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Updated on Wednesday, May 14 at 02:09 PM ET
The most recently received Mail is at the top.


Eastern Phoebe

14 May Eagle Creek Park, Indianapolis [Larry Peavler ]
14 May SW Allen Chorus- May 14 AM [Rodger Rang ]
14 May Mackey [Brian Taylor ]
14 May Howell Wetlands 5/13 [Tim Griffith ]
14 May A Stunning Bird! [Canyon Wren ]
13 May Indiana PBS series [Samuel Orr ]
13 May MNWR [David Crouch ]
13 May IU cross country course, 5/13 - 52 species, three new BIGBY birds ["B.G. Sloan" ]
13 May Lakefront 13May08 Wilson's Phalarope ["Kenneth J. Brock" ]
13 May Interesting sparrow day ["B.G. Sloan" ]
13 May Pine Siskin [Kyle Bixler ]
13 May Red Breasted Nuthatch Southwestway Park ["Ryan J. Sanderson" ]
13 May Laughing Gulls ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
13 May Steuben County May Day Count [Holly Meyers ]
13 May Monroe Co. Yard Birds 5/12 [Scott Evans ]
13 May Muscatatuck NWR rails [Gary Dorman ]
13 May Kingsbury, Pierce Rd. 10 May - Snowy Egret, W. Phalarope, Brewer's Blackbird [Jeff McCoy ]
13 May Lakefront Migrants 5/12 [John Kendall ]
12 May Central Newton Co, 5/10/08 ["Hopkins, Edward M" ]
12 May ignore extra post [Liz Day ]
12 May cardinal nest predated [Liz Day ]
12 May rusty cranes [Liz Day ]
12 May Re: Hovering HOSPs [Liz Day ]
12 May Willets Bluegrass in Warrick county [Brian Taylor ]
12 May Phalaropes,LaGrange Co. [Dan Stoltzfus ]
12 May Eagle Marsh Black Tern- May 12 PM [Rodger Rang ]
12 May Hovering HOSPs ["B.G. Sloan" ]
12 May Dowitcher ? [Ray Troyer ]
12 May Monroe sites ["Whitehead, Donald R." ]
12 May Yard Birds [Vicky Foltz ]
12 May Lake Cumberland Junco [Terry Ballenger ]
12 May Marbled Godwits at Goose Pond FWA [Lee Sterrenburg ]
12 May Montgomery Co, 700 S 100 E [marty jones ]
12 May Eagle Creek Park, Sunday May 11, 2008 [John Ulmer ]
11 May Big May count [Tom ]
12 May Cosc. Co. Surf Scoter [Steve and Connie Doud ]
12 May Eastern Wood PeeWee, Elkhart Co [Wilma J Harder ]
11 May Update to Earlier Post [Canyon Wren ]
11 May Monroe County weekend birds [Cathy ]
11 May Re: LBDO, UPSA pics [Liz Day ]
11 May Greene Co. May Day count highlights [Mike Clarke ]
11 May Spring Count (Lake Co.) - Glaucous Gull, Clay-colored Sp., Moorhens [Michael Topp ]
11 May May Count - St. Joe County (Potato Creek) [JOHN CASSADY ]
11 May Greene Co. MDC - 5/10 [Jim Hengeveld ]
11 May Gibson Co. Pacific Loon - No? [Gary Bowman ]
11 May More Allen Co. May Day count []
11 May Allen County May Day Count- May 10 [Rodger Rang ]
11 May Lk. Lemon - siskins, Surf Scoter [Jim Hengeveld ]
11 May Riddle Point 5/10 [Robert Kissel ]
11 May Re: Question about Wild Turkey in Indianapolis ["B.G. Sloan" ]
11 May Fort Harrison SP May 11 - Rain! [Don Gorney ]
11 May BIG MAY COUNT & NEW STATE RECORD [Canyon Wren ]

Subject: Eagle Creek Park, Indianapolis
From: Larry Peavler <lpeavler AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 15:09:34 -0400
A storm before dawn put down a lot of birds at the marina. Most birds were 
within 100 yards. We walked along the road from 8:15 until 11:10 AM. 


E. Wood-Pewee  12+
Least Flycatcher  4
Great Crested Flycatcher  2
White-eyed Vireo 1
Warbling  4
Red-eyed  8
Swainson's Thrush  3
Warblers
   Tennessee  7   5 M
    Nashville    1
   N. Parula    2    M
   Yellow       11   9 M
   Chestnut-sided  4  M
   Magnolia   2   F
   Cape May  9   6 M
   Black-throated Blue 1   F
   Yellow-rumped  45+   10 M
   Black-throated Green  3  1 M
   Blackburnian   8   M
   Yellow-throated  1   M
   Palm   9
   Bay-breasted  8   6  M
   Blackpoll  25+    20 M
   Black-and-white  2   H
   A. Redstart  7    5 M
   C. Yellowthroat  6  M
   Wilson's  2   M
   Canada   3   M    Two in view at once
Scarlet Tanager  7   6 M
Orchard Oriole  1   F
Baltimore Oriole  8   M

Larry Peavler
Indianapolis, IN. 
   
     
 

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Subject: SW Allen Chorus- May 14 AM
From: Rodger Rang <rrang AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 12:24:56 -0400
Given a full day at Crane Creek yesterday and today's gloomy forecast, I 
elected not to rise early today for birding. Still, while returning home from 
brunch, I detoured through a heavily wooded subdivision around 11:00 to give a 
listen in the light rain. There wasn't much singing at first, but at the 
cul-de-sac things got rather lively, so I exited my vehicle and enjoyed a 
rather nice chorus. This magical May moment included: 


Eastern Wood-Pewee- 2, my FOS for NE Ind.
Acadian Flycatcher- 1
Yellow-throated Vireo- 2
Blue-headed Vireo- 1
Red-eyed Vireo- 3
Swainson's Thrush- 1
Wood Thrush- 1
Warblers- Tennessee- 1
    Chestnut-sided- 2
    Magnolia- 1
    Black-throated Green- 2
    Blackburnian- 1
    Bay-breasted- 2, my FOS for NE Ind.
    Blackpoll- 1, my FOS
    Cerulean- 1
    American Redstart- 2
Scarlet Tanager- 2
    
Noticeably absent in this small but diverse flock were Ruby-crowneds, 
Nashvilles, and Yellow-rumpeds. And May marches on! 


Rodger Rang
Fort Wayne

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Subject: Mackey
From: Brian Taylor <brian.taylor AT HAUBSTADT.COM>
Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 09:57:46 -0500
I went to Mackey yesterday in search of the Pacific Loon.  I did not see the
loon, but was amazed at the habitat.  A full adult eagle flew right over my
truck.  I saw no less than 10 orchard orioles and 1 in 1st spring plumage.
Blue grosbeaks were everywhere and sparrows were everywhere.  I also got my
FOY willow flycatcher.

 

Brian Taylor

Evansville

 


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Subject: Howell Wetlands 5/13
From: Tim Griffith <timgrif396 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 09:41:32 -0400
Played hooky from the store for a couple of hours yesterday morning.  Took a 
quick trip through Howell Wetlands on Evansville's west side.  There was a 
high school science class there as well so bird activity was a little lacking. 

The following were observed or heard:
Canada Goose
Mallard
Great Blue Heron
Turkey Vulture
Red-shouldered Hawk
Mourning Dove
Chimney Swift
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Eastern Wood Pewee
Least Flycatcher
White-eyed Vireo
Yellow-throated Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Tree Swallow
N. Rough-winged Swallow
Carolina Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
Carolina Wren
House Wren
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Veery
Swainson's Thrush
American Robin
Blue Jay
Gray Catbird
European Starling
Tennessee Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Palm Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
Black and White Warbler
Prothonotary Warbler
Ovenbird
Common Yellowthroat
Song Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Indigo Bunting
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Baltimore Oriole
American Goldfinch
House Sparrow

Tim Griffith
Evansville, IN

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Subject: A Stunning Bird!
From: Canyon Wren <canyonwren AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Wed, 14 May 2008 07:03:10 -0500
Yesterday at about 7pm as I was getting into my car at my office to leave for 
the day, I heard a lot of bird activity. I decided to listen for a few minutes 
to see if I could hear anything interesting. I wasn't disappointed. My ears 
told me I had a warbler nearby. But, which one? I thought I knew, but I wanted 
confirmation to be certain. Besides who wouldn't want to see a male warbler in 
full breeding plumage? 


I grabbed my binos and listened again. Of course all the trees are nearly 
leafed out so finding a warbler at the top of a tree isn't all that easy now. 
In an effort to pin-point the tree, I walked about twenty-five yards and 
listened again. I was closing in. I now knew that it was in one of two trees. I 
moved in closer. I thought I saw movement. Yes! I did see movement. I 
positioned myself on the north side of the tree to improve my angle and waited 
for movement again. There it was. Binoculars up. And, just as I thought, there 
was a stunning male Blackburnian Warbler still singing his heart out! 


What a wonderful way to end a workday! As I got into my car, the Blackburnian 
was still singing while foraging up in the top of that tree! 


Good birding!
Lynea

Copyright 2008 by Lynea Hinchman, Michigan City, Indiana. All rights reserved. 
Reproduction in whole or in part by any means without written permission of the 
author is strictly prohibited. 


Lynea Hinchman
Michigan City, Indiana
Heart of the Indiana Dunes
CanyonWrenatComcastdotnet
 
"The beauty and genius of a work of art may be reconceived though its first
material expression be destroyed.  A vanished harmony may yet again inspire
the composer, but when the last individual of a race of living beings
breathes no more, another heaven and another earth must pass before such a
one can be again."  William Beebe
 

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Subject: Indiana PBS series
From: Samuel Orr <sporr AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 20:22:40 -0400
Hi everyone,

 I'm a producer for WFYI in Indianapolis, and we're finishing up a 4 part 
series called 

"The Natural Heritage of Indiana", to air in the fall of 2008 on Indiana PBS 
stations. At the 

moment we're in need of bird material, specifically active nests. However, we 
have to be 

able to film the nest, so something at the top of a tree likely won't work.

 We are potentially interested in all nests, but of special priority are the 
following species; 


         Pileated woodpecker
         Ovenbird (and other groundnesters)
         Nighthawk
         Hummingbird
         Marsh Wren
         Prothonotory Warbler
         Wood duck
         Any nest parasitized by cowbirds
         Any of the raptors

 This is by no means an exclusive list. If the nest is near the ground, or in a 
tree cavity, 

so that we can film it without going up into the tree, or using 
ladders/scaffolding, we'd like 

to hear about it, regardless of the species. A natural setting is preferred, 
but not absolutely 

necessary, especially for nighthawks and cowbirds. We do need to know, however, 
that the 

nest is definitely active, and its specific location.

   Hopefully some of you know where such nests are, and can help us film them.

   You can contact me at - indiananests AT gmail.com

   Thanks in advance.

   Samuel Orr
   Producer "The Natural Heritage of Indiana"
   WFYI - Indianapolis

     

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Subject: MNWR
From: David Crouch <david AT PROGRADE.NET>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 20:00:45 -0400
Clearer in the morning with some clouds blowing in on a south wind  
starting early in the afternoon. A highlight was viewing a Tom Turkey  
doing a full tail fan display for two females on and off for ten  
minutes. His theatrics barely disturbed the foraging. The listed Red- 
tailed hawk was very dark, obscured belly band and a darker than  
typical red tail. Counts for selected species:

Muscatatuck NWR

Pied-billed Grebe
Canada Goose
Great Blue Heron	6
Green Heron		2
Killdeer			7
Turkey			3
Gray Catbird	
American Robin
American Goldfinch
Northern Cardinal
Turkey Vulture
Bald Eagle		1	adult, fishing above Richart Lake
Red-tailed Hawk	1	western or dark morph
E. Kingbird
E. Phoebe
E. Bluebird		4
Brown Thrasher	3	
E. Wood Peewee	
Rt Hummingbird	1	high atop a Cherry tree
Summer Tanager
Red-eyed Vireo
White-eyed Vireo
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Yellow Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Pine Warbler
Kentucky Warbler	1	my FOY
Prairie Warbler		3	all seen
American Redstart
Prothonotary 		2	one tending to a tree cavity nest
Yellow-breasted Chat	many
Indigo Bunting			numerous
Blue Jay
Tree Swallow
Barn Swallow		8
White-crowned Sparrow	4
Song Sparrow
Field sparrow
Mourning Dove
Pileated Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Brown-headed Cowbird
E. Starling
Common Grackle
Red-winged Blackbird	numerous
American Crow


Dave Crouch
Seymour

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Subject: IU cross country course, 5/13 - 52 species, three new BIGBY birds
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 16:26:52 -0700
Today was one of my busier trips to the IU XC course so far this year...52 
species, with three new BIGBY birds (bringing my 2008 BIGBY total to 103 
species). 


The highlight was watching an American Kestrel hover over the grass for a 
couple of minutes or so before pouncing on its prey. The Kestrel was maybe 
25-30 feet up, and then dropped like a rock. 


After not seeing any Eastern Kingbirds so far this year, today they turned out 
in full force...maybe half a dozen. 


Also saw quite a few Purple Martins, another new BIGBY bird.

The third new BIGBY bird was a Swainson's thrush.

The list:

Turkey Vulture - 4
American Kestrel - 1
Canada Goose - 2 (flyover)
Great Blue Heron - 1 (flyover)
Killdeer - several
Eastern Meadowlark - 6-7
Downy Woodpecker - 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 3
Pileated Woodpecker - 1
White-breasted Nuthatch - 4
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 2
Carolina Chickadee - 8-10
Tufted Titmouse - 5-6
Carolina Wren - 2
House Wren - 5
Northern Cardinal - many
Blue Jay - many
Baltimore Oriole - 5
Rose-breasted Grosbeak - 1
Scarlet Tanager - 1
Tree Swallow - several
Northern Rough-winged Swallow - several
Barn Swallow - 1
Purple Martin - 6-7 
Acadian Flycatcher - 1
Eastern Phoebe - 1
Eastern Kingbird - 6
Eastern Bluebird - 4-5
American Robin - 8
Wood Thrush - 1
Swainson's Thrush - 1
Gray Catbird - 3
Brown Thrasher - 2
White-eyed Vireo - 4
Red-eyed Vireo - 1
Common Yellowthroat - 2
White-crowned Sparrow - 6-8
White-throated Sparrow - 2-3
Chipping Sparrow - 6-7
Song Sparrow - 7
Field Sparrow - 3
Eastern Towhee - 5
American Goldfinch - 10
House Finch - 7
House Sparrow - 5
Mourning Dove - 8
Rock Dove - 10 (flyover)
American Crow - 25-30 (foraging in grass)
Red-winged Blackbird - 5
Common Grackle - 6
Brown-headed Cowbird - 2
European Starling - 15

Bernie Sloan
Bloomington


      

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Subject: Lakefront 13May08 Wilson's Phalarope
From: "Kenneth J. Brock" <kj.brock AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 17:40:16 -0500
Today (Tuesday 13 May 08) John Cassady, Joel Greenberg, and I birded the
Indiana lakefront. 

A two-hour lakewatch at Dunes S.P. yielded a mediocre longshore flight.  A
tour of several Lake Co. traps provided some modest success.  The dayıs most
striking bird was a female Wilsonıs Phalarope in pristine alternate plumage
at McCool Basin.

HIGHLIGHTS 

DUNES S.P. Lakewatch (*observed by John in early morning along State Park
Boundary Road)
Caspian tern (6)
Ruby-throated Hummingbird (9)
Red-headed Woodpecker (4)
Red-bellied Woodpecker (4)
Eastern Kingbird (33)
Blue Jay (140)
Cliff Swallow (29)
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (12)
Am. Pipit (5)
Yellow Warbler (2)
Magnolia Warbler (1 male)
Yellow-rumped Warbler (5)
Black-throated Green Warbler (3)
Blackburnian Warbler (1 male)
Bay-breasted Warbler (1 male)
*Kentucky Warbler (1 singing)
Hooded Warbler (1 male)
Scarlet Tanager (2 males)
LARK SPARROW (1- 4th longshore flight record)
Rose-breasted Grosbeak (2)
Indigo Bunting (23)
Bobolink (1 male)
Orchard Oriole (3)
Baltimore Oriole (49)
*Purple Finch (1)

FORSYTHE PARK
Cooperıs Hawk (1)
Least Flycatcher (4)
Red-breasted Nuthatch (1- female)
Orange-crowned Warbler (1)
Nashville Warbler (1)
Yellow Warbler (1)
Magnolia Warbler (1)
Yellow-rumped Warbler (1)
Palm Warbler (2)
Black and white Warbler (4)
Am. Redstart (1 female)
Savannah Sparrow (1)
YELLOW-HEADED BLACKBIRD (1 female)

HAMMOND LAKEFRONT SANCTUARY
WHIP-POOR-WILL (1 female)
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (1 ad fem- ties 5th latest lakefront record)
Least Flycatcher (10)
Ruby-crowned Kinglet (3)
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (1)
Veery (1)
Gray Catbird (20- heavy movement)
Nashville Warbler (3)
Yellow Warbler (5)
Magnolia Warbler (3 males)
Yellow-rumped Warbler (6)
Blackburnian Warbler (1 singing)
Palm Warbler (2)
Black and white Warbler (2)
Am. Redstart (5- 3 males & 2 females)
Ovenbird (1)
Common Yellowthroat (8)
Wilsonıs Warbler (1)
Lincolnıs Sparrow (2)
Rose-breasted Grosbeak (1 male)

STATE LINE WOODS (A parcel of Indiana on the west side of Wolf lake)
Least Flycatcher (1)
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (1)
Swainsonıs Thrush (1)
Wood Thrush (1-singing)
Am. Redstart (2)
N. Waterthrush (1 singing)
SUMMER TANAGER (1 female)

McCOOL BASIN (high water, limited habitat)
Spotted Sandpiper (4)
Least Sandpiper (5)
Dunlin (1- alternate plumage)
Pectoral Sandpiper (1)
WILSONıS PHALAROPE (1- alternate female)
American Pipit (25)
Savannah Sparrow (20)

BEVERLY SHORES (*observed by John in early morning)
Wood Duck (2- female & downy chick)
Hooded Merganser (1)
Cooperıs Hawk (2)
Red-tailed Hawk (8-small flight)
*American Woodcock (1)
*Whip-poor-will (3)
*Willow Flycatcher (1)
Great-crested Flycatcher (2)
*Marsh Wren (3)
Black and warbler (1)
Prothonotary Warbler (2-singing)

Ken Brock
Chesterton, IN

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Subject: Interesting sparrow day
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 13:57:06 -0700
After 4 or 5 days of not seeing a White-throated Sparrow I saw several today.

And after a couple of weeks of seeing White-crowned Sparrows only one at a time 
I saw maybe 6-8 at once today. 


Chipping Sparrows had kind of disappeared for a while too, but today I saw 
quite a few. 


Bernie Sloan
Bloomington


      

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Subject: Pine Siskin
From: Kyle Bixler <kyleb AT HANFIELD.ORG>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 11:37:02 -0400
I had one lone Pine Siskin this morning on my thistle feeder with a group of 
goldfinches. I'm sure passing through to somewhere.

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Subject: Red Breasted Nuthatch Southwestway Park
From: "Ryan J. Sanderson" <sandersonrj AT UINDY.EDU>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 10:53:30 -0400
I'm TAing Roger Sweets' ornithology class for the University of Indianapolis 
this summer. On our first trip out to Southwestway Park today, we found a 
female red-breasted nuthatch. I've been in Southwestway fifteen to twenty times 
over the last two months and have never seen one there. The bird was not 
calling. A student said, "Look, there's a bird over there." And surprise! It 
was the red breasted nuthatch. 


Other birds of note were magnolia warbler, scarlet tanager (male and female 
pair), rose breasted grosbeak, northern parula and eastern meadowlark (the only 
notable bird found in the western part of the park. 


Ryan Sanderson

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Subject: Laughing Gulls
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 10:13:33 -0400
This morning I birded the Fairfax area on Lake Monroe - very few 
passerines and virtually nothing on the lake. Some Gulls sitting in the 
flooded parking lot at the beach. The highlights:

     Turkey Vulture - 14
     Sharp-shinned Hawk - 1
     Ring-billed Gull - 45
     LAUGHING GULL - 2 (beautiful alternate plumage)
     E. Wood-pewee - 3
     Least Flycatcher - 2 (singing and calling)
     Great Crested Flycatcher - 2
     E. Kingbird - 3
     Cape May Warbler - 1
     Blackpoll Warbler - 1
     Yellow-breasted Chat - 1
     Kentucy Warbler - 2
     Orchard Oriole - 2
     Baltimore Oriole - 3

In our yard this morning:
     Wilson's Warbler - 1 (singing)
     White-cr. Sparrow - 2
     Rose-br. Grosbeak - 1 (male)

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: Steuben County May Day Count
From: Holly Meyers <HMeyersKbirder AT AOL.COM>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 09:24:04 EDT
Steuben County May Day Bird Count..Dave and Holly Meyers in the county,  Fred 
Wooley and Fred Zilch on foot at Pokagon State Park.
Great weather, but  surprising lack of Gulls and Waterfowl and Birds of Prey.
Number of  species:     97


Canada Goose     135
Mute Swan      6
Wood Duck     3
Mallard      14
Ring-necked Pheasant     3
Wild Turkey   4
Double-crested Cormorant     1
Great Blue  Heron     17
Green Heron     1
Turkey  Vulture     36
Osprey     2
Red-tailed  Hawk     4
Sandhill Crane      7
Killdeer     13
Spotted Sandpiper      2
Solitary Sandpiper     1
Lesser Yellowlegs   1
American Woodcock     1
Rock Pigeon   43
Mourning Dove     46
Great Horned Owl   2
Chimney Swift     11
Ruby-throated  Hummingbird     1
Red-headed Woodpecker      2
Red-bellied Woodpecker     8
Downy Woodpecker   7
Hairy Woodpecker     3
Northern Flicker  (Yellow-shafted)     15
Pileated Woodpecker      2
Eastern Wood-Pewee     4
Least Flycatcher   1
Eastern Phoebe     3
Great Crested  Flycatcher     2
Eastern Kingbird      8
White-eyed Vireo     1
Yellow-throated Vireo   1
Blue-headed Vireo     2
Red-eyed Vireo   2
Blue Jay     21
American Crow   28
Horned Lark     2
Purple Martin   27
Tree Swallow     25
Northern Rough-winged  Swallow     5
Bank Swallow     80
Barn  Swallow     45
Black-capped Chickadee      9
Tufted Titmouse     6
Red-breasted Nuthatch   2
White-breasted Nuthatch     11
Carolina  Wren     3
House Wren     14
Ruby-crowned  Kinglet     1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher      7
Eastern Bluebird     7
Swainson's Thrush   6
Hermit Thrush     1
Wood Thrush   1
American Robin     87
Gray Catbird   15
European Starling     88
Golden-winged  Warbler     1
Tennessee Warbler      1
Nashville Warbler     1
Yellow Warbler      49
Yellow-rumped Warbler     3
Black-throated Green  Warbler     1
Palm Warbler     2
Cerulean  Warbler     1
American Redstart      1
Prothonotary Warbler     1
Common Yellowthroat   42
Hooded Warbler     4
Wilson's Warbler   1
Yellow-breasted Chat     1
Scarlet  Tanager     7
Chipping Sparrow     28
Field  Sparrow     8
Vesper Sparrow     1
Savannah  Sparrow     8
Song Sparrow     33
Swamp  Sparrow     3
White-throated Sparrow      4
White-crowned Sparrow     1
Northern Cardinal   26
Rose-breasted Grosbeak     6
Indigo  Bunting     2
Bobolink     3
Red-winged  Blackbird     143
Eastern Meadowlark      5
Common Grackle     71
Brown-headed Cowbird   7
Orchard Oriole     3
Baltimore Oriole   12
House Finch     11
American Goldfinch   31
House Sparrow     53

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





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Subject: Monroe Co. Yard Birds 5/12
From: Scott Evans <scottev12 AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 11:24:22 +0000
I had a great day of hanging out in the yard and doing work while
observing birds yesterday.  Highlights include 6 thrush species on the day
with great looks at VEERY and GRAY-CHEEKED THRUSH. Also, I had 13 warbler
species including beautiful breeding male WILSON'S WARBLER and
BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER.  All in all, 64 species on the day.

Location:     Crow's Nest
Observation date:     5/12/08
Number of species:     64

Broad-winged Hawk     1
Red-tailed Hawk     2
Mourning Dove     2
Yellow-billed Cuckoo     1
Chimney Swift     4
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     1
Red-headed Woodpecker     3
Red-bellied Woodpecker     2
Downy Woodpecker     2
Hairy Woodpecker     1
Northern Flicker     1
Pileated Woodpecker     1
Eastern Wood-Pewee     2
Acadian Flycatcher     1
LEAST FLYCATCHER     1   (FOY)
Eastern Phoebe     1
Great Crested Flycatcher     2
Eastern Kingbird     1
Yellow-throated Vireo     1
Red-eyed Vireo     4
Blue Jay     6
American Crow     5
Tree Swallow     2
Carolina Chickadee     3
Tufted Titmouse     4
White-breasted Nuthatch     2
Carolina Wren     2
Eastern Bluebird     1
VEERY     1   (FOY heard singing 5/13 am)
GRAY-CHEEKED THRUSH     1  (heard singing 5/13 am)
Swainson's Thrush     6
Wood Thrush     5
American Robin     2
Gray Catbird     1
Northern Mockingbird     1
Golden-winged Warbler     1
Tennessee Warbler     5
Nashville Warbler     3
Northern Parula     1
Magnolia Warbler     2
Yellow-rumped Warbler     4
Black-throated Green Warbler     2
BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER     2    (FOY from yard)
Yellow-throated Warbler     1
PALM WARBLER     1  (FOY from yard)
American Redstart     2
Kentucky Warbler     1
Common Yellowthroat     1
WILSON'S WARBLER     1 (FOY  adult male singing and great looks)
Summer Tanager     2
Scarlet Tanager     2
Eastern Towhee     1
Chipping Sparrow     3
Field Sparrow     1
Song Sparrow     2
Northern Cardinal     4
Rose-breasted Grosbeak     1
Indigo Bunting     3
Red-winged Blackbird     2
Common Grackle     3
Brown-headed Cowbird     4
House Finch     1
American Goldfinch     7
House Sparrow     1

Scott Evans
Holland Hill
Monroe  Co.

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Subject: Muscatatuck NWR rails
From: Gary Dorman <cowboybirder AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 03:09:28 -0700
 Dan Woods, the biologist at the refuge, told me Saturday that while doing some 
work with Copperbelly snakes in the closed of the refuge he flushed between 
30-and 40 Sora's and 2 KING RAILS. I would loved to have been there as I have 
not seen KIRA's on the refuge. 

   
   


Gary Dorman II
New Albany, Floyd Co.,IN

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Subject: Kingsbury, Pierce Rd. 10 May - Snowy Egret, W. Phalarope, Brewer's Blackbird
From: Jeff McCoy <jeffmccoy AT EMBARQMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 02:32:48 -0500
Saturday 10 May, 2008
After doing the May Count with Ken Brock in northern Porter County I made a
late afternoon stop at Kingsbury FWA and the flooded field on Pierce Rd.
east of Kingsbury.  Weather was unseasonably cool with NNE wind 5-10mph and
a high of 57'F under mostly cloudy skies.

My highlights for the day:  White-winged Scoter (2), Black-billed Cuckoo,
Surf Scoter (9; digiscoped), Least Bittern (heard only), Sedge Wren (a
migrant in the dune grass near the beach at Beverly Shores), Golden-winged
Warbler (4), Orange-crowned Warbler (2), Black-throated Blue Warbler, Rusty
Blackbird (east Beverly Shores late afternoon), Snowy Egret, Black Tern,
Sandhill Cranes with young, Wilson's Phalarope (2), Brewer's Blackbird (6).

The Sandhill Cranes with young were at Kingsbury and I don't recall any
previous nesting here.  Does anyone know of any confirmed nesting records
for this site?

Kingsbury FWA - Birded Big Marsh on River Rd. only.  Water levels continue
to decrease but there were fewer shorebirds than last week.
Mute Swan 3
Mallard 20+
Blue-winged Teal 8
Wild Turkey 2
Great Blue Heron 14
Great Egret 8
SNOWY EGRET 1 (digiscoped)
COMMON MOORHEN 2
American Coot 50+
SANDHILL CRANE 4 (family group with 2 downy colts about 1 foot tall)
Semipalmated Plover
Killdeer 8
Spotted Sandpiper 3
Solitary Sandpiper 15+
Lesser Yellowlegs 60+
Least Sandpiper 50+
Pectoral Sandpiper 20+
Dunlin 9
Caspian Tern 2
BLACK TERN 1
Eastern Phoebe 1
Tree Swallow 30+
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 10+
Bank Swallow 8
Barn Swallow 20+
Yellow Warbler 5
Swamp Sparrow 6
Rose-breasted Grosbeak 1
Baltimore Oriole 2

Pierce Rd. flooded field - Should be good habitat here for at least another
week.
Semipalmated Plover 5
Killdeer 8
Greater Yellowlegs 2
Lesser Yellowlegs 30+
Least Sandpiper 30+
Pectoral Sandpiper 15+
Dunlin 3
Short-billed Dowitcher 3
WILSON'S PHALAROPE 2 (male and female; digiscoped)
BREWER'S BLACKBIRD 6 (this is a traditional breeding area for this species)

Good birding,
Jeff McCoy
Columbia City, Indiana
jeffmccoy AT embarqmail.com

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Subject: Lakefront Migrants 5/12
From: John Kendall <jeffro595 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 00:17:27 -0400
On my way to the airport, I made forays through Hammond Sanctuary, Whiting 
Park and State Line Woods.   Although birding was slow, the highlights were 
two "relatively rare in the traps" and firsts for me at State Line Woods-seen 
together--a female Hooded Warbler(photos) and a Louisiana Waterthrush. 

Whiting Park:
Blue-Headed Vireo-2 singing
Cape May Warbler-1
yellow-Rumped Warbler-12
Palm Warbler-3
White-Throated Sparrow-8
White-Crowned Sparrow-4
House Wren-2
Red-Breasted Nuthatch-1 female

Hammond Sanctuary:
Cape May Warbler-2
Warbling Vireo-1
Yellow Warbler-3
Palm Warbler-8
Wison's Warbler-1
Magnolia Warbler-1
Tennessee Warbler-1
Chesnut-Side Warbler-1
Swainson's Thrush-2
White-Throated Sparrow-14
Least Flycatcher-2
LIncoln's Sparrow-2
House Wren-2
Common Yellowthroat-3

State Line Woods:
Hooded Warbler- 1 female (photos)
Louisiana Waterthrush-1 bright legs, broadened white supercillium, clear throat
Yellow-Rumped Warbler-20
Palm Warbler-6
Yellow Warbler-2
Swainson's Thrush-3
Veery-1
Wood Thrush-1 singing
Swamp Sparrow-2
White-Crowned Sparrow-6
Blackburnian Warbler-1 singing
Warbling Vireo-1 singing

John Kendall
Valparaiso

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Subject: Central Newton Co, 5/10/08
From: "Hopkins, Edward M" <hopkinse AT PURDUE.EDU>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 22:57:14 -0400
Central Newton Co, 5/10/08
  I was very inefficient.  I just covered parts of Willow Slough FWA and
the S parts of TNC Kankakee Sands.  WS had all the gates closed so I had
to bike into several areas.  I left for KS instead of doing some
woodland birding and didn't get back to WS until mid-afternoon.  I got
130 species.

Pied-billed Grebe,3
Double-crested Cormorant,8
Great Blue Heron,16
Green Heron,2
Least Bittern,1
American Bittern,7
Canada Goose,269
Wood Duck,47
Gadwall,1
Green-winged Teal,2
Mallard,29
Northern Pintail,1
Blue-winged Teal,10
Ring-necked Duck,8
Lesser Scaup,4
Turkey Vulture,8
Bald Eagle,1
Northern Harrier,1
Cooper's Hawk,1
Red-tailed Hawk,7
Wild Turkey,8
Ring-necked Pheasant,12
Sandhill Crane,5
King Rail,1
Sora,13
Common Moorhen,3
American Coot,580
Semipalmated Plover,11
Killdeer,27
American Woodcock,3
Greater Yellowlegs,4
Lesser Yellowlegs,18
Solitary Sandpiper,3
Spotted Sandpiper,3
Semipalmated Sandpiper,1
Least Sandpiper,32
Pectoral Sandpiper,3
Dunlin,3
Wilson's Phalarope,5
Ring-billed Gull,5
Black Tern,1
Mourning Dove,11
Eastern Screech-Owl,1
Barred Owl,1
Common Nighthawk,2
Whip-poor-will,22
Chimney Swift,4
Ruby-throated Hummingbird,1
Belted Kingfisher,2
Red-headed Woodpecker,10
Red-bellied Woodpecker,6
Downy Woodpecker,5
Hairy Woodpecker,2
Northern Flicker,7
Olive-sided Flycatcher,1
Eastern Wood-Pewee,2
Least Flycatcher,1
Eastern Phoebe,1
Great Crested Flycatcher,6
Eastern Kingbird,10
Horned Lark,9
Purple Martin,35
Tree Swallow,56
Northern Rough-winged Swallow,7
Bank Swallow,73
Cliff Swallow,5
Barn Swallow,33
American Pipit,162
House Wren,5
Sedge Wren,3
Marsh Wren,9
Gray Catbird,30
Brown Thrasher,1
Eastern Bluebird,2
Gray-cheeked Thrush,1
Swainson's Thrush,1
Wood Thrush,7
American Robin,57
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher,9
Tufted Titmouse,3
White-breasted Nuthatch,6
Blue Jay,3
American Crow,21
European Starling,39
White-eyed Vireo,2
Yellow-throated Vireo,7
Warbling Vireo,3
Red-eyed Vireo,2
Golden-winged Warbler,1
Tennessee Warbler,3
Nashville Warbler,1
Northern Parula,1
Yellow Warbler,25
Magnolia Warbler,2
Cape May Warbler,1
Yellow-rumped Warbler,38
Blackburnian Warbler,2
Palm Warbler,17
Blackpoll Warbler,1
Ovenbird,5
Common Yellowthroat,82
Yellow-breasted Chat,1
Scarlet Tanager,2
Eastern Towhee,34
Chipping Sparrow,12
Field Sparrow,20
Vesper Sparrow,1
Lark Sparrow,2
Savannah Sparrow,4
Henslow's Sparrow,7
Grasshopper Sparrow,9
Song Sparrow,35
Swamp Sparrow,7
White-crowned Sparrow,8
White-throated Sparrow,48
Northern Cardinal,26
Rose-breasted Grosbeak,21
Blue Grosbeak,2
Indigo Bunting,1
Dickcissel,7
Bobolink,4
Red-winged Blackbird,236
Eastern Meadowlark,17
Common Grackle,24
Brown-headed Cowbird,27
Baltimore Oriole,9
Orchard Oriole,3
House Finch,1
American Goldfinch,40
House Sparrow,10

====
Ed Hopkins
W Lafayette, IN

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Subject: ignore extra post
From: Liz Day <lizday44 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 19:20:01 -0700
Sorry the duplicate posting, I am on an unfamiliar computer.
  Liz D.

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Subject: cardinal nest predated
From: Liz Day <lizday44 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 19:18:40 -0700
My cardinals' second nest this year was predated by some mammal (it was tipped 
over). 

 The fact that the nests seem to be always depredated shortly after the babies 
hatch makes me wonder if some diurnal animal hears the babies calling and 
thereby locates the nest, but I'm not sure. The female bird is not the same as 
last year, so she too may take 5 nests to figure out that the only safe place 
is on the building side of the parking lot. 

   
  Liz D.
  Indianapolis     
  
Liz Day  wrote:
  
Saturday May 10 at Mulvey Pond in Tippecanoe county, May day counters saw two 
sandhill cranes. They might be nesting there, as I think pairs have nested 
there in past years (?). 


Most strikingly, both birds were the color of the "lesser summer plumage" in 
Sibley - solid brown (one bird) and solid rust (the other bird) everywhere 
except their heads, necks, and stomachs. 

(I understand that Greaters also have this rust color, so the color doesn't 
mean they're Lessers.) 


Does anyone know what causes this color? What is unique about cranes that they 
get stained? Dozens of other wetland bird species must go the same geographic 
places as the cranes, being exposed to the same ... whatever it is in the dirt 
- yet they don't become rust-stained. (Or do they?) 


Are cranes slovenly, that they allow crud to get on their plumage, while 
somehow, miraculously to me, shorebirds can stick their beaks right from the 
mud into their feathers and have the feathers remain nice and white? Should the 
laundry companies look into this for their ads? ("Preens the stain right out!") 


How does the rust come off the cranes? 
Has anyone else seen rusty cranes this year?

thanks,
Liz D.
Indianapolis



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Subject: rusty cranes
From: Liz Day <lizday44 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 19:08:59 -0700
 
 Saturday May 10 at Mulvey Pond in Tippecanoe county, May day counters saw two 
sandhill cranes. They might be nesting there, as I think pairs have nested 
there in past years (?). 

   
 Most strikingly, both birds were the color of the "lesser summer plumage" in 
Sibley - solid brown (one bird) and solid rust (the other bird) everywhere 
except their heads, necks, and stomachs. 

 (I understand that Greaters also have this rust color, so the color doesn't 
mean they're Lessers.) 

   
 Does anyone know what causes this color? What is unique about cranes that they 
get stained? Dozens of other wetland bird species must go the same geographic 
places as the cranes, being exposed to the same ... whatever it is in the dirt 
- yet they don't become rust-stained. (Or do they?) 

   
 Are cranes slovenly, that they allow crud to get on their plumage, while 
somehow, miraculously to me, shorebirds can stick their beaks right from the 
mud into their feathers and have the feathers remain nice and white? Should the 
laundry companies look into this for their ads? ("Preens the stain right out!") 

   
  How does the rust come off the cranes?   
  Has anyone else seen rusty cranes this year?
   
  thanks,
  Liz D.
  Indianapolis
   


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Subject: Re: Hovering HOSPs
From: Liz Day <lizday44 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 18:56:03 -0700
I haven't seen them hover together in numbers, but I have seen them chase moths 
in flight that involved hovering. Also, I saw one sitting in the lawn as a 
Japanese beetle approached flying low over the grass. As it reached the 
sparrow, he leaped up and grabbed it out of the air. 

   
  Liz D.
  Indianapolis
  
"B.G. Sloan"  wrote:
 Walking the IU cross country course several times in the past few days I've 
observed small flocks of sparrow-like birds hovering above the long grass. They 
would hover almost like an American Kestrel (but nowhere near as high) and dive 
into the grass. 


I thought I had found some exotic grassland bird as I had never seen this 
feeding behavior before. This morning I finally got close enough to the birds 
to identify them as...House Sparrows! :-) 


According to Birds of North America Online, HOSPs "occasionally catch insects 
by flycatching and hover pouncing." These birds were doing this big time! 


Just wondering how common this behavior is?

Bernie Sloan
Bloomington



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Subject: Willets Bluegrass in Warrick county
From: Brian Taylor <brian.taylor AT HAUBSTADT.COM>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 20:53:34 -0500
On my way home from work I went to Bluegrass real quick.  In the field
across from the back lakes were 6 willets.  They were not shy at all.  They
let me pull right next to them so I could take some pictures.

Brian Taylor

Evansville


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Subject: Phalaropes,LaGrange Co.
From: Dan Stoltzfus <DanHSt AT AOL.COM>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 21:43:19 EDT
Yesterday, May 10, four of us did birding in southwest LaGrange County for  
the LaGrange County spring count and got the following:
 


Location:    Farmer's field near  Emma
Observation date:     5/10/08
Notes:   Enos Yoder, Chris Yoder, Myron Bontreger, and  myself.   
One female and one male Wilson's Phalarope were with  shorebirds north side 
of CR 300 S about 2 miles west.
Number of  species:     31

Turkey Vulture      2
Semipalmated Plover     7
Killdeer      2
Solitary Sandpiper     3
Greater Yellowlegs   1
Lesser Yellowlegs     17
Semipalmated  Sandpiper     2
Least Sandpiper      21
Pectoral Sandpiper     43
Dunlin      16
WILSON'S PHALAROPE    2
Rock Pigeon      20
Mourning Dove     8
Red-headed Woodpecker   2
Red-bellied Woodpecker     1
Downy  Woodpecker     2
Northern Flicker      2
Eastern Phoebe     1
Eastern Kingbird      1
Horned Lark     4
Purple Martin      8
Cliff Swallow   100+ at the barn on 300S west of SR5
Tree  Swallow     4
House Wren     1
Gray  Catbird     1
Brown Thrasher     1
Chipping  Sparrow     3
White-throated Sparrow      2
Northern Cardinal     2
Indigo Bunting      1
Eastern Meadowlark     1
Baltimore Oriole   2

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




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Subject: Eagle Marsh Black Tern- May 12 PM
From: Rodger Rang <rrang AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 21:10:25 -0400
A quick review of Eagle Marsh at 8:15 this evening netted a few noteworthy 
species. 


From the Boy Scout parking lot overlook:

Blue-winged Teal- 4 (3m, 1f)
Great Egret- 2
BLACK TERN- 1 hawking bugs low over the water, my FOS

From the Verizon parking lot overlook:

Northern Shoveler- 1m
Savannah Sparrow- 1
Eastern Meadowlark- 1

From Engle Road:

Blue-winged Teal- 6 (3pr)
No shorebirds other than Killdeer and Spotted SP
Earlier, in the late afternoon, my wife saw a coyote in this area. A property 
first?? 


Rodger Rang
Fort Wayne

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Subject: Hovering HOSPs
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 18:04:47 -0700
Walking the IU cross country course several times in the past few days I've 
observed small flocks of sparrow-like birds hovering above the long grass. They 
would hover almost like an American Kestrel (but nowhere near as high) and dive 
into the grass. 


I thought I had found some exotic grassland bird as I had never seen this 
feeding behavior before. This morning I finally got close enough to the birds 
to identify them as...House Sparrows! :-) 


According to Birds of North America Online, HOSPs "occasionally catch insects 
by flycatching and hover pouncing." These birds were doing this big time! 


Just wondering how common this behavior is?

Bernie Sloan
Bloomington


 
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Subject: Dowitcher ?
From: Ray Troyer <raytroyer AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 19:42:20 +0000
What did we do before photos?  

We are still looking for a definitive answer. Today I took some time to search 
through some flickr photos. Compared to the ones by John Kendall (LBDO), and 
Jim Sullivan (SBDO), I think the bird I photographed looks more like the ones 
by Jim Sullivan. 

http://outdoors.webshots.com/photo/2344970620101565606kxywXG
--
Ray Troyer 
Goshen 
Elkhart County 
raytroyer AT comcast.net

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Subject: Monroe sites
From: "Whitehead, Donald R." <whitehea AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 15:21:49 -0400
This morning I visited both Paynetown and Cutright on Lake Monroe - a 
lovely, but cool morning - water levels continue to rise once again on 
the lake. The morning's highlights:

     Canada Goose - 36 (counting 14 goslings)
     Mallard - 6
     Common Loon - 1 (alternate plumage)
     Great Blue Heron - 2
     Turkey Vulture - 6
     Spotted Sandpiper - 2
     Ring-billed Gull - 35
     Forster's Tern - 2
     Chimney Swift - 28
     E. Wood-pewee - 3
     White-eyed Vireo - 3
     Yellow-thr. Vireo - 5
     Warbling Vireo - 7
     Red-eyed Vireo - 16
     Tree Swallow - 6
     Cliff Swallow - 39
     Barn Swallow - 12
     Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 2
     E. Bluebird - 2
     Tenn. Warbler - 4
     Nashville Warbler - 2
     No. Parula - 3
     Yellow Warbler - 6
     Chestnut-sided Warbler - 1
     Magnolia Warbler - 1
     Cape May Warbler - 3
     Bay-breasted Warbler - 1 (FOS)
     Blackpoll Warbler - 2
     Prothonotary Warbler - 2
     Kentucky Warbler - 2
     Co. Yellowthroat - 5
     Hooded Warbler - 1
     Scarlet Tanager - 2
     White-cr. Sparrow - 2
     Indigo Bunting - 8
     Orchard Oriole - 7
     Baltimore Oriole - 5

Don Whitehead
Bloomington
whitehea AT indiana.edu

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Subject: Yard Birds
From: Vicky Foltz <vfoltz AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 13:43:28 -0500
Hello everyone,
Finally, on Mother's Day, the orioles came!  I had three on my feeder :) 
Also, FOY for me was two ruby throated hummers, and one male 
rose-breasted grosbeak.

And, of course, the usual suspects:

2 morning doves
4 cardinals (two pair)
1 pr blue birds
1 pr chickadees
1 chipping sparrow
2 Engl. sparrows (1 pair)
1 downey woodpecker
1 hairy woodpecker
1 redbellied woodpecker
1 whitebreasted nuthatch
tufted titmouse
goldfinches
two house finches

Missing for a day or so now: white-crowned sparrow
Missing for a week or so now:  red breasted nuthatch

Vicky Foltz, Ft. Wayne
Allen County

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Subject: Lake Cumberland Junco
From: Terry Ballenger <t.ballenger AT ATT.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 17:23:59 +0000
Hello all--

On a weekend trip to Lake Cumberland Kentucky in Russell Co., had what seemed 
to me to be a very late Dark-eyed Junco. It was foraging on the buds of newly 
blossomed wildflowers. 

Other highlights were:
Scarlet Tanager
Summer Tanager (male & female)
Blackpoll warbler
Baybreasted warbler
Nashville warbler
Blue Grosbeak (first year male: singing) A life bird for me. I've been chasing 
this one for the last two years. 

Eastern Bluebird
Green Heron
Wood Duck (taking hand outs around the boat docks!?  Very unusual.)
Great-crested flycatcher

It seemed to be the tail end of the warbler migration at that geographical 
location what with Blackpolls coming through and all. Hopefully we still have 
some to go here. 


Good birding to all,
Terry Ballenger
Noblesville, Ham. Co.

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Subject: Marbled Godwits at Goose Pond FWA
From: Lee Sterrenburg <sterren AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 12:30:30 -0400
This morning (May 12, 2008) while doing ISS (International Shorebird  
Survey) monitoring in Main Pool West of Goose Pond FWA, Property  
Manager Brad Feaster saw 2 MARBLED GODWITS. The Godwits were  
flyovers.  Brad said they came from the direction of GP10S or GP9 and  
kept on going, apparently putting down somewhere in the south end of  
Main Pool East.  There is no close to the road access to MPE and it  
would take several hours round trip to hike in and try to look for  
the Godwits.  I may or may not give that a try, depending on how the  
afternoon goes.

--Lee Sterrenburg
Bloomington

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Subject: Montgomery Co, 700 S 100 E
From: marty jones <indth33 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 07:38:13 -0700
I only had a few minutes to stop here on my way to work. At 9:45 am May 12th, 
found one Wilson's Phalarope feeding alongside a single Dunlin. Several other 
more common shorebirds also present. Phalarope and Dunlin were in flooded area 
furthest west (toward 231) about 35 yards to the southside of 700 S. I may have 
a few mediocre photo's to post on flickr later tonight. 

   
  Marty Jones
  Terre Haute

       
---------------------------------
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Subject: Eagle Creek Park, Sunday May 11, 2008
From: John Ulmer <remlu AT TDS.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 10:15:35 -0400
Cool and rain. Temperature dropping from 55 to 51 degrees with gusty 
southwest wind. With both limited conditions and a limited number of 
Sunday birders we managed to tally 100 species including 26 warblers. 
The list included --

Common Loon
Double Crested Cormorant
Least Bittern
Great Blue Heron
Turkey Vulture
Canada Goose
Wood Duck
Mallard
Blue-winged Teal
Coopers Hawk
Red-shouldered Hawk
American Coot
Spotted Sandpiper
Laughing Gull
Caspian Tern
Foresters Tern
Rock Dove
Barred Owl
Chimney Swift
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Belted Kingfisher
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Downy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker
Pileated Woodpecker
Eastern Wood Pewee
Acadian Flycatcher
Least Flycatcher
Eastern Phoebe
Great Crested Flycatcher
Eastern Kingbird
White-eyed Vireo
Yellow-throated Vireo
Blue-headed  Vireo
Warbling Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay
American Crow
Purple Martin
Tree Swallow
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Bank Swallow
Barn Swallow
Carolina Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
Red-breasted Nuthatch
White-breasted Nuthatch
Carolina Wren
House Wren
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Eastern Bluebird
Swainson's Thrush
Wood Thrush
American Robin
Gray Catbird
Brown Thrasher
European Starling
Blue-winged Warbler
Tennessee Warbler
Nashville Warbler
Northern Parula Warbler
Yellow Warbler
Chestnut-sided Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Cape May Warbler
Black-throated Blue Warbler
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Yellow-throated Warbler
Pine Warbler
Palm Warbler
Bay-breasted Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
Black and White Warbler
American Redstart
Prothonotary Warbler
Ovenbird
Northern Waterthrush
Louisiana Waterthrush
Kentucky Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Hooded Warbler
Summer Tanager
Scarlet Tanager
Eastern Towhee
Chipping Sparrow
Field Sparrow
Song Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Northern Cardinal
Indigo Bunting
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown-headed Cowbird
Baltimore Oriole
Purple Finch
House Finch
House Sparrow

Bire walks begin at 9am each Sunday at the Nature Center, all are welcome.
-- 
John Ulmer

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Subject: Big May count
From: Tom <annntom AT EMBARQMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 18:22:43 -0400
For anyone who birded in Johnson County on Saturday please send me 
your data for compilation.  Thanks to Jack for already doing this.  I 
do have electronic forms that can be filled out to facilitate this 
process.  We need your birds plus the effort expended on a separate 
form.  Thanks for participating in this scientific effort.
I had fairly good success for me.  I walked around our area plus 
drove to a couple of spots I thought would yield some different 
species.  I saw  257 birds of 59 species including 10 warbler 
species.  I am not very good with the songs etc so these all were 
seen.  I did not have time to go out on the lake where I could have 
picked up a few additional species plus I did not record some birds 
that I have been seeing daily so I am happy with the 
results.  Hopefully others can expand this for the rest of Johnson County.
Tom Hougham
on Lamb  Lake in SW Johnson Co

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Subject: Cosc. Co. Surf Scoter
From: Steve and Connie Doud <sandcdoud AT MCREMC.NET>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 06:53:48 -0400
The second Sat. in May brought us out again for 15 mostly exciting hours in our 
birdy SW corner of Kosc. Co. The highlight was undoubtedly a female-type SURF 
SCOTER on Yellowcreek Lake, near the church camp on the west end. An Osprey 
flyover distracted us momentarily, but pix of both were obtained. A total of 
116 species was recorded for the day, about 5 better than average for this area 
over the last 15 years. 


Notable species:
Screech Owl--first bird of the day
Common Loon--Hill Lake
24 DC Cormorants--Palestine Lk
2 Ospreys--Palestine Lk, Yellowcreek Lk
8 RN Pheasants-scattered
10 Shorebird sp.--various wet fields
1 Forsters Tern--Diamond Lk
18 Warbler sp--Blue Wings, Ceruleans, Parulas, Ovenbirds, Chat, both Water 
Thrushes 

19 RB Grosbeaks
13 Bobolinks
7 Veerys--some singing
3 Sedge Wrens--last bird of the day

Big Misses:
Pileated WP
Bl.W.Teal
Least FC
Cedar Waxwing
Y Thr. Warb
Dickcissel
Grasshopper & Henslows--can you say Ethanol?
Bobwhite

Steve and Connie Doud
Roann, IN

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Subject: Eastern Wood PeeWee, Elkhart Co
From: Wilma J Harder <wilmajeanharder AT JUNO.COM>
Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 06:29:54 -0400
Thought I heard an eastern wood peewee two days ago, saw one this morning
in my neighbors tree.  Not a figment of my imagination this time.  :)

Rose breasted grossbeaks are still here.  Usually not here this long.  

Wilma  Harder
Goshen

"Life is good.  Live it gently and with fire and always with hope." 
---Charlie Murphy

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Subject: Update to Earlier Post
From: Canyon Wren <canyonwren AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 22:07:01 -0500
Hi All,
As I stated in my earlier post today, I asked Ken Brock for confirmation 
regarding Barred Owl records.  Ken responded stating that the Owl Surveys 
done by the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore were, indeed, single party 
counts.  Therefore, my team's count this week-end will constitute a count in 
the top ten, but not a new state record.  Even so, we were thrilled to have 
that many Barred Owls.

Thanks, Ken, for clarifying the owl data for me.

Good Birding!
Lynea

Lynea Hinchman
Michigan City, Indiana
Heart of the Indiana Dunes
CanyonWrenatComcastdotnet

"The beauty and genius of a work of art may be reconceived though its first
material expression be destroyed.  A vanished harmony may yet again inspire
the composer, but when the last individual of a race of living beings
breathes no more, another heaven and another earth must pass before such a
one can be again."  William Beebe

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Subject: Monroe County weekend birds
From: Cathy <cmeyer AT KIVA.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 22:03:40 -0400
I helped a group of 8 birders visiting form northern Indiana find birds 
in the area yesterday and today. Tomorrow they are meeting Lee 
Sterrenberg to see Goose Pond.Yesterday we had a beautiful day, in 
contrast to today's rain. I believe the group is up to about130 for 
their trip and they were happy to see, or at least hear, some of our 
local birds. I think their reactions make me reconsider some of the 
birds I take for granted here and appreciate them more. A few highlights:

Sat. 5/10
Flatwoods Park - Bobwhite, 2 singing Willow Flycatchers, White-crowned 
Sparrows, nice variety of warblers in the woods
Upper Woodall Rd. - 2 singing Grasshopper Sparrows (1 perched on a fence 
in full view), a dozen bobolinks in the grape vines, 2 Blue Grosbeak 
males (nice looks), Red-headed Woodpecker (far to the west calling 
loudly from the top of a big dead tree)
Bryant's Creek Rd. - 5 Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, lots of warblers - 
including Ovenbird, Worm-eating, Kentucky (good looks), Hooded, 
Blue-winged, Parula, Louisiana Waterthrush, Yellow, Yellow-throated, 
Cerulean, Redstart, Scarlet Tanager, Gray-cheeked Thrush
Lake Griffy - White-eyed Vireos building a nest over the parking lot, 
Scarlet and Summer Tanagers, pr. Blue-winged Teal, more

Sun. 5/11 Riddle Point - 3 Common Loons, D. C.Cormorant, Spotted 
Sandpiper, nice variety of warblers, including Blackpoll, Cape May, lots 
of Yellow-rumped, and  Palm, Cliff Swallows on a wire
Little Africa - Prothonotary, Yellow-throated, and Prairie Warblers, 
Northern Waterthrush
Brummet's Creek Rd. - 5 Lesser Yellowlegs
Stillwater - Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Northern Waterthrush. Least 
Flycatcher, Redstart
Paynetown - Cattle Egret in the primitive campground (we watched it 
gobble up a big nightcrawler)
Monroe dam- Ruddy Duck
Fairfax - 2 Caspian Terns, 2 Forster's Terns, 2 Laughing Gulls in 
alternate plumage, 1 Herring Gull, Spotted Sandpiper

Cathy Meyer
Bloomington

Cathy  Meyer

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Subject: Re: LBDO, UPSA pics
From: Liz Day <lizday44 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 18:44:06 -0700
>
http://outdoors.webshots.com/photo/2344970620101565606kxywXG

The wide pale edges to the back feathers cause me to
wonder if perhaps this particular bird might be a
short-billed.   Any thoughts?

Liz Day
Indianapolis

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Subject: Greene Co. May Day count highlights
From: Mike Clarke <redeyegravy AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 21:28:36 -0400
On Saturday, Jim Mitchell and I worked the Greene Co. side of the
Greene-Sullivan State Forest for the Big May Day count.  In the evening, we
poached on other's areas in Goose Pond and Beehunter Marsh where we added
most of the evening-species mentioned in Jim Hengeveld's report for our
personal day-list.  We finished the day with 133 species, 107 in our
assigned area.

Highlights included: 1 Common Loon, 5 Ring-necked Ducks, 2 Black-crowned
Night Herons, 1 Yellow-billed Cuckoo, 5 Barred Owls, 1 Common Nighthawk,  4
CHUCK-WILL'S-WIDOWS, 8 Eastern Wood Pewee, 4 Veery,  12 Swainson's Thrush, 9
Wood Thrush, 24 warbler species (including 1 Golden-winged and 2 Pine), 4
Summer Tanagers,  and 9 sparrow species (including 2 Grasshopper, 2 Savannah
and 2 Swamp).

-Mike Clarke and Jim Mitchell
Bloomington

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Subject: Spring Count (Lake Co.) - Glaucous Gull, Clay-colored Sp., Moorhens
From: Michael Topp <mtopp7927 AT AOL.COM>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 20:59:28 -0400
I covered Parts of Lake County for the Spring Count - 5/10
    Highlights were Glaucous Gull, Bald Eagle, Clay-colored Sparrow
    Moorhens and some tardy ducks.  * Photos I will post later.

   Highlights:
      MILLER BEACH:
    1-Common Loon
    3-Horned Grebes
    3-Red-breasted Mergansers
    1-BALD EAGLE (Juv. bird feeding on the beach.)
    1-Osprey
    1-Peregrine Falcon
   13-Spotted Sandpipers (Together at the breakwall)
    8- Sanderlings
   27-Dunlin (Including a flock of 24 flybys.)
    1-GLAUCOUS GULL (Juv. bird ) *
    5-Caspian Terns
    1-Forster's Tern 
    1-Horned Lark
    1-Brown Thrasher
    1-Field Sparrow

      GARY  (Area) :
    1-GREEN-WINGED TEAL (Male)
    2-Blue-winged Teal
    2-N.PINTAILS  (Pair)
    1-N.SHOVELER (Male)
    3-Hooded Mergansers
    1-Great creasted F.C.
    3-E.Kingbirds
    5-Marsh Wrens
    1-E.Bluebird
    1-Wood Thrush
    2-Swainson's Thrush
    1-Veery
   10-Palm Warblers
     4-Yellow Warblers
    3-Y.R.Warblers
    3-C.Yellowthroats
    1-Indigo Bunting
    3-Swamp Sparrows
   11-White-throated Sparrows
     2-Savhanna Sparrows
   
        CLINE AVE. MARSH AREA -   (HIGHLAND)
   1-Pied-billed Grebe
  29-D.C.Cormorants
  58-G.B.Herons
   6-Great Egrets
  17-B.C.Nightherons
   4-Green Herons
  12-Wood Ducks
   2-Blue-winged Teal
   3-Hooded Mergansers
   2-Turkey Vultures
   1-Virgina Rail
   6-Soras
   7-COMMON MOORHENS (all were seen.)
   1-Lesser Yellowlegs
   5-Spotted Sandpipers
   6-Solitary Sandpipers
   1-Belted Kingfisher
   4-Red-headed Woodpeckers
   2-Red-bellied Woodpeckers
   1-E.Phoebe
   1-Great-creasted F.C.
   2-E.Kingbirds
   3-Warbling Vireos
   2-R.E.Vireos
  12-Marsh Wrens
   1-Swainson's Thush
   1-Blue-winged Warbler
   2-Tennessee Warblers
   2-Nashville Warblers
   1-Northern Parula
   9-Yellow Warblers
   2-Magnolia Warblers
  10-Y.R.Warblers
   1-Black-throated Green Warbler
  12-Palm Warblers
   1-Black and White Warbler
   1-A.Redstart
   1-Ovenbird
   2-N.Waterthrush
   9-C.Yelowthroats
   1-Wilson's Warbler
   1-Indigo Bunting
   2-E.Towhees
   1-Rose-breasted Grosbeak
   2-Chipping Sparrows
   1-CLAY-COLORED SPARROW
   1-Lincoln's Sparrow
   5-Swamp Sparrows
  11-White-throated Sparrows
   9-White-crowned Sparrows
   2-RUSTY BLACKBIRDS  (Feeding on cracked corn in my yard.)
   5-Baltimore Orioles  (At my feeder)
   2- Monk Parakeets (Cline Ave. nest) My wife had 5 at the Post office site.
                                            
                                                      Michael Topp
                                                        Highland IN.
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
    
    
    
    

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Subject: May Count - St. Joe County (Potato Creek)
From: JOHN CASSADY <jcassady AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 17:07:52 -0600
Wendy and Kelly Cassady once again joined me for our annual May Count at Potato 
Creek. Late migration was evident - Yellow-rumpeds and Palms were still around 
in numbers, but few other warblers, and almost no flycatchers (it has been 
years since we have missed Willow). However it was a beautiful day to bird, and 
we did have some nice highlights - including: 

BROAD-WINGED HAWK, PINE WARBLER (female on the ground!), YELLOW-THROATED 
WARBLER, FORSTER'S TERN, 

and our "bird of the day" - BLACK-BILLED CUCKOO.

            35 Canada Goose
            3 Mute Swan
            11 Mallard
            5 Wild Turkey
            1 Pied-billed Grebe
            8 Double-crested Cormorant
            3 Great Blue Heron
            1 Green Heron
            2 Turkey Vulture
            2 Osprey
            3 Red-shouldered Hawk
            1 Broad-winged Hawk
            2 Red-tailed Hawk
            1 Sandhill Crane
            1 Killdeer
            1 Spotted Sandpiper
            1 Solitary Sandpiper
            1 American Woodcock
            1 Ring-billed Gull
            4 Forster's Tern
            4 Rock Pigeon
            1 Mourning Dove
            1 Black-billed Cuckoo
            1 Barred Owl
            1 Ruby-throated Hummingbird
            1 Belted Kingfisher
            2 Red-bellied Woodpecker
            2 Downy Woodpecker
            1 Hairy Woodpecker
            1 Northern Flicker
            1 Pileated Woodpecker
            2 Eastern Wood-Pewee
            1 Acadian Flycatcher
            4 Least Flycatcher
            2 Eastern Phoebe
            3 Great Crested Flycatcher
            3 Eastern Kingbird
            9 White-eyed Vireo
            10 Yellow-throated Vireo
            1 Blue-headed Vireo
            5 Warbling Vireo
            7 Red-eyed Vireo
            3 Blue Jay
            15 American Crow
            11 Tree Swallow
            1 Northern Rough-winged Swallow
            3 Barn Swallow
            8 Black-capped Chickadee
            2 Tufted Titmouse
            4 White-breasted Nuthatch
            10 House Wren
            1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet
            13 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
            2 Eastern Bluebird
            5 Veery
            5 Swainson's Thrush
            7 Wood Thrush
            18 American Robin
            27 Gray Catbird
            1 Brown Thrasher
            1 European Starling
            6 Blue-winged Warbler
            4 Tennessee Warbler
            2 Nashville Warbler
            46 Yellow Warbler
            3 Chestnut-sided Warbler
            2 Magnolia Warbler
            17 Yellow-rumped Warbler
            3 Black-throated Green Warbler
            3 Blackburnian Warbler
            1 Yellow-throated Warbler
            1 Pine Warbler
            9 Palm Warbler
            1 Black-and-white Warbler
            2 American Redstart
            7 Ovenbird
            6 Northern Waterthrush
            1 Louisiana Waterthrush
            24 Common Yellowthroat
            5 Hooded Warbler
            2 Yellow-breasted Chat
            5 Scarlet Tanager
            12 Eastern Towhee
            6 Chipping Sparrow
            3 Field Sparrow
            14 Song Sparrow
            3 Swamp Sparrow
            13 White-throated Sparrow
            1 White-crowned Sparrow
            29 Northern Cardinal
            12 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
            6 Indigo Bunting
            38 Red-winged Blackbird
            2 Common Grackle
            11 Brown-headed Cowbird
            2 Orchard Oriole
            17 Baltimore Oriole
            2 House Finch
            16 American Goldfinch
            2 House Sparrow

     Total species reported: 100


Wendy, John & Kelly Cassady
jcassady AT verizon.net
To view our gallery of "digiscoped" bird photos, go to the following link:
http://www.jkcassady.com

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Subject: Greene Co. MDC - 5/10
From: Jim Hengeveld <jhengeve AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 17:54:28 -0400
Susan & I participated in the Greene Co. May Day Count yesterday.  We  
spent the majority of the day in Hillenbrand FWA in the northwest  
section of the county, the first time we had birded this area.  After  
Hillenbrand, we covered the Linton Conservation Club (no. of Linton)  
before ending up in the Goose Pond area, where we looked for birds  
that were seen by Lee Sterrenburg's group, by Mike Clarke & Jim  
Mitchell, by Don Whitehead's group, and by the group of Stephen  
Nawrocki, Roger Sweets, Ryan Sanderson, and Ryan Hamilton.  We  
finished the day with 137 species, 111 of those in "our" area.

Highlights in our area included 2 Hooded Mergansers, 2 Ospreys,  
Virginia Rail, Sora, 12 Bell's Vireos, 3 Sedge Wrens, Ruby-crowned  
Kinglet, good numbers of the expected thrush species, 22 warbler  
species, 27 Henslow's Sparrows, and 2 Pine Siskins.  At Goose Pond,  
we added both bitterns, BC Night-Heron, Great Egret, King Rail, Semi.  
Plover, BN Stilt, Dunlin, WESTERN SANDPIPER (a beautiful bird in alt.  
plumage), Least Sandpiper, Pectoral Sandpiper, SB Dowitcher, 2  
Wilson's Phalaropes, and Black Tern.

The following list includes the count of birds from our area, the  
first number for Hillenbrand birds and then additions from outside of  
that FWA.

   -Canada Goose - 9 + 12
   -Hooded Merganser - 2
   -Wild Turkey - 5
   -No. Bobwhite - 16
   -Green Heron - 1
   -Gr. Blue Heron - 2
   -Turkey Vulture - 17 + 4
   -Osprey - 2
   -Cooper's Hawk - 1
   -Red-shouldered Hawk - 4
   -Red-t. Hawk - 3 + 4
   -Virginia Rail - 1
   -Sora - 2
   -Killdeer - 3 + 4
   -Gr. Yellowlegs - 1
   -Am. Woodcock - 4
   -Mourning Dove - 17 + 10
   -Gr. Horned Owl - 2
   -Barred Owl - 4 + 1
   -Com. Nighthawk - 1
   -Whip-poor-will - 3
   -Chimney Swift - 0 + 2 (+ 25 in Linton)
   -Ruby-thr. Hummingbird - 0 + 2
   -Red-headed Woodpecker - 3 + 1
   -Red-bel. Woodpecker - 9 + 5
   -Downy Woodpecker - 2 + 1
   -Pileated Woodpecker - 4
   -E. Wood-Pewee - 5
   -Acadian Flycatcher - 3
   -Least Flycatcher - 1
   -E. Phoebe - 6 + 1
   -Gr. Crested Flycatcher - 9 + 3
   -E. Kingbird - 10 + 3
   -White-e. Vireo - 22 + 11
   -Yellow-thr. Vireo - 3 + 1
   -Bell's Vireo - 12
   -Blue-headed Vireo - 1
   -Red-e. Vireo - 28 + 9
   -Warbling Vireo - 4 + 1
   -Blue Jay - 6 + 5
   -Am. Crow - 22 + 4
   -Tree Swallow - 4
   -Purple Martin - 6 + 2
   -Cliff Swallow - 1
   -No. Rough-w. Swallow - 4 + 2
   -Barn Swallow - 4 + 7
   -Car. Chickadee - 8
   -Tufted Titmouse - 24 + 4
   -White-br. Nuthatch - 5 + 1
   -House Wren - 8 + 2
   -Carolina Wren - 16 + 10
   -Sedge Wren - 3
   -Ruby-cr. Kinglet - 1
   -Blue-gr. Gnatcatcher - 25 + 5
   -E. Bluebird - 2 + 2
   -Wood Thrush - 15 + 5
   -Veery - 7 + 2
   -Gray-ch. Thrush - 3
   -Swainson's Thrush - 22 + 6
   -Am. Robin - 8 + 30
   -Gray Catbird - 16 + 5
   -No. Mockingbird - 1 + 1
   -Brown Thrasher - 6 + 3
   -Eur. Starling - 6 + 110
   -Prothonotary Warbler - 4
   -Tennessee Warbler - 15
   -Nashville Warbler - 1
   -No. Parula - 5 + 2
   -Chestnut-s. Warbler - 3
   -Magnolia Warbler - 2
   -Yellow-rumped Warbler - 34 + 3
   -Blackburnian Warbler - 0 + 1
   -Black-thr. Green Warbler - 3
   -Yellow-thr. Warbler - 1
   -Prairie Warbler - 8 + 4
   -Pine Warbler - 1
   -Palm Warbler - 10 + 4
   -Yellow Warbler - 11 + 4
   -Kentucky Warbler - 19 + 1
   -Canada Warbler - 1
   -Ovenbird - 6
   -Louisiana Waterthrush - 0 + 1
   -Northern Waterthrush - 2
   -Com. Yellowthroat - 76 + 9
   -Yellow-br. Chat - 20 + 3
   -Am. Redstart - 11
   -Summer Tanager - 8 + 1
   -Scarlet Tanager - 9 + 1
   -E. Towhee - 21 + 3
   -Field Sparrow - 34 + 9
   -Chipping Sparrow - 9 + 2
   -Henslow's Sparrow - 27
   -Song Sparrow 10 + 11
   -White-thr. Sparrow - 5
   -White-cr. Sparrow - 14
   -Rose-br. Grosbeak - 10 + 4
   -No. Cardinal - 42 + 10
   -Dickcissel - 2
   -Blue Grosbeak - 7 + 5
   -Indigo Bunting - 72 + 17
   -Bobolink - 7
   -E. Meadowlark - 10 + 5
   -Red-w. Blackbird - 57 + 58
   -Com. Grackle - 5 + 20
   -Brown-h. Cowbird - 22 + 2
   -Orchard Oriole - 10
   -Baltimore Oriole - 16 + 4
   -Pine Siskin - 0 + 2
   -Am. Goldfinch - 16 + 16
   -House Sparrow - 6 + 15


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Subject: Gibson Co. Pacific Loon - No?
From: Gary Bowman <otus44 AT SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 16:31:41 -0400
We checked the strip mine pit where the loon was seen yesterday and 
this morning.
The wind was howling and the rain was coming down so I am not surprised that we
didn't see the loon.  It was probably trying to stay out of the wind 
along the edge to
the pit somewhere.  This is a large, narrow, two section pit possibly 
1/2 mile or more
long so it could have been hidden from view.

I can't imagine that the bird has left in these weather conditions.

If you try for it, the pit is about 2 miles east of Mackey in the 
southeast corner of Gibson
County.  Go east from the blinker light at SR57 on CR700S nearly two 
miles to a
cemetery on the north side of the road at a jog in the 
road.  Continue a little farther to
a stop sign at an intersection and then coninue a short distance to 
the pit.  It is on the
right side of the road.  Good luck.

Gary Bowman
Vincennes

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Subject: More Allen Co. May Day count
From: Jhawillet AT AOL.COM
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 14:20:02 EDT
Ryan Smith and I birded Fox Island for the Allen Co. May Day count  yesterday 
morning.  Doug Rood and Marisa Windell joined us for afternoon in  northwest 
Allen Co., and I quickly surveyed the Woodburn sewage ponds in the  evening.  
Our party total for the day was 115 species, but there was  nothing unexpected 
among them.
 
We had 78 species at Fox Island, which is decidedly subpar for a May Day  
count, including 21 warblers. New for the year was Philadelphia Vireo. Ed and 

Cynthia Powers, a second Fox Is. party for the  morning, added several 
additional species in the park, including the first Blackpoll Warbler of the 
year. 

Although a few migrant species were in fair  numbers, most were quite low.  
Missed entirely at Fox Is. were Blue-headed and Yellow-throated Vireos, Veery, 

Gray-cheeked Thrush, Black and White  Warbler, and Lincoln's Sparrow.  Some 
other species--many flycatchers including E. Wood Pewee, both cuckoos, Canada, 

Mourning, and Connecticut  Warblers--have not yet been reported in northeast 
Indiana in this late spring  migration.
 
In the afternoon we found a few shorebirds--several Spotted Sandpipers, 1  
Greater and 9 Lesser Yellowlegs, 2 Least Sandpipers, 2 Dunlin, 3 Wilson's 
Snipe, 

 but again the shorebird variety has not reached us yet.  New for the year  
was Bobolink, present in our assigned area in one of the three locations where 

they have been found in the recent past.  They are just starting to  come in. 
 I had assumed that there were no late-lingering ducks around, but  we found 
Blue-winged and Green-winged Teal, a pair of Ring-necked Ducks, 4  Lesser 
Scaup, and a pair of Ruddy Ducks in one location.
 
A glorious day to be out and a good party total in spite of the big gaps on  
our list.
 
Jim Haw



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Subject: Allen County May Day Count- May 10
From: Rodger Rang <rrang AT VERIZON.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 13:00:21 -0400
Jerry Brown, Sandy Schacht, Sister Mary Joan and I participated in Saturday's 
Big May Day Count, covering the north central section of Allen County from 
Franke Park northward into the Cedar Creek area. We tallied 99 species- average 
at best- in mostly low numbers, with no lingering waterfowl, very few 
shorebirds, virtually no grassland species, and no new arrivals. We found only 
21 warblers, the best probably being the continuing male Golden-winged 
(singing) at Franke and two Louisiana Waterthrushes (singing) at Bicentennial 
Woods and off Chapman Road. We did have a few lingering early migrants: one 
each of Red-breasted Nuthatch, Winter Wren, and Purple Finch (singing) at 
Franke, but overall, the list was fairly unexciting. Best highlight was the 
weather- mostly sunny with a refreshing light north breeze, a stark contrast to 
this morning's dark skies and consistent rain. I'm happy to stay inside today. 


Rodger Rang
Fort Wayne

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Subject: Lk. Lemon - siskins, Surf Scoter
From: Jim Hengeveld <jhengeve AT INDIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 12:19:24 -0400
There are currently 24 PINE SISKINs at our feeders.  A fem/imm SURF  
SCOTER was at the east end of the lake at ~11 am.  There are 2 E.  
WOOD-PEWEES  in our yard.

........Jim & Susan



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





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Subject: Riddle Point 5/10
From: Robert Kissel <bluesdoc AT BLUEMARBLE.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 11:53:55 -0400
In walking my dogs early evening at Riddle Point (w end of Lake Lemon), 
I had a Spotted Sandpiper land on a log near the camp. Otherwise, 
Riddle Point and the lake seemed pretty quiet, beyond 3 Common Loons 
mid-lake and the expected Canada Geese. Bluebirds were feeding young at 
the box at the camp (prior years occupied by Tree Swallows).

Bob Kissel
NE Monroe County

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Subject: Re: Question about Wild Turkey in Indianapolis
From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 08:46:35 -0700
 
I wanted to thank Steve Backs for taking the time to address the "urban wild 
turkey" issue. It's always good to hear from the experts. 

 
Steve mentions two potential reasons for the presence of tukeys in urban areas:
 
1. They may be released "pen-raised" turkeys that look like wild turkeys.

2. With urban sprawl, our communities are moving into areas that were once more 
rural and wooded. 


I'd like to offer another potential reason: there are a heck of a lot more wild 
turkeys than there used to be. I saw one estimate that said there were only 
1300 wild turkeys in Indiana as recently as 1969. Turkey numbers have increased 
about a hundredfold since then. In one document published by the Purdue 
extension service they estimated that there 125,000 turkeys in Indiana in 2005. 
These turkeys have to have someplace to go, and in some cases they might be 
slowly expanding their territories into urban/suburban areas, much as was the 
case with whitetailed deer. 


Bernie Sloan
Bloomington

--- On Thu, 5/8/08, Castrale, John  wrote:

From: Castrale, John 
Subject: Re: [IN-BIRD-L] Question about Wild Turkey in Indianapolis
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Date: Thursday, May 8, 2008, 10:10 AM

Steve Backs asked me to post this to IN-Bird.
John Castrale


 I apologize for not responding sooner to your request about wild
turkeys around urban areas in Indiana but things have been a little
hectic around here.  The whole issue of urban "wild" turkeys is
something wild turkeys biologists are a little perplexed in addressing.
Unfortunately, none of the scenarios is good for true wild turkeys nor
those folks who appreciate seeing wild critters.

First, several urban areas around the state have a chronic history of
releases of "pen-reared" turkeys that are the wild looking type.
Examples: Carmel area, Greenwood, Geist Reservoir, several communities
in NC Indiana. By experience we are often suspect of the origin of
"wild" turkeys that show up in some urban settings.  In some cases,
these birds may have been hatched from real wild turkey eggs, that were
illegally removed from wild nests under the perception the nest had been
abandoned and these were hatched in an incubator, the hatched chicks
become imprinted to humans and their habitations.  Once the birds begin
to get some size and become a problem to keep the folks turn them lose.
Please note all the associated activities of this latter scenario are
illegal.

Second, as urban sprawl has moved into areas that were once more rural
and wooded we have seen a greater frequency of wild turkeys becoming
more acclimated to humans.  Generally, backyard bird feeders become the
mechanism for this acclimation during periods of winter stress when
birds lose some of the inherent wildness because of their need to find
food resources.  Each subsequent generation of birds who frequent these
feeding sources becomes more acclimated. Before you know you have
semi-domesticated wild birds.

Finally, we did make one wild turkey release at Eagle Creek Park in
Indianapolis against our biological recommendations.  The question was
not so much will they survive but what if they survive.  We are not sure
of the true status of these birds because we know we have had some
subsequent releases of pen-reared birds in the general area as well.

From a biological perspective, none of the situations discussed above is
good for the long term future of true wild turkey flocks in Indiana
because of potential disease concerns from contact with contaminated
fowl, genetic pollution, and the unfortunate nuisance complaints that
eventually occur.  It does take very long for a turkey walking on the
roof of a car to cause several hundred dollars of scratching damage,
roosting on antennas, satellite dishes, and gutters along with
accumulated feces around homes and lawn furniture, flogged windows or
humans especially children, scratched up flower gardens or vegetable
gardens, broken car windshields, etc before the perception of natural
beauty goes to beast!

Bottom-line, wild turkey biologists strongly discourage any feeding of
any wild turkeys and consider any turkeys in an urban setting to be of
either suspect origin and potentially contaminated as carriers of
diseases that pose a potential threat to true wild turkey flocks.  When
asked to address the nuisance complaints regarding such turkeys, trap
and transplanting such birds to someplace else is not an option for
primarily the reasons discussed. 

Steven E. Backs
Wildlife Research Biologist
Wild Turkey Project Leader

-----Original Message-----
From: Castrale, John
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 9:28 AM
To: Backs, Steve
Subject: FW: [IN-BIRD-L] Question about Wild Turkey in Indianapolis

 
fyi
-----Original Message-----
From: Bird discussion list for Indiana
[mailto:IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] On Behalf Of B.G. Sloan
Sent: Monday, April 14, 2008 6:21 PM
To: IN-BIRD-L AT LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Subject: [IN-BIRD-L] Question about Wild Turkey in Indianapolis

Ellie Baker asked:
   
  "Has anyone else seen a turkey in the city [Indianapolis]? We do live
on Little Crooked Creek, so it could have come via that corridor. But it
does not make much sense."
   
  I checked the Christmas Bird Counts (Indianapolis and Indianapolis NW)
since about 1990. There were Wild Turkeys reported in just one count
(1999-2000), and even then only two birds. And I couldn't find any
sightings in the IN-BIRD-L archives. So it looks like they aren't common
in Indy.
   
  But urban Wild Turkeys aren't unheard of. When I was observing a flock
of turkeys in my old Urbana, IL neighborhood I did a lot of background
reading and found quite a few examples. Several Chicago suburbs had
turkeys, as did Boston, Pittsburgh, Hartford CT, and Minneapolis.
Turkeys have even been spotted in Manhattan!
   
  Bernie Sloan
  Bloomington

Eleanor Baker  wrote:
  About 10 minutes ago, a neighbor called to report a very large,
irredescient bird strolling in her back yead. I rushed down and indeed
it was a male turkey.
Location: North Willow Park at Brewster and Cinnebar, one block south of
Tulane (which goes into College Park). About 1/2 mile north of 86th
Street.

Has anyone else seen a turkey in the city? We do live on Little Crooked
Creek, so it could have come via that corridor. But it does not make
much sense.

Ellie Baker

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Subject: Fort Harrison SP May 11 - Rain!
From: Don Gorney <dongorney AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 08:37:43 -0700
The most amazing sighting on May 11 at Fort Harrison State Park, Indianapolis, 
was a birdwatcher for the bird hike despite the downpour. The regulars all 
stayed home but one high school student came out for the hike. Since there was 
heavy rain at 8am I delayed the hike an hour so we birded in the drizzle and 
moderate rain. Only 56 species were found. Seven warbler species, a few 
flycatchers, and one cuckoo were the highlights. The entire list: 


Canada Goose     29
Mallard     8
Great Blue Heron     10
Cooper's Hawk     1
Killdeer     3
Mourning Dove     6
Cuckoo sp    1 seen in flight as I got out of my car
Chimney Swift     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     3
Downy Woodpecker     2
Acadian Flycatcher     1
Great Crested Flycatcher     2
White-eyed Vireo     1
Yellow-throated Vireo     1
Warbling Vireo     1
Red-eyed Vireo     2
Blue Jay     5
American Crow     2
Northern Rough-winged Swallow     6
Barn Swallow     6
Carolina Chickadee     5
Tufted Titmouse     2
Carolina Wren     1
House Wren     3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     7
Swainson's Thrush     1
Wood Thrush     1
American Robin     32
Gray Catbird     5
Northern Mockingbird     1
European Starling     17
Cedar Waxwing     2
Tennessee Warbler     3
Nashville Warbler     2
Northern Parula     1
Yellow Warbler     6
Chestnut-sided Warbler     1
Palm Warbler     4
Wilson's Warbler     1
Summer Tanager     1
Scarlet Tanager     2
Chipping Sparrow     9
Field Sparrow     3
Song Sparrow     5
White-crowned Sparrow     3
Northern Cardinal     11
Rose-breasted Grosbeak     1
Indigo Bunting     7
Red-winged Blackbird     8
Eastern Meadowlark     1
Common Grackle     7
Brown-headed Cowbird     20
Orchard Oriole     3
Baltimore Oriole     5
American Goldfinch     12
House Sparrow     2

A bird hike will be held each Sunday in May at Fort Harrison. Meet at 8am at 
Delaware Lake parking lot. 


Don Gorney
Indianapolis, IN
dongorney AT yahoo.com
www.dongorney.com

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Subject: BIG MAY COUNT & NEW STATE RECORD
From: Canyon Wren <canyonwren AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2008 09:36:42 -0500
Hi Birders,
While I won't have time to report all of my sightings until later today or 
Monday (due to Mother's Day activities), there is one record that worthy of 
SPECIAL MENTION. 


BARRED OWLS:
While I seek confirmation of this record from Dr. Kenneth J. Brock, it appears 
that a new state record was set. My team, comprised of Dr. Jack Swelstad, Dr. 
Jason Swelstad and myself, were fortunate enough to have observed a new STATE 
HIGH SINGLE PARTY SPRING COUNT for Barred Owls. This is based upon data 
published in "Brock's Birds of Indiana." Our tally of Barred Owls for the day 
was SEVEN. If I have intrepreted the data in "Brock's Birds of Indiana" 
correctly, the previous high spring single party count was six. These owls were 
all observed in Porter County; four in Indiana Dunes State Park and three in 
the Heron Rookery unit of the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. My team is 
thrilled with this record. 


OTHER BIG MAY HIGHLIGHTS:
We had a Turkey flush from within four feet of us in the Heron Rookery. This is 
a first for this species in that location. 


An Osprey was an exciting addition to our Big May Count list. Both it and a 
Common Loon were observed by Jack and Jason from the foot bridge near Wilson 
Shelter in the state park while I was conveniently back at the porta-pot near 
the Wilson Shelter parking lot. 


Our total species for the day was in the 100 species range. We had 24 warbler 
species for the count; 5 vireo species missing Philly; 4 flycatcher species 
missing, among others, Eastern Wood-Pewee which may not have arrived this far 
north yet. We delighted to watch a mother Wood Duck with 14 chicks. Another 
welcome speices: three Hooded Mergs, at least one was a female that flew in low 
over the footbridge. A singleton Red-breasted Nuthatch put in an appearance as 
we finished our Trails 2-10 loop back at Wilson Shelter. We added a second Pine 
Warbler to the state park tally when we heard both the one counted by Ken Brock 
near the former Green Tower site and a second one from across the street. We 
were also successful in observing the Yellow-throated Warbler in the Heron 
Rookery, the only reliable place for this species in the entire Dunes area. 


That's about it for now.  An update will follow later.

Happy Mother's Day and Good Birding!
Lynea

Lynea Hinchman
Michigan City, Indiana
Heart of the Indiana Dunes
CanyonWrenatComcastdotnet
 
"The beauty and genius of a work of art may be reconceived though its first
material expression be destroyed.  A vanished harmony may yet again inspire
the composer, but when the last individual of a race of living beings
breathes no more, another heaven and another earth must pass before such a
one can be again."  William Beebe
 

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