Thursday 31 March 2016

[Maine-birds] Evergreen Cemetery

YBSS - FOY 3 very chattery birds
E. Phoebe - FOY ME (1) (3 in our yard in CE
today)
N. Flicker R/S - FOY ME (1)
E. Bluebird - 4

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Evergreen Cemetery"

[Maine-birds] Tufted Duck

Hello All,

The male Tufted Duck, viewed by Don Smith and myself, mid-day today, was accompanied by a female diver. 

It was determined, via photos, by Louis Bevier, Doug Hitchcox and Bill Sheehan, that the female closely associating with the male Tufted Duck, at Sabattus Pond, was a female Ring-necked Duck.

Rob Speirs Cumberland


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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Tufted Duck"

RE: [Maine-birds] Barrow's on Back Cove

And still there today at 6:00.

 

From: maine-birds@googlegroups.com [mailto:maine-birds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of peter morelli
Sent: Wednesday, March 30, 2016 7:02 PM
To: Dave Cowan; maine-birds@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Maine-birds] Barrow's on Back Cove

 

And still there at 6:15.

Peter

 



On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 3:12 PM -0700, "Dave Cowan" <dcowan01@maine.rr.com> wrote:

Hi everyone,

 

Sighted a handsome drake BAGO offshore of the soccer fields this afternoon. Posted a photo under my name on eBird if you'd like to have a look. I first sighted him around 1 p.m. and he was still there when I ventured back with a camera around 3-ish.

 

Cheers!

Dave

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Read More :- "RE: [Maine-birds] Barrow's on Back Cove"

[Maine-birds] Bremen birds

A pair of Brown-headed Cowbirds at the feeder today and a Flicker in the meadow. Heard a FOY Phoebe in Damariscotta Hardware parking lot!

Juanita Roushdy
Bremen, ME 04551

Friends of Hog Island - Promises made; promises kept.






Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Bremen birds"

[Maine-birds] Eastern Phoebe & Song Sparrow, Madison

FOY: 1 Eastern Phoebe & 1 Song Sparrow this afternoon at camps, west shore, Wesserunsett Lake, Madison.

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Eastern Phoebe & Song Sparrow, Madison"

[Maine-birds] Tufted Duck. Sabattus Pond...West side, north of point at end of Sanborn road. With 100 RNDU. Possible female as well..photos. Rob Speirs Cumberland

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Tufted Duck. Sabattus Pond...West side, north of point at end of Sanborn road. With 100 RNDU. Possible female as well..photos. Rob Speirs Cumberland"

[Maine-birds] Tufted Duck @ Sabattus Pond

I found a tufted duck this afternoon with a large flock (90) of ring necked ducks. Obvious bright white side and the tuft was clearly visible. Unfortunately it was at the end of the Sawyer Rd which is a private road and private property. I have had permission to bird there for the last few years in the spring and fall but it is a narrow muddy driveway into a private yard. Maybe the flock will find its way to the south end of the pond! 

Don Smith


Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Tufted Duck @ Sabattus Pond"

[Maine-birds] Re identifying the sex of a first winter Surf Scoter

If I had looked more carefully at the plates in Sibley's newest edition, I would have seen that the bird Gary and I saw was a female Surf Scoter in first winter plumage. 

Ron Harrell

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[Maine-birds] FOY Phoebe

Phoebe singing away in the yard this morning, center Montville.

Sarah
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] FOY Phoebe"

[Maine-birds] Belfast Bay census of Saturday, March 26, 2016

Gary Gulezian and I did the census under cloudy skies, brisk winds, and temperatures in the 30's.  Duck numbers were low, except for Common Eiders and Buffleheads.  Herring Gulls dominated the numbers with 642 of the total number of 807 individual birds counted.  Highlight of the day was an adult Lesser Black-backed Gull, which is the third year in a row that one (same bird?) has appeared on the census at this time of year.  We also found a first winter Surf Scoter, which we were unable to sex, since our field guides did not cover this aspect of identification.  We would appreciate any help or sources on this point.

The complete report is found on ebird by clicking

http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S28659988

This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Belfast Bay census of Saturday, March 26, 2016"

[Maine-birds] Eastern Prom Earlybirds - YBSA, HETH

Beautiful day to bird the Eastern Promenade in Portland.

Worked the East End Beach and the Mid Slope Trail around 10-Noon today.

An early-ish Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Hermit Thrush were present. Plus a number of Eastern Phoebes and a bucketload of Song Sparrows all enjoying the warm weather.

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Eastern Prom Earlybirds - YBSA, HETH"

[Maine-birds] FOY Great Egret

FOY behind Scarboro Marsh Nature Center 1pm Thursday
Ron C

Sent from my iPhone

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] FOY Great Egret"

[Maine-birds] Waxwings

There has been a large flock of Waxwings feeding in a crabapple tree on Main Street in Lewiston, right at the intersection of the Veteran's Bridge.
I wasn't close enough to tell if there was any Bohemians among them.

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Waxwings"

[Maine-birds] FOY Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Spotted my FOY YBSA in Evergreen Cemetery in Portland today. eBird is listing it as a seasonal rarity, however considering our weather I think that may be an overstatement. 

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] FOY Yellow-bellied Sapsucker"

[Maine-birds] Gardiner swallows

Since the amazingly early group of Tree Swallows arrived here in Gardiner a few weeks ago, the flock has continued to grow daily so that as of this morning there are 30-40 (maybe more) milling around over the stream and nearby area. I’ve been looking through them but so far all I’ve seen have been Tree Swallows.

 

Jeff Wells

 

Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Gardiner swallows"

Re: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

Thank you to all who have commented about bluebird nests.  I have 18 box nests and will go to 20 box nests.

I have put a one new this year in a rock pile in the middle of a hay field.  I will put a second nest within 15 feet of that one.  They will be isolated from all other nests by at least 500 feet. 

I will put a second nest within 15 feet of a box nest near the river. 

I will move two nests within 15 feet of each other in a mowed area that will be more than 200 feet from the nearest other nests.

This year I replaced all the front plates with new plates made of old barn boards with a new hole that is 1 1/2" in diameter.  The old front plates were about 10 years old and I found many had been pecked larger over the years.  I am not sure how or who enlarged the holes.  I assume either the Tree Swallows or a predators.  
 


On 3/31/2016 8:24 AM, Sharon F. wrote:
Mowing an area short and frequently does do the trick. We have 8-10 pairs of tree swallows nesting around us and by the river and always have one bluebird pair. They stay in the upper field area so I make sure to keep that bluebird friendly-has worked for the past 15 years...and is so worth the effort! So beneficial and fun to have both species here.  Sharon in West Kennebunk



Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2016 03:52:29 -0700
From: asegel@colby.edu
To: maine-birds@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

I find the same thing with my nest boxes. The swallows are more aggressive and drive off the bluebirds. I've tried providing more boxes but that just led to more swallow pairs...not necessarily a bad thing. One thing I had recommended, was to put two boxes back to back on the same post. The theory being that one pair of swallows would keep the others away, freeing up the box for the bluebirds. It never worked for me but you might have better luck. One thing I do know that will increase the number of blue birds is keeping the area well mowed. It makes a noticeable difference as the bluebirds feed close to the ground unlike the swallows. I've maintained about a half dozen boxes for 30 years now on the same 5 acre field. About one in every three years a bluebird pair will nest successfully. I've learned to be satisfied with that. Cultivating a less Augustinian view of nature is also helpful :)

On Wednesday, March 30, 2016 at 6:39:29 PM UTC-4, Allan Fuller wrote:
FOY Bluebird has been checking out a bird house.  The Tree Swallows will be here in about 1-2 weeks and chase the Bluebirds out.  Happens every year.  Anyone have any suggestions on how to keep the Tree Swallows from hassling the Bluebirds. 

About 20 FOY Eastern King Birds were eating high bush cranberries.  I have never seen so many Eastern King Birds at one place at one time.  They must be traveling though. 

FOY Black and White Warbler hopping around the raspberry patch.

Last Sunday FOY Great Blue Heron flew up the river at tree height. 

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more"

[Maine-birds] Signs of the Seasons: A New England Phenology Program

Here's a great volunteer opportunity with trainings happening in many locations around the state:

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RE: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

Mowing an area short and frequently does do the trick. We have 8-10 pairs of tree swallows nesting around us and by the river and always have one bluebird pair. They stay in the upper field area so I make sure to keep that bluebird friendly-has worked for the past 15 years...and is so worth the effort! So beneficial and fun to have both species here.  Sharon in West Kennebunk



Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2016 03:52:29 -0700
From: asegel@colby.edu
To: maine-birds@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

I find the same thing with my nest boxes. The swallows are more aggressive and drive off the bluebirds. I've tried providing more boxes but that just led to more swallow pairs...not necessarily a bad thing. One thing I had recommended, was to put two boxes back to back on the same post. The theory being that one pair of swallows would keep the others away, freeing up the box for the bluebirds. It never worked for me but you might have better luck. One thing I do know that will increase the number of blue birds is keeping the area well mowed. It makes a noticeable difference as the bluebirds feed close to the ground unlike the swallows. I've maintained about a half dozen boxes for 30 years now on the same 5 acre field. About one in every three years a bluebird pair will nest successfully. I've learned to be satisfied with that. Cultivating a less Augustinian view of nature is also helpful :)

On Wednesday, March 30, 2016 at 6:39:29 PM UTC-4, Allan Fuller wrote:
FOY Bluebird has been checking out a bird house.  The Tree Swallows will be here in about 1-2 weeks and chase the Bluebirds out.  Happens every year.  Anyone have any suggestions on how to keep the Tree Swallows from hassling the Bluebirds. 

About 20 FOY Eastern King Birds were eating high bush cranberries.  I have never seen so many Eastern King Birds at one place at one time.  They must be traveling though. 

FOY Black and White Warbler hopping around the raspberry patch.

Last Sunday FOY Great Blue Heron flew up the river at tree height. 

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Re: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

Hi all,

We have a lot of experience with bluebirds and bluebird houses (personally, professionally, and scientifically) and there seems to be only one answer to alleviating the competition with Tree Swallows. As yes, if a Tree Swallow wants a box, it it almost always usurp it. You just need to make the swallow not want the box!

Boxes should be paired, yes, but not back-to-back. Instead, pair them on separate posts, 12-15 feet apart. Same house, same height (4-6 feet) and same direction (usually, but not always south, depends on the spot) in order to keep all variables equal. Tree Swallows will not nest that close to each other, leaving one of the two boxes free for the bluebirds. Tree Swallows have no particular concern for bluebirds as neighbors, and there's some suggestion that bluebirds actually benefit from having swallows - who aggressively mob potential predators - as neighbors. And we certainly want as many Tree Swallows to eat flying insects around as possible, so pairing boxes is a win-win.

While swallows will nest in almost any house more than 20 feet from each other, bluebirds have much larger territories. Therefore, it is usually recommended to have the house-pairs at least 100 feet apart, and preferably out of site from each other to maximize bluebird occupancy rates.

In our experience, with adequate habitat and space, there's no reason not to have up to 50% occupancy by bluebirds when pairing houses.

Other competitors, such as House Wrens and chickadees, can usually be dissuaded by placing houses at least 25 feet from dense cover. 

As for House Sparrows, well, that's another question entirely. While there's lots of things that have worked well for someone in someplace, we are still desperately searching for a consistently-reliable deterrent (house design, placement, etc) for this invasive. 

Hope that helps,
Derek

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 31, 2016, at 6:52 AM, asegel@colby.edu wrote:

I find the same thing with my nest boxes. The swallows are more aggressive and drive off the bluebirds. I've tried providing more boxes but that just led to more swallow pairs...not necessarily a bad thing. One thing I had recommended, was to put two boxes back to back on the same post. The theory being that one pair of swallows would keep the others away, freeing up the box for the bluebirds. It never worked for me but you might have better luck. One thing I do know that will increase the number of blue birds is keeping the area well mowed. It makes a noticeable difference as the bluebirds feed close to the ground unlike the swallows. I've maintained about a half dozen boxes for 30 years now on the same 5 acre field. About one in every three years a bluebird pair will nest successfully. I've learned to be satisfied with that. Cultivating a less Augustinian view of nature is also helpful :)

On Wednesday, March 30, 2016 at 6:39:29 PM UTC-4, Allan Fuller wrote:
FOY Bluebird has been checking out a bird house.  The Tree Swallows will be here in about 1-2 weeks and chase the Bluebirds out.  Happens every year.  Anyone have any suggestions on how to keep the Tree Swallows from hassling the Bluebirds. 

About 20 FOY Eastern King Birds were eating high bush cranberries.  I have never seen so many Eastern King Birds at one place at one time.  They must be traveling though. 

FOY Black and White Warbler hopping around the raspberry patch.

Last Sunday FOY Great Blue Heron flew up the river at tree height. 

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more"

[Maine-birds] FOYA Eastern Phoebe in Holden

Singing boldly this a.m. on the South Road.  Welcome back!

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[Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

I find the same thing with my nest boxes. The swallows are more aggressive and drive off the bluebirds. I've tried providing more boxes but that just led to more swallow pairs...not necessarily a bad thing. One thing I had recommended, was to put two boxes back to back on the same post. The theory being that one pair of swallows would keep the others away, freeing up the box for the bluebirds. It never worked for me but you might have better luck. One thing I do know that will increase the number of blue birds is keeping the area well mowed. It makes a noticeable difference as the bluebirds feed close to the ground unlike the swallows. I've maintained about a half dozen boxes for 30 years now on the same 5 acre field. About one in every three years a bluebird pair will nest successfully. I've learned to be satisfied with that. Cultivating a less Augustinian view of nature is also helpful :)

On Wednesday, March 30, 2016 at 6:39:29 PM UTC-4, Allan Fuller wrote:
FOY Bluebird has been checking out a bird house.  The Tree Swallows will be here in about 1-2 weeks and chase the Bluebirds out.  Happens every year.  Anyone have any suggestions on how to keep the Tree Swallows from hassling the Bluebirds. 

About 20 FOY Eastern King Birds were eating high bush cranberries.  I have never seen so many Eastern King Birds at one place at one time.  They must be traveling though. 

FOY Black and White Warbler hopping around the raspberry patch.

Last Sunday FOY Great Blue Heron flew up the river at tree height. 

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Re: Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more"

[Maine-birds] 11 Duck species and PBGR Androscoggin County

Hello All,

The day started with a Pied-billed Grebe at Runaround Pond in Durham but Sabattus was the hotspot with Common Goldeneye, Common and Hooded Mergansers, Lesser and Greater Scaup, Ring-necked Duck, Ruddy Duck, Mallard and Canada Goose at Sabattus Pond.

In downtown Sabattus on Sabattus River from Island Road (Amvets Hall) were 4 Green-winged Teal, 3 American Wigeon, 1 Gadwall, 10 Mallard and a Hooded Merganser.

Numbers of Scaup, Ruddy Ducks and Common Mergansers on Sabattus Pond are increasing from earlier reports.

Good birding,

Dan Nickerson
Freeport


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Re: [Maine-birds] Wigeons, Gadwalls etc. in Albion

I checked this spot out yesterday morning, and, with the exception of GW Teal, all of the ducks mentioned were present.  There were 5 Gadwalls (3 m, 2 f).  Also a Phoebe was near the northern end of Taylor Rd.  Later I found what I presume to be the local breeding pair of 2 Sandhill Cranes in the fields along Rt. 8 in Smithfield.  This is a bit early, but, not surprising, given the conditions.  Diligent scanning of open water on all lakes encountered yesterday produced no loons.  That is puzzling.

 

Wally S.

On Sun, 27 Mar 2016 21:10:24 -0400, Hodgkins <hodgki@myfairpoint.net> wrote:

Great variety of ducks on Taylor Road in Albion: Gadwalls, American Wigeons, Green-winged Teal, Buffleheads, Goldeneyes, Ring-necked Ducks, and Hooded Mergansers. Also a Kestrel hunting the fields. Taylor Road is a dirt road (a bit muddy at the end) with few cars, near downtown Albion. Good spot to view ducks, the road is above and parallels a backwater stream, with open field to the stream, close enough to have good views of the ducks but far enough that they're not spooked. A spotting scope is helpful here. Details and some pictures on eBird:

http://ebird.org/ebird/me/view/checklist?subID=S28588958

Glenn Hodgkins

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Wigeons, Gadwalls etc. in Albion"

Wednesday 30 March 2016

Re: [Maine-birds] Dead Waxwings

Lighthouses, fog and migration can also create a deadly combination. Mt. Desert Rock in the early 70s was one event I won't forget. 

Craig K
SW Harbor



Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 30, 2016, at 5:26 PM, Linda Scotland <lds@maine.rr.com> wrote:

Slightly different--when we lived in western Mass about 35 years ago during a high wind 20+~ robins hit the side of our garage and died. I was devastated. Haven't seen a mass kill like that since.

Linda Scotland

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 30, 2016, at 4:47 PM, Bruce Bartrug <bbartrug@gmail.com> wrote:

In response to Anne Williams of Lewiston concerning waxwings running into windows......I've seen this happen more than once, and there's always more than one bird.  I'm not certain of the circumstances in the incident you recalled in Lewiston, but I suspect it's just because waxwings fly so fast, and usually in groups, that they so often crash into windows.  In both the cases I've seen the window was on a second story building and had no "warnings" of any sort for flying birds.

BAB

Bruce Bartrug
Nobleboro, Maine, USA
bbartrug@gmail.com
www.brucebartrug.com

•The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.  - Albert Einstein
•In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends. -Martin Luther King

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Dead Waxwings"

[Maine-birds] Fwd: Bradbury Mountain State Park (30 Mar 2016) 74 Raptors



Bradbury Mountain State Park
Pownal, Maine, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Mar 30, 2016
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture24187187
Osprey000
Bald Eagle34343
Northern Harrier61313
Sharp-shinned Hawk123030
Cooper's Hawk43838
Northern Goshawk022
Red-shouldered Hawk44545
Broad-winged Hawk011
Red-tailed Hawk14170170
Rough-legged Hawk000
Golden Eagle000
American Kestrel588
Merlin022
Peregrine Falcon000
Unknown Accipiter133
Unknown Buteo044
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor144
Total:74550550


Observation start time: 08:00:00
Observation end time: 16:00:00
Total observation time: 8 hours
Official CounterAnna Stunkel
Observers: Chuck Barnes, Dave Gulick, Jeannette Lovitch, John Berry, Julie Krasne, Lionel Quirion, Tom Downing



Visitors:
18 people visited the hawkwatch.

Weather:
The weather was beautiful, with generally light winds from the southwest and west. This made for a great day of raptor counting. Skies were mostly cloudy, with some clearing in the afternoon. Windspeed picked up during late afternoon, which slowed raptor movement during the last two hours of the count.

Raptor Observations:
Turkey Vultures and Red-tailed Hawks made a strong appearance, with both distant and close birds moving through. Sharp-shinned Hawks, Northern Harriers, and American Kestrels were also seen in good numbers, with many of these birds rising high on thermals before streaming off to migrate.

Non-raptor Observations:
27 bird species were seen and/or heard. There was a push of grackle and robin migration this morning, with large flocks streaming through. Tree Swallows were seen for the first time this season, swooping along acrobatically. The first Eastern Phoebe of the season landed in a nearby treetop. Species deemed migrating:
272 Common Grackles
221 American Robins
21 blackbird sp.
10 passerine sp.
10 Tree Swallows
9 Common Mergansers
7 finch sp.
6 Canada Geese
5 Purple Finches
3 swallow sp.
2 American Goldfinches
1 Pine Siskin

Predictions:
It sounds like tomorrow will be another beautiful day, with warm temperatures and south southwest winds. Windspeed may pick up in the afternoon, but it should be a good day for migration considering the expected wind direction and mostly sunny skies.


Report submitted by Jeannette Lovitch (freeportwildbird@yahoo.com)
Bradbury Mountain State Park information may be found at: www.freeportwildbirdsupply.com/hawkwatch.asp
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Fwd: Bradbury Mountain State Park (30 Mar 2016) 74 Raptors"

Re: [Maine-birds] Barrow's on Back Cove

And still there at 6:15.

Peter




On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 3:12 PM -0700, "Dave Cowan" <dcowan01@maine.rr.com> wrote:

Hi everyone,

 

Sighted a handsome drake BAGO offshore of the soccer fields this afternoon. Posted a photo under my name on eBird if you'd like to have a look. I first sighted him around 1 p.m. and he was still there when I ventured back with a camera around 3-ish.

 

Cheers!

Dave

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[Maine-birds] Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more

FOY Bluebird has been checking out a bird house.  The Tree Swallows will be here in about 1-2 weeks and chase the Bluebirds out.  Happens every year.  Anyone have any suggestions on how to keep the Tree Swallows from hassling the Bluebirds. 

About 20 FOY Eastern King Birds were eating high bush cranberries.  I have never seen so many Eastern King Birds at one place at one time.  They must be traveling though. 

FOY Black and White Warbler hopping around the raspberry patch.

Last Sunday FOY Great Blue Heron flew up the river at tree height. 
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Sebasticook River-Benton - Blue bird, King Birds, Black and White Warbler, more"

[Maine-birds] FOY GREG

…and a Great Egret along Back Cove shoreline off Baxter Boulevard, FOY.

 

From: Dave Cowan [mailto:dcowan01@maine.rr.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 30, 2016 6:12 PM
To: maine-birds@googlegroups.com
Subject: Barrow's on Back Cove

 

Hi everyone,

 

Sighted a handsome drake BAGO offshore of the soccer fields this afternoon. Posted a photo under my name on eBird if you’d like to have a look. I first sighted him around 1 p.m. and he was still there when I ventured back with a camera around 3-ish.

 

Cheers!

Dave

Read More :- "[Maine-birds] FOY GREG"

[Maine-birds] Barrow's on Back Cove

Hi everyone,

 

Sighted a handsome drake BAGO offshore of the soccer fields this afternoon. Posted a photo under my name on eBird if you’d like to have a look. I first sighted him around 1 p.m. and he was still there when I ventured back with a camera around 3-ish.

 

Cheers!

Dave

Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Barrow's on Back Cove"

Re: [Maine-birds] Dead Waxwings

Slightly different--when we lived in western Mass about 35 years ago during a high wind 20+~ robins hit the side of our garage and died. I was devastated. Haven't seen a mass kill like that since.

Linda Scotland

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 30, 2016, at 4:47 PM, Bruce Bartrug <bbartrug@gmail.com> wrote:

In response to Anne Williams of Lewiston concerning waxwings running into windows......I've seen this happen more than once, and there's always more than one bird.  I'm not certain of the circumstances in the incident you recalled in Lewiston, but I suspect it's just because waxwings fly so fast, and usually in groups, that they so often crash into windows.  In both the cases I've seen the window was on a second story building and had no "warnings" of any sort for flying birds.

BAB

Bruce Bartrug
Nobleboro, Maine, USA
bbartrug@gmail.com
www.brucebartrug.com

•The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.  - Albert Einstein
•In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends. -Martin Luther King

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Dead Waxwings"

[Maine-birds] Dead Waxwings

In response to Anne Williams of Lewiston concerning waxwings running into windows......I've seen this happen more than once, and there's always more than one bird.  I'm not certain of the circumstances in the incident you recalled in Lewiston, but I suspect it's just because waxwings fly so fast, and usually in groups, that they so often crash into windows.  In both the cases I've seen the window was on a second story building and had no "warnings" of any sort for flying birds.

BAB

Bruce Bartrug
Nobleboro, Maine, USA
bbartrug@gmail.com
www.brucebartrug.com

•The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.  - Albert Einstein
•In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends. -Martin Luther King

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Dead Waxwings"

[Maine-birds] Cormorant

FOY cormorant today, on the Libby River in Scarborough

Lucy LaCasse
52 Old Neck Rd
Scarborough, ME 04074
207-883-3637
207-928-3637 (Stoneham)
207-650-4770 (cell)
wnder@aol.com

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Cormorant"

[Maine-birds] dead waxwings

a neighbor just came home and discovered five dead waxwings (cedars) next to the house - they had obviously collided with the windows.

Has anyone experienced any similar mass waxwing fatalities?

Could they be eating fermented berries and losing their bearings?

Or could a hawk have chased them, killed even more, and made off with a couple?

Thanks for any thoughts you can share.
Anne Williams
Lewiston

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[Maine-birds] MDI Snow Goose and wigeon

When I read reports of Snow Geese, I fondly reminisce my days in the Champlain Valley when we saw tens of thousands. Here on Mount Desert Island, Snow Geese are a very uncommon occurrence: I can easily go the entire year without seeing one. So yesterday, when a flock of Canada Geese flew overhead, I was immediately struck by the fact that one in the skein was significantly smaller and whiter. Raising my binoculars, I was pleased to see what may end up being my one MDI Snow Goose for the year.

Today, I finally had a chance to chase Craig Kesselheim’s American Wigeon of a couple days ago. SUCCESS! I found the bird in Bass Harbor Marsh, mixed in with the Mallards and American Black Ducks.


Richard MacDonald
The Natural History Center
P.O. Box 6
Bar Harbor, Maine 04609
207/266-9461
Rich@TheNaturalHistoryCenter.com
www.TheNaturalHistoryCenter.com
www.facebook.com/TheNaturalHistoryCenter
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] MDI Snow Goose and wigeon"

[Maine-birds] FOY Tree Swallow

Sitting on the summit of Bald Pate in Bridgton looking for migrating raptors. Had a single Tree Swallow fly by, heading north. My FOY

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] FOY Tree Swallow"

Re: [Maine-birds] FOY Common Loon in Skowhegan

Just had one on Messalonskee Lake as seen from the boat launch.

Margaret Viens

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 30, 2016, at 9:46 AM, William Reid <williamfreid@gmail.com> wrote:

One Common Loon reported this morning on Wesserunsett Lake, Madison, too.

On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 9:39 AM, Marianne Taylor <andale62@gmail.com> wrote:
Just now swimming past our house.

Marianne Taylor

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] FOY Common Loon in Skowhegan"

Re: [Maine-birds] FOY Common Loon in Skowhegan

One Common Loon reported this morning on Wesserunsett Lake, Madison, too.

On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 9:39 AM, Marianne Taylor <andale62@gmail.com> wrote:
Just now swimming past our house.

Marianne Taylor

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] FOY Common Loon in Skowhegan"

[Maine-birds] FOY Common Loon in Skowhegan

Just now swimming past our house.

Marianne Taylor

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] FOY Common Loon in Skowhegan"

[Maine-birds] Am Wigeon in Skowhegan

A few minutes ago an Am Wigeon came to our waterfront with some mallards. First time we have ever seen one here. Will post photos on eBird.

Marianne Taylor

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Tuesday 29 March 2016

[Maine-birds] Golden Crowned Kinglets - Monhegan

Saw 3 male Golden Crowned Kinglets in my apple tree this afternoon.

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Golden Crowned Kinglets - Monhegan"

[Maine-birds] Fwd: Bradbury Mountain State Park (29 Mar 2016) 20 Raptors



Bradbury Mountain State Park
Pownal, Maine, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Mar 29, 2016
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture9163163
Osprey000
Bald Eagle14040
Northern Harrier077
Sharp-shinned Hawk31818
Cooper's Hawk13434
Northern Goshawk122
Red-shouldered Hawk14141
Broad-winged Hawk011
Red-tailed Hawk4156156
Rough-legged Hawk000
Golden Eagle000
American Kestrel033
Merlin022
Peregrine Falcon000
Unknown Accipiter022
Unknown Buteo044
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor033
Total:20476476


Observation start time: 08:00:00
Observation end time: 16:00:00
Total observation time: 8 hours
Official CounterAnna Stunkel
Observers:



Visitors:
22 people visited the hawkwatch.

Weather:
It was a blustery day! Wind speeds were around 20-30 mph and mostly northwest throughout the count. This kept things a little slow, but there were still some migrants moving through. Skies were mostly cloudy at the beginning of the day, but it cleared up a bit and many of the clouds were wispy cirrus in the afternoon.

Raptor Observations:
Nearly half of today's migrants were Turkey Vultures, who didn't seem to mind braving the winds. Accipiters followed low flight paths today. An immature Northern Goshawk flying over Pownal was a nice treat.

Non-raptor Observations:
21 bird species were observed today. A little flock of five Bohemian Waxwings stopped by and landed in some nearby trees. Species deemed migrating:
29 Canada Geese
13 Common Grackles
6 American Robins
4 Common Mergansers
4 finch sp.
2 Pine Siskins
1 American Goldfinch
1 Purple Finch

Predictions:
Tomorrow should be an excellent day for hawkwatching, with beautiful weather for visiting Bradbury Mountain. Clear skies, warm temperatures, and moderate south southwest winds should bring a nice flight of raptors. We hope to see you!


Report submitted by Jeannette Lovitch (freeportwildbird@yahoo.com)
Bradbury Mountain State Park information may be found at: www.freeportwildbirdsupply.com/hawkwatch.asp
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Fwd: Bradbury Mountain State Park (29 Mar 2016) 20 Raptors"

[Maine-birds] Bald Eagle in Kennebunk

Bald Eagle soaring over the Mousam River at 8:30 a.m.

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Bald Eagle in Kennebunk"

[Maine-birds] York/Cumberland County sightings (Mar 23-29)...

Here are some bird happenings from around York and Cumberland County, Maine:

3/23 (Wednesday)
...Northern Shoveler (FOY), 2 Wilson's Snipes, Eastern Phoebe, 3 Tree Swallows, 40 Song Sparrows and Swamp Sparrow at the Sanford Lagoons
...continuing Yellow-rumped Warbler along Harbor Rd., Wells

3/24 (Thursday)
...Great Blue Heron (FOS=first of spring) and Northern Pintail (drake) at marsh along Mousam River near Rt. 9, Kennebunk
...American Woodcock heard around 7:30pm from parking lot of York Public Library
...continuing Eastern Screech-Owl (my 300th Maine Bird!) giving repeated monotone trill at undisclosed location in York (with Evan Glynn, Andy Aldrich, and Kevin Couture; thanks to Evan for originally finding the bird)

3/26 (Saturday)
...2 Gadwall (FOY), 2 Double-crested Cormorants (FOS), Great Blue Heron, and Eastern Phoebe at Scarborough Marsh
...20 Bohemian Waxwings and 80 Cedar Waxwings at Key Bank on Temple St., Saco (thanks to an eBird report from Pat Moynahan)

3/27 (Sunday)
...3 Northern Flickers (FOY) feeding on the ground alongside ~100 American Robins near the Smith Preserve, Guinea Rd., Kennebunkport
...Great Egret (FOY) and 3 Great Blue Herons at marsh along Dyke Rd., K'port
..."Ipswich" Savannah Sparrow at East Point Sanctuary, Biddeford Pool

3/29 (Tuesday)
...2 Turkey Vultures feeding on a Striped Skunk carcass along Chapel Rd., Wells

--Josh

Josh's Journal: New England Natural History and Foraging [joshfecteau.com]

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] York/Cumberland County sightings (Mar 23-29)..."

[Maine-birds] Bath Osprey

2:10pm two osprey, one female, one male, in flight circling around above well known nest on utility poles in median of Rt One near Shaws

 

Robin R Robinson

http://robinrobinsonmaine.com

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Bath Osprey"

[Maine-birds] 825 Bohemian Waxwings, Rockport, 3/29

Hi all,
Evan Obercian reports approximately 825 BOHEMIAN WAXWINGS (estimated based on his photo which captured 744 of them) were near the Rockport dump at about 9:00am, "rolling towards Camden."

-Derek

Sent from my iPhone

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] 825 Bohemian Waxwings, Rockport, 3/29"

[Maine-birds] FoxSparrow

I have a Fox Sparrow around my feeders in Lewiston this morning

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[Maine-birds] Fwd: (CBC) CBC: White pileated woodpecker caught on camera near Edmon

I saw this yesterday on Bloomberg and neglected to send it out. So here it is. The link is real. Great pic of the bird

Bill Laverty
Cape Elizabeth

Sent from my iPhone

Begin forwarded message:

From: "William Laverty (FIDELITY CAPITAL MKT)" <wlaverty1@bloomberg.net>
Date: March 29, 2016 at 8:39:25 AM EDT
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: (CBC) CBC: White pileated woodpecker caught on camera near Edmon
Reply-To: "William Laverty" <wlaverty1@bloomberg.net>

(CBC) CBC: White pileated woodpecker caught on camera near Edmon
ton  Edmonton  CBC News

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CBC: White pileated woodpecker caught on camera near Edmonton  Edmonton  CBC News
2016-03-29 12:38:39.324 GMT

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/white-pileated-woodpecker-caught-on-camera-near-edmonton-1.3509744

PageExcerpt:
An incredibly rare white pileated woodpecker was spotted this weekend in Bon Accord, Alta. about 40 kilometres north of Edmonton. Rita and Joe Milligan, both avid birdwatchers, spotted the bird as it perched on a feeder outside their window on ...
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Fwd: (CBC) CBC: White pileated woodpecker caught on camera near Edmon"

[Maine-birds] Iceland Gull at Deering Oaks Pond, Portland.

 A beautiful, pure white, first year Iceland Gull remains at the Pond as of yesterday. (Everybody probably already has Iceland gull on their year lists, but I'm just back from snow-birding in Florida so it was a very nice FOY for me.)

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Monday 28 March 2016

[Maine-birds] Black-throated Sparrow, and Mew Gull status

We have a favor to ask for local birders of the black-throated sparrow and Mew Gull if you can tell us the status of these  birds. Are they still around this week??
         Ken Janes has spent most of the winter in Fla., and is returning this coming weekend. He would like to see them if they are around.   It is a 200 mile trip, and it is to far just look at chickadees, etc., we have lots of them here in York County.
 
Thank you and please reply off line aaldrich1@maine.rr.com
 
Andy Aldrich
North Berwick
 
 
Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Black-throated Sparrow, and Mew Gull status"

[Maine-birds] Project Snowstorm: Funding the Future (ends soon!)

Hey everyone:

While I try to keep non-bird-sighting posts here to a minimum, I thought this was worthy cause:

Project SNOWstorm which started during the Snowy Owl irruption in 2013-14 is doing a final fundraiser to help "keep the SNOWstorm going." You can learn more about the project on their website (http://www.projectsnowstorm.org) or make a last minute contribution at: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/project-snowstorm-funding-the-future

The most recent update on their blog (http://www.projectsnowstorm.org/posts/cascos-grand-tour/) should be inspiring enough but here are a few quick facts about some of the owls that have moved through Maine:

Back in February, I had the pleasure of taking a group of students from Windham Middle School down to Wells to see the famous 'Brunswick' who has apparently taken up residence on the Isle of Shoals: http://www.projectsnowstorm.org/snowstorm-owls-winter-2015-16/brunswick/. And here is a little story of my trip with the adventurous Windham students: http://maineaudubon.org/blog/2016/03/in-search-of-snowy-owl-brunswick/

If you haven't seen other updates recently, 'Casco' managed to skirt all the way around Maine after bookin' it out of Washington County: http://www.projectsnowstorm.org/snowstorm-owls-winter-2015-16/casco/

And 'Merrimack' has moved into Maine, visiting Sebago Lake (that would've been a good patch bird) before moving back toward the Scarborough Marsh and Stratton Island: http://www.projectsnowstorm.org/snowstorm-owls-winter-2015-16/merrimack/

What a great way to give back to a great project if you've had the joy of seeing one of the beautiful birds over the past few winters. I cannot wait to see what other mysteries are uncovered thanks to the work of Project SNOWstorm.


Doug Hitchcox

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Project Snowstorm: Funding the Future (ends soon!)"

Fwd: [Maine-birds] Banded Herring Gull

Thanks for the suggestions on where to report the banded Gull. It turns out this one was banded on 6/27/21014 as a chick on the roof-top of the Maine College of Art on Congress Street in Portland.  

Bill Blauvelt


---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Noah Perlut <nperlut@une.edu>
Date: Mon, Mar 28, 2016 at 11:01 AM
Subject: RE: [Maine-birds] Banded Herring Gull
To: Stella Walsh <stellawalsh@earthlink.net>
Cc: "bil.blauvelt@gmail.com" <bil.blauvelt@gmail.com>


HI Bill and Stella,

 

Thanks for reporting that bird!  S/he was banded 6/27/21014 as a chick on the roof-top of the Maine College of Art on Congress Street in Portland.

 

Noah

 

 

 

From: Stella Walsh [mailto:stellawalsh@earthlink.net]
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 10:29 AM
To: Noah Perlut <nperlut@une.edu>
Cc: bil.blauvelt@gmail.com
Subject: FW: [Maine-birds] Banded Herring Gull

 

One of yours?

 


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Read More :- "Fwd: [Maine-birds] Banded Herring Gull"

[Maine-birds] Re: Banded Herring Gull

Hi all--I banded this bird as a chick in the 2014 summer on the roof of MECA (Maine College of Art) on Congress Street in Portland.

noah

On Sunday, March 27, 2016 at 6:08:16 PM UTC-4, Bill Blauvelt wrote:
We saw a banded Herring Gull at Evergreen Cemetery in Portland today. Does anyone know where I should report it?


Bill Blauvelt
Portland, ME

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Re: Banded Herring Gull"