Friday, 15 November 2013

Re: [Maine-birds] Northern Hawk Owl in Lincoln - NO

Re: the Lincoln owl.
Same here.  I was there earlier in the day (11:30-1:45), with a couple from Millinocket and two other guys, with whom I exchanged cell nos.  No sign of the bird.  We collectively covered much of the same ground as Margaret, usually multiple times.  Also checked the boat launch "park" down Rt 2 a bit.  I also spent quite a bit of time walking several gravel (unmarked roads) in the area.  It's a loud place, but Hawk Owls don't seem to mind that.  Curious about Ellen's corpse.

But on the way home, the highlight was a flock of well-over 500 Snow Buntings at Flood Bros Dairy Farm, Clinton.  What an incredible sight. 


On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 5:14 PM, Margaret Viens <mfviens@roadrunner.com> wrote:
I too, drove to Lincoln today to look for the owl - with no luck. I was there from about 12:30-3:30 pm and ran into 3 other birders also looking. We searched pretty extensively from I95 to Rte 2, down each of the side roads, the Airport Road and all dirt pull-offs as well as a couple of miles in each direction down Rte 116 and Rte 2 over the 3 hour period I was there.

It was very mild - 50 degrees, so perhaps he wasn't as hungry to find warming calories today and was holed up in the trees some place away from roads and open fields.

Best of luck to the next searchers.

- Margaret Viens
Waterville


----- Original Message ----- From: "Ellen Campbell" <ellenrc@myfairpoint.net>
To: "Maine Birds List" <maine-birds@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, November 15, 2013 5:01 PM
Subject: [Maine-birds] Northern Hawk Owl in Lincoln


I finished a big project today, so decided a birding trip was my reward. I drove to Lincoln hoping to see the Northern Hawk Owl, but no luck. On the return trip down Route 2 just before the golf course, I saw a pale colored dead bird on the shoulder of the northbound lane.  Fearing it could be my target, I stopped to see that it was indeed an owl, badly damaged.  I believe it was a Barred Owl, as I couldn't detect any dark feathers at the side of the face.  He did seem small, though.

In the Penobscot, in Passadumkeag by the public boat launch, were 65 Common Goldeneyes.

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