On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 10:53 PM, Brenda Nelson <brendahnelson@gmail.com> wrote:
I just realized it was a Hermit thrush, not a wood thrush that I was hearing here in West Bath. He sang often for my first couple of years here. But the last time I heard him sing was the evening we buried my beloved cat of 18 years. Not a sound since. INterestingly, my cat had died at midnight and I feel asleep, only to wake suddenly about 30 minutes later from a dream in which I saw my cat walking upright like a more human version of himself. He was in a beautiful garden and I watched from a distance as he approached a bush, stopped, reached in and brought out a brown bird with a speckled chest, which he released saying..."Have a happy life." I believe now that it was a Hermit thrush. But at that time I had never seen one. Connections in Nature are so magical.On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 5:06 PM, <maine-birds@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Group: http://groups.google.com/group/maine-birds/topics
- May on Monhegan [1 Update]
- Tuckahoe Preserve, Great Works R. L. Trust,, May 2, 2013 [1 Update]
- Cerulean Warbler - RETRACTION, Freeport, 5/2 [2 Updates]
- Weskeag Marsh, May 1 [1 Update]
- Indigo Bunting and Hooded Merganser in Camden [1 Update]
- Capisic Pond House Wren, Wood Duck [1 Update]
- Eagle with white "windows" in the wings - Yarmouth [1 Update]
- Ospreys [1 Update]
- Sandhill Cranes - New Sharon, Maine [3 Updates]
- House Wren arrival in Gardiner [1 Update]
- Phippsburg high count Glossy Ibis [1 Update]
- HSR: Bradbury Mountain State Park (01 May 2013) 49 Raptors [1 Update]
- 05/01 Stockton Springs COTE [2 Updates]
WillardJ Boynton <willardjboynton@gmail.com> May 02 04:22PM -0400
New birds today are Indigo Bunting, Eastern Kingbird, Gray Catbird, and
Rufous-Sided Towhee. Bill Boynton
"Andrew Aldrich" <aaldrich1@maine.rr.com> May 02 02:52PM -0400
We checked out a new area today. It is the Tuckahoe Preserve, part of the
Great Works Reginal Land Trust. It is about .6 on Hubbard Road north of
Tuckahoe Turf Farm which is at 305 Hubbard Rd Berwick, ME 03901
North of the Turf Farm on the west side of the road at about .6 is an
large area for parking several cars. Maybe at .4 is a gate for people who
like to fly airplanes, You can park there, please do not block the road.
You may walk anywhere on the 100 Acres. Along the south and along some of
the Salmon Falls River on the west, is a trail. There is a bog, and wet
areas in the north part of the preserve.
Map is
here:http://www.gwrlt.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=170:tuckahoe-turf-berwick-1004-&catid=48:berwick&Itemid=68
Site for Great Works http://www.gwrlt.org/
Tuckahoe Preserve, Great Works R. L. Trust,, York, US-ME
May 2, 2013 8:30 AM - 10:40 AM
Protocol: Traveling
2.5 mile(s)
Comments: Ken Janes, Pat Moynahan, Joanne Stevens
24 species
Ruffed Grouse 3
Turkey Vulture 2
Mourning Dove 3
Eastern Phoebe 1
Blue Jay 5
American Crow 2
Black-capped Chickadee 8
Tufted Titmouse 2
White-breasted Nuthatch 2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Hermit Thrush 1
Black-and-white Warbler 6
Nashville Warbler 2
Palm Warbler 1
Pine Warbler 4
Eastern Towhee 7
Field Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 1
Swamp Sparrow 1
Northern Cardinal 2
Red-winged Blackbird 2
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Purple Finch 1
American Goldfinch 2
View this checklist online at
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S13963829
This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org/me)
Happy birding
Andy Aldrich
North Berwick
Derek Lovitch <freeportwildbird@yahoo.com> May 02 08:34AM -0400
Hi all,
Well, I am sorry - and perhaps a little embarrassed - to have to retract my Cerulean Warbler report from yesterday.
This morning, after well over an hour of searching, Doug Hitchcox, Katrina Fenton, and I - soon joined by Jay Adams, Margaret Viens, and with apologies, someone who's name i failed to get (I was distracted by my just-then-apparent failure) - located a singing Black-throated Blue Warbler in treetops only a few hundred yards away from yesterday's bird. (I guess I should have called it quits sooner!)
It was singing a distinctly three-parted song, but much slower and lower overall, and more typical BTBW-like than yesterday. When we first heard it, we all thought BTBW immediately; there was little doubt. Perhaps also the two rock faces it was singing near yesterday were playing with the acoustics as well.
While I do believe the song was different yesterday, it is impossible for me to ignore the coincidence. I won't hide behind the classic "two-bird theory," and admit that I have most likely made a big mistake.
Apologies to those who took the time to chase this morning, but at least there was a fair diversity of other, real birds to enjoy.
-Derek
Sent from my iPhone
"Down East Nature Tours" <info@downeastnaturetours.com> May 02 02:23PM -0400
Hi Derek,
Thank you for your candor on the Cerulean Warbler mistake, Derek. You of
all people know that most of us out here understand the excitement and
appreciate your desire to find a good bird.... next time right!
One thing I have learned is that every one of us makes a mistake now and
then, and as you know.... I have been guilty of that myself.... While
giving us all something to think about yesterday you showed us all how easy
it is to just fess-up and move on!! It happens and thanks for the
follow-up.
Good birding and Thank you for all of the important work you do and have
done... for example the "Bradbury Mountain Raptor Monitoring Program"....
I have a separate file for these reports and find them very useful.
Thanks again
Michael
-----Original Message-----
From: Derek Lovitch
Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2013 8:34 AM
To: Maine-birds
Subject: [Maine-birds] Cerulean Warbler - RETRACTION, Freeport, 5/2
Hi all,
Well, I am sorry - and perhaps a little embarrassed - to have to retract my
Cerulean Warbler report from yesterday.
This morning, after well over an hour of searching, Doug Hitchcox, Katrina
Fenton, and I - soon joined by Jay Adams, Margaret Viens, and with
apologies, someone who's name i failed to get (I was distracted by my
just-then-apparent failure) - located a singing Black-throated Blue Warbler
in treetops only a few hundred yards away from yesterday's bird. (I guess I
should have called it quits sooner!)
It was singing a distinctly three-parted song, but much slower and lower
overall, and more typical BTBW-like than yesterday. When we first heard it,
we all thought BTBW immediately; there was little doubt. Perhaps also the
two rock faces it was singing near yesterday were playing with the acoustics
as well.
While I do believe the song was different yesterday, it is impossible for me
to ignore the coincidence. I won't hide behind the classic "two-bird
theory," and admit that I have most likely made a big mistake.
Apologies to those who took the time to chase this morning, but at least
there was a fair diversity of other, real birds to enjoy.
-Derek
Sent from my iPhone
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Fyn Kynd <fynkynd@gmail.com> May 02 09:47AM -0700
> It seems as though the shorebird migration hasn't really started yet...
> only two species. Scoped out most of the marsh and hardly anything. I'm
> going back later in the month.
Good birding,
Fyn
Here's the list of species seen and heard around the Marsh:
1. *Canada Goose*
2. *American Black Duck*
3. *Swamp Sparrow*
4. *Black-and-white Warbler*
5. *FOY, Black-throated Green Warbler*
6. *Herring Gull*
7. *Belted Kingfisher*
8. *Common Raven*
9. *Red-winged Blackbird*
10. *Song Sparrow*
11. *Snowy Egret*
12. *Mallard*
13. *Greater Yellowlegs *
14. *Green-winged Teal*
15. *Savannah Sparrow*
16. *Common Grackle*
17. *Killdeer*
18. *American Kestrel*
**
Fyn Kynd <fynkynd@gmail.com> May 02 09:30AM -0700
Hi Roger. Was it there today?
Thanks,
Fyn
On Wednesday, May 1, 2013 5:04:08 PM UTC-4, Roger Rittmaster wrote:
Rafael Adams <soposup@gmail.com> May 02 11:22AM -0400
Walked the length of the park hoping for Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher and/or
Blue-Headed Vireo. Saw neither. There was a Green Heron posing for pics,
a Wood Duck at the far end where the stream narrows into a gully, and very
loud House Wren in one of the path-edge apple trees near the end of the
park as well. Dozens of Yellow-Rumped Warblers feeding heavily. Plus the
usual suspects
ron romano <roroman@maine.rr.com> May 02 06:15AM -0700
Yesterday at 2 pm i was driving north Portland to Yarmouth on 295 and saw
way up ahead two soaring dark birds. I dismissed them as Turkey Vultures,
commonly seen, but as i sped closer, there was no teetering to the soaring
and they were larger that TV's, so I thought: great! a pair of Bald
Eagles. But as I passed directly underneath at 65 mph, I noticed there was
no white head/tail, so I figured "immature Bald Eagle." But as the eagle
banked, there were very distinct white windows showing (about 1/3 of the
way in from wingtips). Given there was a pair, and given proximity to the
ocean, and given what is expected here this time of year, I thought
Baldies, but since last night it has been bugging me, as I keep seeing
pictures in my field guides that shows Golden Eagle with those distinct
white patches ("windows") on the wings. Is it possible I had a Golden? Or
are immature Baldies showing distinct white wing patches in flight?
nancy mcreel <nmcreel@maine.rr.com> May 02 08:31AM -0400
were mating yesterday on the nest at the Wells Reserve.
Nancy in Wells
Steve Muise <fiddlemoose@gmail.com> May 01 06:47PM -0700
A friend called at 6:00 this evening to let me know about 3 Sandhill Cranes
feeding in a cornfield on Rt. 2 in New Sharon. They are on the south side
of Rt. 2
Directions: From the East: 3.5 miles west of the Rt. 2/27 split (Douin's
Market), pass Sandy Shade Holsteins, and the cornfield is just after the
green fields.
From Farmington: 1 mile east of the Rt. 41/156/2 junction in Farmington
Falls. For locals, it's the cornfield almost opposite the old New Sharon
Motel.
I may not get a chance to check tomorrow afternoon, so please repost if
found again.
I took several photos, and I posted 2 on flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/79863218@N08/
Enjoy, Sincerely, Steve Muise, Farmington
Steve Muise <fiddlemoose@gmail.com> May 01 07:36PM -0700
Please be very careful... Rt. 2 is narrow, curvy, and has fast, relatively heavy traffic. There are lots of big trucks cruising by. Safe birding!
R&W Sumner <chrwsu@myfairpoint.net> May 02 07:02AM -0400
I saw those cranes in the afternoon and they were still there around
6:30 p.m. I travel that road every day and this is the first time I've
seen cranes in that area. In spite of the traffic, the shoulder is wide
on the west bound lane of Rt. 2, so parking should be no problem. The
east bound lane has a guard rail and the shoulder is rather narrow.
Wally S.
On 5/1/2013 10:36 PM, Steve Muise wrote:
Jeff Wells <jeffwells@borealbirds.org> May 02 10:46AM
First House Wren I have heard yet this year here in Gardiner singing vigorously this morning.
Jeff
Jeff Wells
Robin R Robinson <rrrobinson2010@hotmail.com> May 01 07:20PM -0500
Phippsburg, Maine Map 6, Sebasco Harbor, Watah Lake
today got Glossy Ibis 6, feeding on edge of lake on east side viewed from Cashman Lane on little bridge on west side of resort seen across the lake. Mowing for first time on links of resort got my attention as it had driven all the Canada geeese into the lake. While studying flock of geese in hopes of something more interesting than Canadas, saw the Glossies. Studied them too with the idea given the list serve talk of late that might be a white faced. Not so. But, when I entered into eBird, the # triggered the confirm. So, I post here. I did look over the flock carefully, but they were only Glossies. But, ya just ne'vah know.
STill have Eastern Towhees # 2 in my yard since this morning at Totman Cove
Laughing gulls 3
Totman Cove Preserve
Hermit thrush #1
Robin R Robinson
Bound And Determined In The Burg
Jeannette Lovitch <freeportwildbird@yahoo.com> May 01 06:57PM -0400
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
William Nichols <wnbirder@gmail.com> May 01 05:18PM -0400
Hi Everyone,
Had a Common Tern here at Sandy Point Beach today, apparently a first-year
bird (thank you to Louis for a confirmation here- I'm learning that it is
good to always ask for an opinion from others who have more experience).
Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/wnbirder/8700213642/ eBird checklist:
http://ebird.org/ebird/me/view/checklist?subID=S13955342
Also, I should note that this is a very good location to watch nesting
Osprey. Just please keep some distance as the nest is near the beach.
Good birding,
William Nichols
Stockton Springs
William Nichols <wnbirder@gmail.com> May 01 05:21PM -0400
Sorry, links didn't work. Photo:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wnbirder/8700213642/ Checklist:
http://ebird.org/ebird/me/view/checklist?subID=S13955342
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