I took a few minutes this afternoon to check some of the local wetlands in
the Dryden area.  Although a lot is still frozen, the flooding has created
some interesting waterfowl/shorebird habitat.  If any of it lingers a week
or two we could get some good concentrations.  As of now, the birds were
fairly sparse.

Dryden Lake is still almost completely frozen (and replete with
ice-fisherman getting in a few last hours of sitting around on the ice), but
the north bay is open as usual (without birds, though I was told a Tundra
Swan stopped there earlier today), as is a strip on the south end, where a
few Common Mergansers and Canada Geese were swimming.

The George Road pond has only a small shoreline thawed, but it should open
up significantly this week, and some of the surrounding wet areas had a bit
of water, but I saw nothing but Canada Geese and Mallards.  The low field at
George Junior (on the same side of 38 as George Road pond but farther
towards Freeville) had a lot more geese and Mallards as well as two American
Black Ducks and a big white domestic goose.

The water level at the wet areas on Herman Road (straight at the sharp left
turn on Rt. 38 just outside Freeville) is quite impressive, and what is
usually a creek with some damp fields is currently a huge, shallow,
rectangular lake, on both sides of the road.  The water is only a foot or
two from the road, so any more rain could see that road flooded.  The bird
numbers weren't spectacular here, but that could change quickly.  I did find
a pair of Richardson's CACKLING GEESE in with the several hundred Canada
Geese.  Mallards and American Black Ducks were the only ducks, and a few
dozen Ring-billed Gulls were also present.  Several hundred Ring-billed
Gulls and a handful of Herring were loafing in the field across the road,
and more were up Ed Hill Road in another field.  The best waterfowl I found
were in the flooded area along Fall Creek west of Herman/Ed Hill Road and
just east of Freeville.  Besides Canada Geese, Mallards, and American Black
Duck there were 4 NORTHERN PINTAIL, 2 AMERICAN WIGEON, and 2 RING-NECKED
DUCKS.


Good birding,
Jay McGowan
Dryden, NY

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