Sunday, 29 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Purple Finches Bar Harbor June 26, '25

A pair of Purple Finches at the feeder, the male has raised head-feathers,
is that because he is courting the female?  Link to photo on iNaturalist:

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Purple Finches Bar Harbor June 26, '25"

[Maine-birds] "Patches"

Hello all,

I'll put this out to the group as I've lost track of the hybridization state of affairs with the specimen known familiarly as Patches. I photographed a specimen at Pelreco that looks like it might be a cross,
but after looking at photos it might be a straight-up Little Blue transitioning to adult plumage. Two-tone bill, grayish lores, very pale irides. Much more blue present on the dorsal side of this bird than shows
in the photo.I had just mentioned Patches to Noah Perlut in a chance meeting with him moments before at Seaveys Landing so that bird was on my brain. Would appreciate feedback on this, thank you!

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

Saturday, 28 June 2025

[Maine-birds] This (Two) Week's Highlights, 6/18-6/27.

Hi all,
Some of my observations of note over the past two weeks, and some out of state pictorial highlights, can be seen here:



-Derek

*****************************************

 Derek and Jeannette Lovitch

 Freeport Wild Bird Supply

 541 Route One, Suite 10

 Freeport, ME 04032

 207-865-6000

 www.freeportwildbirdsupply.com  

 ****************************************

Read More :- "[Maine-birds] This (Two) Week's Highlights, 6/18-6/27."

Friday, 27 June 2025

Re: [Maine-birds] Appledore Island Birding Tour - late August

Would love to but that price is over the top of my price range. 
Linda Thompson

On Jun 26, 2025, at 6:18 PM, 'Steve Mirick' via Maine birds <maine-birds@googlegroups.com> wrote:

 Forwarded for Pam Hunt.

Steve Mirick
Bradford, MA



Greetings all,

 

NH Audubon and the Shoals Marine Lab are again partnering to offer a chance to visit Appledore Island later this summer on August 25-28 (three nights).

 

Experience the magic of the Isles of Shoals in early fall. Spending 3 nights on Appledore Island will give us the opportunity to explore the diversity of the islands. Over 200 species of songbirds, seabirds, and waterfowl occur on Appledore as migrants – making it a perfect spot to observe fall movements. The Appledore Island Migration Banding Station will be in operation and we will have the chance to observe songbird migrants up close. Past trips have found unusual birds such as Red Knot, Yellow-crowned Night Heron, and Philadelphia Vireo, and the spectacle of hundreds of egrets returning to the island to roost is not to be missed. Weather permitting, we will also take a boat trip around the islands to look for seals and seabirds. In addition to all the spectacular birding that the islands have to offer, we will take time to explore other aspects of Appledore, Shoals Marine Laboratory, and Celia Thaxter's garden. Activities may include exploring the intertidal, an island history walk, or learning about SML's innovative research programs focused on understanding and sustaining the marine environment.

 

Trip leaders are Pam Hunt (Senior Conservation Biologist at NH Audubon), Becky Suomala (Biologist Emerita at NH Audubon), and Shoals Marine Lab staff.

More information, and the registration link, is available at: https://www.shoalsmarinelaboratory.org/event/2025/08/isles-shoals-birding

 

Maybe see you on the island!

 

Pamela D. Hunt, Ph.D.

Senior Biologist for Avian Conservation

NH Audubon

 

603-224-9909 x328 (office)

Voicemail gets forwarded to email so please leave a message so I know you called and can get back to you.

 

How are NH's birds doing? Check out our "State of the Birds" report at: 

https://stateofthebirds.nhaudubon.org/

      ___

_/ -o-- \_____

   \ /     \''''',,,,,\__

     \/////////'' _\======

 

<image001.jpg>

 

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Appledore Island Birding Tour - late August"

Thursday, 26 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Appledore Island Birding Tour - late August

Forwarded for Pam Hunt.

Steve Mirick
Bradford, MA



Greetings all,

 

NH Audubon and the Shoals Marine Lab are again partnering to offer a chance to visit Appledore Island later this summer on August 25-28 (three nights).

 

Experience the magic of the Isles of Shoals in early fall. Spending 3 nights on Appledore Island will give us the opportunity to explore the diversity of the islands. Over 200 species of songbirds, seabirds, and waterfowl occur on Appledore as migrants – making it a perfect spot to observe fall movements. The Appledore Island Migration Banding Station will be in operation and we will have the chance to observe songbird migrants up close. Past trips have found unusual birds such as Red Knot, Yellow-crowned Night Heron, and Philadelphia Vireo, and the spectacle of hundreds of egrets returning to the island to roost is not to be missed. Weather permitting, we will also take a boat trip around the islands to look for seals and seabirds. In addition to all the spectacular birding that the islands have to offer, we will take time to explore other aspects of Appledore, Shoals Marine Laboratory, and Celia Thaxter's garden. Activities may include exploring the intertidal, an island history walk, or learning about SML's innovative research programs focused on understanding and sustaining the marine environment.

 

Trip leaders are Pam Hunt (Senior Conservation Biologist at NH Audubon), Becky Suomala (Biologist Emerita at NH Audubon), and Shoals Marine Lab staff.

More information, and the registration link, is available at: https://www.shoalsmarinelaboratory.org/event/2025/08/isles-shoals-birding

 

Maybe see you on the island!

 

Pamela D. Hunt, Ph.D.

Senior Biologist for Avian Conservation

NH Audubon

 

603-224-9909 x328 (office)

Voicemail gets forwarded to email so please leave a message so I know you called and can get back to you.

 

How are NH's birds doing? Check out our "State of the Birds" report at: 

https://stateofthebirds.nhaudubon.org/

      ___

_/ -o-- \_____

   \ /     \''''',,,,,\__

     \/////////'' _\======

 

 

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Appledore Island Birding Tour - late August"

Wednesday, 18 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Hermit Thrush, Purple Finch, Mitchell Fields, Harpswell, ME 6/18/25

Hermit Thrush, Purple Finch, Mitchell Fields, Harpswell, ME 6/18/25

Dr. Jay Pitocchelli, Professor Emeritus
Biology Department
Saint Anselm College
Manchester, NH 03102
 
Blog: http://mourningwarbler.blogspot.com/

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Hermit Thrush, Purple Finch, Mitchell Fields, Harpswell, ME 6/18/25"

[Maine-birds] Sapsucker

A yellow-bellied sapsucker was working the bark on one of the large white pines on Holland Road outside of the Animal Welfare Society exit in West Kennebunk around 1:30 PM today.

Susan A. Bloomfield 

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

Sunday, 15 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Central Maine wetlands exploration report

Hi folks,

I've spent most mornings over the past three weeks in my kayak (mostly) birding as many under- (or un-) birded wetlands as possible in central Maine. Because Northern Androscoggin county doesn't get much coverage, I spent most of my time focused there, and it turned out to be quite productive! Who knows what could be out there if people spent more time exploring unique breeding habitats in their areas... Hopefully this encourages folks to spend some time on google earth satellite maps or on the national wetlands inventory mapper (thanks Gary for this tip!), pick out nearby spots with interesting-looking habitats, and just give it a shot! Especially in areas without many public trails, a kayak is a complete game-changer. 

Many of these sites were pretty difficult to access, and quite a few times I had to carry my kayak through the woods or drag it through deep marsh. Explanations of how I accessed any "inaccessible" sites can be found on the checklists on the trip report linked here

Here's some of the marsh bird highlights: 
- 2 Least Bitterns (Both Androscoggin, although I could use ID advice on this recording of a bird which I really thought was calling from the marsh, and Merlin classifies as LEBI, but which sounds more hollow and more like a Black-billed Cuckoo than any other LEBI I've ever heard, so I'm questioning it a bit)
- 9 American Bitterns (4 Androscoggin, 5 Somerset)
- 6 Virginia Rails (2 Androscoggin, 1 Cumberland, 3 Kennebec)
- 1 Sandhill Crane (at a new location which hasn't been birded before in Kennebec)
- 67 Marsh Wrens (33 Androscoggin, 21 Sagadahoc, 13 Somerset)
- 5 Wilson's Snipe (1 Androscoggin, 4 Somerset)
- 138 Swamp Sparrows
- 74 Wood Ducks
- 22 Hooded Mergs
- 3 Pied-billed Grebes

I also had good luck with other uncommon birds in riparian habitats along the edges of marshes or floodplain forests
- 5 Yellow-throated Vireos (1 Androscoggin, 2 Kennebec, and 2 Somerset)
- 23 Willow Flycatchers (17 Androscoggin, 3 Kennebec, 1 Somerset, 2 Sagadahoc)
- 3 Yellow-billed Cuckoos
- 21 Bank Swallows
- 51 Alder Flycatchers
- 71 Veerys
- 40 Warbling Vireos

Additionally, I encountered a few more northern birds presumably on territory in suitable breeding habitat which felt rather out of place in Androscoggin county. 
- 8 Palm Warblers (all in black spruce bogs in Androscoggin)
- 4 Canada Warblers (Androscoggin)
- 15 Northern Waterthrush (Androscoggin, Somerset, Kennebec)
- 14 Nashville Warblers (all on territory, 13 in Androscoggin, 1 in Somerset)
- 6 Magnolia Warblers (4 on territory in Androscoggin)

Somehow I missed Sora completely! Someday I'll find one in Androscoggin...

Happy birding, 
Matthew 

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Central Maine wetlands exploration report"

Friday, 13 June 2025

[Maine-birds] This (Two) Week's Highlights, 5/31 - 6/13

Hi all,
Here are my observation and photographs of note over the past two weeks:


-Derek


*****************************************

 Derek and Jeannette Lovitch

 Freeport Wild Bird Supply

 541 Route One, Suite 10

 Freeport, ME 04032

 207-865-6000

 www.freeportwildbirdsupply.com  

 ****************************************

Read More :- "[Maine-birds] This (Two) Week's Highlights, 5/31 - 6/13"

Tuesday, 10 June 2025

Re: [Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY

Thanks Ian

Oriole seems to be the consensus. 

Kind regards

—mco

On Jun 9, 2025, at 10:15, Ian Lynch <revianlynch@gmail.com> wrote:

The main voice does sound like Baltimore Oriole. There are clearly Red-winged Blackbird and Mourning Dove in the background. I think I'm picking up Red-eyed Vireo and there might be a Warbling Vireo at the start, which could explain Merlin's waffling.

Peace שָׁלוֹם سلام

Ian
he/him/his


On Sun, Jun 8, 2025 at 11:58 AM Mike Chace-Ortiz <mchaceortiz@gmail.com> wrote:
Good morning All

We were recently at a campsite in Waterloo, NY just outside of Seneca Falls.

Despite the rainy, dreary weather, this guy was singling all day long. You'll hear the song 8 times in this edited recording.

I looked long and hard but never saw the bird. Merlin vacillates between a Warbling Vireo and a Baltimore Oriole. 

Doesn't sound like the vireo to me but does have the same tonal quality as the Orioles I hear in Maine but not a song I've heard here.

Anyone familiar with the song and able to ID?

Thanks for the help.

—mco




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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY"

Re: [Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY

Thanks Alicia

I guess we'll go with Oriole then! 

We did indeed make it to Montezuma. Slightly odd in that we had to stay in the car (peak breeding season) as we slowly made our way around the refuge on a cold and dreary, rainy day.

We did end up with more than 50 species in the book for 3 hours of watching with 6 lifers, so not bad at all. I don't recall ever seeing so many Great Blue Herons in one place — hundreds…

Kind regards

—mco

On Jun 9, 2025, at 11:13, tess@ottcmail.com wrote:

Hi Mike,

I expected you to get lots of responses from Finger Lakes birders but just realized you sent this to the Maine birds list!  (I live in Seneca County NY so I am on the local bird list, but also on the Maine list b/c in my dreams I get to live in Maine - plus we visit whenever we can.)  When I listened to your tape I immediately heard Baltimore Oriole, even though I hadn't read the next line where you said what Merlin's guesses were.  It doesn't seem like an odd song, except that at this point the orioles are all paired up and are nesting here (about 15 miles south of Waterloo) so they aren't singing so regularly.  But three weeks ago there still was a fair amount of oriole song here and it could be that this bird arrived late or was unlucky getting a mate and is still trying.

Baltimore Oriole song can have very local dialects from what I hear here.  One year we had a male with a very distinctive song, both rhythm and melody, and for a 6 or 8 years after that we could here snatches of that song in those of younger males at our house, but I've never heard anything like it in other orioles, not even the ones just a mile or two up the road!  (As you probably noticed when you visited, this part of the Finger Lakes is very popular with orioles, we always have multiple nests on our little 2½ acre plot as do all our neighbors.)  This year, 20 years later, I was startled to hear a song that again echoed part of his distinctive song so bits of it still linger on here but I still haven't heard it elsewhere.  Maybe your birds have a different accent from the ones here?  I've never been to Maine in April/May, we go in the fall, so have not hear the orioles singing there.

And I don't know if Warbling Vireos have local accents but have never heard one sing anything like this song, the tone is possible but the rhythm seems off and it lacks the upward tendency in pitch toward the end, which seems uniform here.

Hope you had a successful trip to Montezuma and are having fun birding in Maine, the state of my dreams!

Best -

Alicia


On 6/8/2025 11:58 AM, Mike Chace-Ortiz wrote:
Good morning All

We were recently at a campsite in Waterloo, NY just outside of Seneca Falls.

Despite the rainy, dreary weather, this guy was singling all day long. You'll hear the song 8 times in this edited recording.

I looked long and hard but never saw the bird. Merlin vacillates between a Warbling Vireo and a Baltimore Oriole. 

Doesn't sound like the vireo to me but does have the same tonal quality as the Orioles I hear in Maine but not a song I've heard here.

Anyone familiar with the song and able to ID?

Thanks for the help.

—mco



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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY"

Monday, 9 June 2025

Re: [Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY

The main voice does sound like Baltimore Oriole. There are clearly Red-winged Blackbird and Mourning Dove in the background. I think I'm picking up Red-eyed Vireo and there might be a Warbling Vireo at the start, which could explain Merlin's waffling.

Peace שָׁלוֹם سلام

Ian
he/him/his


On Sun, Jun 8, 2025 at 11:58 AM Mike Chace-Ortiz <mchaceortiz@gmail.com> wrote:
Good morning All

We were recently at a campsite in Waterloo, NY just outside of Seneca Falls.

Despite the rainy, dreary weather, this guy was singling all day long. You'll hear the song 8 times in this edited recording.

I looked long and hard but never saw the bird. Merlin vacillates between a Warbling Vireo and a Baltimore Oriole. 

Doesn't sound like the vireo to me but does have the same tonal quality as the Orioles I hear in Maine but not a song I've heard here.

Anyone familiar with the song and able to ID?

Thanks for the help.

—mco



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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY"

[Maine-birds] Decoy Tufted Puffin on Eastern Egg Rock

Just a heads up that on June 4th, the crew on Eastern Egg Rock placed a decoy Tufted Puffin on the island. That decoy was photographed and entered as the real bird on June 5 and 8. The last date at EER is June 1st, but the bird was seen at Matinicus Rock yesterday, the 8th.

Louis Bevier
Fairfield

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Decoy Tufted Puffin on Eastern Egg Rock"

Sunday, 8 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY

Good morning All

We were recently at a campsite in Waterloo, NY just outside of Seneca Falls.

Despite the rainy, dreary weather, this guy was singling all day long. You'll hear the song 8 times in this edited recording.

I looked long and hard but never saw the bird. Merlin vacillates between a Warbling Vireo and a Baltimore Oriole. 

Doesn't sound like the vireo to me but does have the same tonal quality as the Orioles I hear in Maine but not a song I've heard here.

Anyone familiar with the song and able to ID?

Thanks for the help.

—mco



Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Help with UNID Song from Upstate NY"

Saturday, 7 June 2025

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Thursday, 5 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Alder Flycatcher

I heard an alder flycatcher from our home in West Kennebunk this morning. It spent 20 minutes hanging around in our woods until the neighbor's Downeast Energy truck scared it away. We'll keep an ear out for it again.

Susan A. Bloomfield 
West Kennebunk

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Alder Flycatcher"

Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Re: [Maine-birds] Brooksville, FOY Cedar Waxwings

I saw some in Pretty Marsh last Sunday in an apple tree.
Jackie

On Wed, Jun 4, 2025, 2:33 PM Bob Knight <bob@knightarchitect.com> wrote:
Had a flock of Cedar Waxwings eating something in my Hawthorne trees, which are flowering now.  

Bob Knight

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Read More :- "Re: [Maine-birds] Brooksville, FOY Cedar Waxwings"

[Maine-birds] Brooksville, FOY Cedar Waxwings

Had a flock of Cedar Waxwings eating something in my Hawthorne trees, which are flowering now.  

Bob Knight

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Brooksville, FOY Cedar Waxwings"

Sunday, 1 June 2025

[Maine-birds] Veery, Bobolink, Mitchell Fields, Harpswell, ME 5/31/25

Veery singing in the woods behind the Gazebo, several Bobolinks singing in the fields, Mitchell Fields, Harpswell, ME 5/31/25

Dr. Jay Pitocchelli, Professor Emeritus
Biology Department
Saint Anselm College
Manchester, NH 03102
 
Blog: http://mourningwarbler.blogspot.com/

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Read More :- "[Maine-birds] Veery, Bobolink, Mitchell Fields, Harpswell, ME 5/31/25"