Hi All;
Kristen has a really good point. Perhaps we're looking at the lack of numbers from our own perspective too much. However, it doesn't take a professional bird counter to know which way the wind is blowing, to coin a phrase. Numbers are down, and we'd all like to know why.
Glenn Jenks
Camden, ME
From: maine-birds@googlegroups.com [mailto:maine-birds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Kristen Lindquist
Sent: Tuesday, September 29, 2015 10:53 PM
To: Joel and Sandy Wilcox-Fairbanks
Cc: Peter Vickery; Maine Birds
Subject: Re: [Maine-birds] Fall Migration
It seems to me that the unusually fair weather we've experienced for the past month or so might be playing some role, at least, in why we are seeing fewer birds. We've had no fallout-producing conditions, so we're not seeing huge numbers of downed birds. I'm not so naive as to think that there are as many birds in existence as there were 20, 30, or 40 years ago. But they aren't suddenly all *gone*. Observations like those in Cape May prove that that is just not the case. Rather than be alarmist about a seemingly quiet migration season, perhaps we should be thankful that the birds have had such good flying weather in recent weeks? What we observers are calling a "bad" migration season might actually be quite successful for the birds themselves--a fallout, while fun for birders, can be devastating for the birds involved.
Kristen
On Tuesday, September 29, 2015, Joel and Sandy Wilcox-Fairbanks <joelandsandy@gmail.com> wrote:
I hope it's not all over yet. At least there was a report from Cape May 2-3 weeks ago of a carefully-estimated 56,000 warblers in one day.
Down here in south FL (back at work) warbler numbers so far are maybe a bit down from normal, but not much.
Joel Wilcox
Cherryfield, as much as possible
otherwise Tamarac
On Tue, Sep 29, 2015 at 9:44 PM, Peter Vickery <crescentchest@gmail.com> wrote:
Maybe most of the birds are gone, it almost seems obvious. Certainly compared to 30 - 40 years ago.
Sadly,
Peter
On Sep 29, 2015, at 6:36 PM, Richard Harris Podolsky <richardpodolsky@gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you BAB for weighing in. Sorry to hear your migration was a bust down your way. If your and my experience is representative it is odd isn't it? In past low years the theory I heard floated is that for some reason birds shunned the coast in favor of an interior, mountain ridge on ramp to the Atlantic Flyway. But, I never drilled down to test the voracity of this. Another theory I hear is that rather than "Big Days" birds are trickling through in smaller flights. But what I am seeing looks more like no migration rather than a trickle migration.
Bye,
Richard
On Tuesday, September 29, 2015 at 6:01:47 PM UTC-4, BAB wrote:
Total bust in the Midcoast.
BAB
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