A walk around the Durland Preserve turned up a good assortment of the
usual late migrants, including Winter Wren, Hermit Thrush, Lincoln's
Sparrow, White-crowned Sparrow, both kinglets. Pine Siskins and Purple
Finches were flying over, and large groups of Cedar Waxwings and
American Robins were conspicuous. I flushed my first FOX SPARROW of
the fall from one of the hedgerows. The most intriguing bird was a
possible Audubon's Yellow-rumped Warbler. I heard a harsh, dry chip
note coming from an area where a lot of Myrtle Yellow-rumped Warblers
were calling which immediately brought to mind Audubon's. The flock
dispersed fairly rapidly though, and I was only able to get a look at
a couple of the birds in the flock, so I can't be sure the bird I
heard was an Audubon's and not some other bird making a similar call
that just happened to be in a Yellow-rumped flock. Frustrating, but
something to keep an eye out for. I wasn't able to relocate the flock.

Here at the Lab, siskins are everywhere, as well as a male Eastern
Towhee on the Wilson Trail.

-Jay

-- 
Jay McGowan
Macaulay Library
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
[email protected]

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