 
pole-sized timber along the south edge of the IU cross country course. 

* Just in the past few days I've seen several really out-of-place Pileateds 
. One was flying over the Best Buy on 3rd Street. Another was flying over the 
College Mall parking lot. And just this morning I watched a pair of Pileateds 
leisurely working their way through the Bell Trace retirement community. 

  
Bernie Sloan 
My birding blog : http ://bird-bs. blogspot .com 
Follow me on Twitter: http ://twitter.com/ birdbs 
My all-time favorite song about birdwatching: http :// tinyurl .com/yk8j6wr 

  
  





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Subject: Harbingers of Spring??
From: Bob Huguenard <roberthuguenard AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2010 16:48:47 -0500
Hi,

 

  This morning near the Horseman's Campground at Potato Creek SP, I counted
37 American Robins feeding on sumac and berries with a few BC Chickadees..
Spring is coming. I also had the Northern Shrike near the west Osprey Tower.

 

Bob

 

North Liberty

 

 


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Subject: Wabash R from W Lafayette, 2/2/10
From: Ed Hopkins <birder4in AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2010 14:13:17 -0500
Wabash River from the W Lafayette bank, 2/2/10
  I counted from US52 S to IN26.  The W shore has slower moving water,
and waterfowl are often difficult to see from W Lafayette.  One of the
BAEAs was perched above the river along the N pond of the Williamsburg
Apts where ducks usually sit. I walked to the edge of the river from
the mowed lawn off of the southend apartments.  The scoter happened to
be just below out of sight.  When it and some Mallards took off, I was
only 30' from it.

Canada Goose,10
Mallard,77
Surf Scoter,1,female
Common Goldeneye,1
Great Blue Heron,4
Bald Eagle,2, one adult & one 4th year
Ring-billed Gull,1
Rock Pigeon,24
Red-bellied Woodpecker,1
Hairy Woodpecker,1
American Crow,6
European Starling,2
House Sparrow,1

====
Ed Hopkins
W Lafayette, IN

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Subject: Out-of-place Pileated Woodpeckers? Plus lots of Chickadees
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 17:52:16 -0800
 
This winter I've been seeing Pileated Woodpeckers in places where I 
haven't usually seen them over the five years I've lived in this house. 

 
But before I start talking about the Pileateds, I just wanted to mention a 
large flock of Carolina Chickadees I encountered along the IU cross country 
course this morning. There were at least 20-25 chickadees in this flock. They 
all were chasing each other agitatedly. This is the largest tightly knit flock 
of chickadees I have ever seen. Cool!! 

 
I'm lucky enough to live a half mile from 2.5+ square miles of largely 
uninhabited wooded hills. The habitat there is really good for Pileated 
Woodpeckers. When I go deep into these woods it's not at all unusual to 
see/hear Pileateds. 

 
But this past fall and this winter I've consistently seen Pileateds in 
less-than-optimal habitats: 

 
* I've had Pileateds at my suburban feeders numerous times this winter.
* On at least three occasions I've had to chase away Pileateds hammering the 
siding of my house, presumably looking for carpenter bee nests. This is an 
interesting experience in itself. When a Pileated starts hammering on your 
siding it sounds like some sort of maniac is trying to hack through your wall 
with a ball-peen hammer. :-) 

* Pileateds have become quite common in hedgerows and small patches of 
pole-sized timber along the south edge of the IU cross country course. 

* Just in the past few days I've seen several really out-of-place Pileateds. 
One was flying over the Best Buy on 3rd Street. Another was flying over the 
College Mall parking lot. And just this morning I watched a pair of Pileateds 
leisurely working their way through the Bell Trace retirement community. 

 
Bernie Sloan
My birding blog: http://bird-bs.blogspot.com 
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/birdbs
My all-time favorite song about birdwatching: http://tinyurl.com/yk8j6wr 

 
 





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Subject: Birding in Gibson County.
From: Vicky Whitaker <hostas4u AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 23:59:37 -0500
1-31-10 Went birding at Blue Grass FWA with a group of other birders.
 We saw Merlins 4
 Rough-legged hawk 1
Northern harriers 10+
Red-tailed hawk 1
Coopers hawk 1 (me only)driving around on my own earlier.
Short-eared owls 10+, once we started seeing them it was hard to keep 
track, but was very enjoyable.
Redwing blackbirds 100+ a few females there too.
American tree sparrows 10+
Canada geese 50+
Horned Larks 25+
Great blue Herons 3
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monday 2-1-10
Pileated Woodpecker back yard 1
downy Woodpecker 1 
Tufted Titmice 4 feeder
Carolina chickadee 2 feeder
N Cardinals 6 feeder, 10+ in bottom pasture, scrub area.
Red-tailed hawk 1 Flying away from the pasture
Sharp shinned hawk flying over yard 1
Blue Jays 4 fighting over food
Mourning doves 20+
E Starlings 15+ fighting over food
Cowbird 2
H finches 10
H sparrows 15
White-throated sparrow 3 down in schub area.
Happy birding to all intil next time.
Vicky Whitaker

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Subject: Re: Surf Scoter Pictures
From: Ning Wu <tippbird AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 21:11:37 -0500
Sorry, everyone, I forgot to send the link to the photos. I apologize for the 
picture quality. I only had a point-and-shoot camera and it was just after 
sunrise. Thanks. 


 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/47128735 AT N05/

 

Ning

 

 

 

From: raytroyer AT comcast.net [mailto:raytroyer AT comcast.net] 
Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 8:57 PM
To: Ning Wu
Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Surf Scoter Pictures

 

Where did you upload them to. I don;t have a flickr account so, I don;t think I 
can login unless you attach a link. Sounds like you made the right call though, 
good work. 


Ray


----- Original Message -----
From: "Ning Wu" 
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Sent: Monday, February 1, 2010 7:54:40 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Surf Scoter Pictures

I just uploaded two pictures of the Surf Scoter on flickr. I think the bird
is likely a young male because of the ring shaped mark that's forming on the
bill. Also, not apparent in the photo because of the lighting, there is
considerable yellow in the front of the bill. After getting home and
comparing the pictures to to my Sibley's guide, I feel more confident about
my id. Please let me know if you think there's anything wrong with my id.
Thanks.

 

Ning


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Subject: Re: Merlins going Urban? 2/1/10, W Lafayette
From: John Cassady <jcassady AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 19:25:51 -0600
I remember seeing a Merlin perched in the middle of downtown Michigan City
on a Christmas Count, and another on a pole in the center of the town of
Miller.  Both birds looked very out of place.

John Cassady
Elkhart

-----Original Message-----
From: Bird discussion list for Indiana
[mailto:IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] On Behalf Of Ed Hopkins
Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 5:50 PM
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Merlins going Urban? 2/1/10, W Lafayette

  This evening I was approaching Sagamore Pkwy on Salisbury Ave.  I
saw a small falcon land on top of a tall power pole.  It appeared to
be dark.  I crossed the intersection and parked in a CVS Drug parking
lot and got my scope out.  It was a female Merlin.  It was still
sitting up there at 6 PM when I left.  The situaltion remined be of
the Hawthorn Mine evening roosts.
   This was my first urban Merlin!
====
Ed Hopkins
W Lafayette, IN

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Subject: Surf Scoter Pictures
From: Ning Wu <tippbird AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 19:54:40 -0500
I just uploaded two pictures of the Surf Scoter on flickr. I think the bird
is likely a young male because of the ring shaped mark that's forming on the
bill. Also, not apparent in the photo because of the lighting, there is
considerable yellow in the front of the bill. After getting home and
comparing the pictures to to my Sibley's guide, I feel more confident about
my id. Please let me know if you think there's anything wrong with my id.
Thanks.

 

Ning


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Subject: FOY Redbreasted Nuthatch
From: terry ballenger <t.ballenger AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 15:55:32 -0800
Had my first RENU at my peanut feeder yesterday afternoon.  Since I was out of 
the raw peanuts I usually use, I snuck out a few of my wife's expense nut 
mix in hopes of keeping the little critter around (shhhh!!, don't tell her.) 

 
Good birding
Terry Ballenger

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Subject: Merlins going Urban? 2/1/10, W Lafayette
From: Ed Hopkins <birder4in AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 18:50:16 -0500
  This evening I was approaching Sagamore Pkwy on Salisbury Ave.  I
saw a small falcon land on top of a tall power pole.  It appeared to
be dark.  I crossed the intersection and parked in a CVS Drug parking
lot and got my scope out.  It was a female Merlin.  It was still
sitting up there at 6 PM when I left.  The situaltion remined be of
the Hawthorn Mine evening roosts.
   This was my first urban Merlin!
====
Ed Hopkins
W Lafayette, IN

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Subject: my four raptor commute
From: Bob Royalty <royaltyr AT WABASH.EDU>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 18:16:22 -0500
I was surprised on the way out of Crawfordsville this evening about 4:45
pm on IN 32 by a Northern Harrier (not far from where I often see Wild
Turkeys and, last week, a female pheasant).

Then a few Kestrels on "Kestrel Alley," IN 32 between Shannondale and
Lebanon.

An adult Accipiter flying over I-65 South of Lebanon.  It looked smaller
than the Cooper's Hawk I saw yesterday, but I couldn't swear to a
Sharp-Shinned.  One or the other.

Finally a Red-tailed Hawk on 865, with a herd of deer in the background,
as I headed to Trader's Point.

Bob R.
Zionsville

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Subject: Re: Surf Scoter on the Wabash, Tippecanoe Co.
From: "Dunning, John B" <jdunning AT PURDUE.EDU>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 13:06:31 -0500
Surf Scoter is definitely a rare bird in the Tippecanoe County area. But the 
area that Ning found the bird is exactly where one expects to see winter 
waterfowl in the Lafayette area. We have had several scoter sightings, as well 
as all three mergansers and Long-tailed Duck in the stretch of the river near 
the Williamsburg apartment complex. It is also a good area for wintering 
eagles. There is some overflow areas along the river here that is attractive to 
ducks, but probably the concentration of sightings is due to the apartment 
complex's parking lots - the river is relatively accessible here for people 
with scopes. Still, I get more records of rare waterfowl here than just 
downstream where the river goes through downtown Lafayette/West Lafayette. The 
latter also has good parking and birder access so that is only part of the 
explanation for the Williamsburg rarities. 


Barny
Misner13 AT verizon.net

-----Original Message-----
From: Bird discussion list for Indiana [mailto:IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] 
On Behalf Of Ning Wu 

Sent: Monday, February 01, 2010 9:17 AM
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Surf Scoter on the Wabash, Tippecanoe Co.

This morning, I found the duck I reported yesterday again. It was still on
the Wabash River by Williamsburg apartments. The light was better today, and
I got a good look. It was definitely a Surf Scoter, likely an immature as
its nape is not white yet. I got one good picture and several not so good
ones, which I'll post later when I get home and grab my camera cable. 

 

I wonder if this bird is rare on this stretch of Wabash. My report is the
only Surf Scoter record on ebird.org for the counties of Tippecanoe,
Carroll, Warren, Fountain, and Cass. But then I don't know how many birders
regularly contribute to ebird. Anyway, this is officially my 100-th life
bird! Woo-hoo!!!!

 

Ning


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Subject: Surf Scoter on the Wabash, Tippecanoe Co.
From: Ning Wu <tippbird AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2010 09:17:05 -0500
This morning, I found the duck I reported yesterday again. It was still on
the Wabash River by Williamsburg apartments. The light was better today, and
I got a good look. It was definitely a Surf Scoter, likely an immature as
its nape is not white yet. I got one good picture and several not so good
ones, which I'll post later when I get home and grab my camera cable. 

 

I wonder if this bird is rare on this stretch of Wabash. My report is the
only Surf Scoter record on ebird.org for the counties of Tippecanoe,
Carroll, Warren, Fountain, and Cass. But then I don't know how many birders
regularly contribute to ebird. Anyway, this is officially my 100-th life
bird! Woo-hoo!!!!

 

Ning


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Subject: Rusty Blackbird Blitz: 1/30 - 2/15
From: Jim Hengeveld <jhengeve AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 31 Jan 2010 21:26:47 -0500
The Rusty Blackbird Blitz – January 30- February 15

Last year over 200 birders submitted 453 Rusty Blackbird Surveys  
during the first annual Rusty Blackbird Blitz. This year we are hoping  
to gain more information to help understand what habitats support (and  
lack thereof) wintering populations of Rusties.  Blitz Participants  
will simply be asked to visit locations where they have previously  
sighted or would expect to encounter Rusty Blackbirds (e.g. wet  
forested areas) and submit their observations via e-Bird.  You can go  
wherever you like, whenever you like, and as often as you like anytime  
between the dates of January 30 – February 15, 2010.   We are simply  
seeking observations on the number of birds present at each location  
visited, along with very basic habitat information. Last year, more  
people may have gone out to search for Rusties than was recorded on E- 
Bird.  This is because some people who did not see Rusty Blackbirds  
did not report. So I must emphasize that even if you do not see any  
Rusty Blackbirds during your survey, this information should still be  
reported on the eBird.org site.

The protocol website:

http://nationalzoo.si.edu/ConservationAndScience/MigratoryBirds/Research/Rusty_Blackbird/protocol.cfm 

Please let me know if you have any questions or would like help  
submitting a Rusty survey.

A datasheet can be downloaded here:

http://nationalzoo.si.edu/ConservationAndScience/MigratoryBirds/Research/Rusty_Blackbird/Blitz%20Data%20Form.pdf 


The Rusty Blackbird has been steeply declining with estimates of an  
85-99% population drop over the past 40 years.  The cause for this  
alarming decline is not known and the increasingly sparse and patchy  
winter distribution of the Rusty Blackbird is making it more difficult  
to learn more about distribution, abundance, and ecology as a basis  
for conservation efforts.  Collaborating with Cornell Laboratory of  
Ornithology's and National Audubon Society’s e-Bird project, the Rusty  
Blackbird Technical Working Group (RBTWG) needs your help to find  
local, but predictable wintering concentrations of Rusty Blackbirds by  
participating in the Rusty Blackbird Blitz. As a result of these  
efforts, the RBTWG is hoping to create maps of wintering Rusty  
Blackbird "hot spots" that will help direct research, monitoring and  
conservation attention.

The main overview website:

http://nationalzoo.si.edu/ConservationAndScience/MigratoryBirds/Research/Rusty_Blackbird/blitz.cfm 


A new Rusty Blackbird Facebook page is listed here:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?v=info&ref=search&gid=160304893362

Last year’s results are posted at this site:

http://nationalzoo.si.edu/ConservationAndScience/MigratoryBirds/Research/Rusty_Blackbird/blitz_results.cfm 


Your participation in this event is needed.  Reports by Indiana  
birders were few and far between last year and it would be nice to get  
some information generated about Rusties in Indiana this year.   
Information gained from this effort will provide focus to local  
conservation efforts to benefit Rusty Blackbirds.

.........Jim


********************
James Hengeveld
Dept. of Biology
Indiana University
Bloomington, IN  47405
Ph.:  812-855-5353






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Subject: Neighborhood birds - Black Vulture, plus Robins and Crows
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 31 Jan 2010 16:22:09 -0800
 
This morning I walked to the local grocery store to pick up a Sunday newspaper. 
As I was headed home I noticed a first-of-year (FOY) Black Vulture flying above 
Pete Ellis Drive. That was BIGBY species #71 for 2010! 

 
Along the way I also saw a mixed flock of Cedar Waxwings and Robins feeding on 
the desiccated fruit of an ornamental crabapple tree. I know we have Robins 
year-round here, but seeing 50-60 noisily feeding Robins reminded me that 
spring migration is (almost) just around the corner. And thinking about Robins 
and spring migration reminded me of my favorite birdwatching song 
(http://tinyurl.com/yk8j6wr). OK, so it’s the only birdwatching song I know 
of. 

 
Finally, there has been a heck of a lot of crows around the neighborhood this 
week. Saturday morning I was walking past IU’s new Innovation Center on east 
10th Street and the ground under a couple of trees there was blanketed with 
crow droppings. (I made a big detour around those trees!) Last night at sunset 
I stood in the front yard and heard what sounded like thousands of crows 
massing not too far off to the west. And at one point this afternoon I had 
about 25-30 crows foraging in the side yard. I’ve lived in this neighborhood 
for five years and I can’t remember ever having this many crows around. 

 
Bernie Sloan
Bloomington
My birding blog: http://bird-bs.blogspot.com 
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/birdbs




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Subject: Zimmerman Wetlands - 1/31/10
From: Jeff Riegel <jkriegel AT BIRDCOUNTRY.US>
Date: Sun, 31 Jan 2010 15:03:12 -0800
Jim and Susan Hengeveld, Geoff Keller, Mike Kelley, Ann and I went to  
the Zimmerman Wetland Preserve at Stonehead (Brown County) this  
morning (Sunday) for our monthly look at what's around. Nothing new  
for the property this morning, but a good morning to be out, although  
a tad on the chilly side - 9 degrees when we started. Here's our list  
in no particular order.

White-breasted Nuthatch - 7
Northern Flicker - 2
American Crow - 8
Red-shouldered Hawk - 1 (heard only)
White-throated Sparrow - 2
Carolina Chickadee - 3
Mourning Dove - 1
Dark-eyed Junco - 20
Eastern Bluebird - 7
Pileated Woodpecker - 1
Song Sparrow - 21
Swamp Sparrow - 9
American Tree Sparrow - 13
Tufted Titmouse - 6
Wild Turkey - 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 3
Downy Woodpecker - 2
Northern Cardinal - 8
Blue Jay - 4
American Goldfinch - 6
Eastern Towhee - 2
Carolina Wren - 2
Field Sparrow - 4

-- 
Jeff Riegel
PO Box 6194
Bloomington, IN  47407
812-275-5708
jkriegel AT birdcountry.us
www.BirdCountry.US
www.eaglesatlakemonroe.com

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Subject: Tippecanoe Co., Possible Scoter on Wabash
From: Ning Wu <tippbird AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 31 Jan 2010 16:04:28 -0500
I saw a duck with big triangular bill swimming on Wabash River at around
2:30 this afternoon. It was swimming along with Mallards in the river by the
Williamsburg apartments. I was observing it from the Heritage Trail across
the river. The duck was dark overall, with big triangular bill, and some
white on the head (particularly in front of the eye). It was noticeably
smaller than the Mallards. Because I was looking to the west, where the sun
was at that time, and I only had binoculars, so I couldn't positively ID the
bird. But based on the bill shape and size, I think it was probably either a
female or young Surf Scoter or the White-winged Scoter. Of these two, I
think the Surf Scoter is more likely, as I didn't detect any white on the
body. I drove to Williamsburg apartments, hoping it would swim by the gap of
the quarry (?) pond and I could get a better look of it in more favorable
lighting. But I didn't do so in the 10 minutes I stayed there. I wonder if
anyone had seen it or could bring a scope to it before it's gone. To get on
the Heritage Trail where I saw the duck, the most convenient way is to park
at the sport park off Canal Street. Thanks.

 

Ning


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