FYI--to confirm a trajectory:  Broome Co folks, on Bluewing list, reported more 
than 8 Semi-palmated Sandpipers (and more with time) as well as 6 Dunlin and 4 
Semi-palmated Plovers at the Tri-Cities airport this morning.

anne


On May 24, 2013, at 7:18 PM, Jeff Gerbracht wrote:

> After work. I stopped by the compost piles. 4 Dunlin. A few Least Sandpiper=
> s and 24 Semi Sands.  Biggest count of Semi Sandpipers I've  seen in Tompkin=
> s County.  They seem to have appeared en mass today
>    Jeff
> 
> On Friday, May 24, 2013, Mark Chao wrote:
> Wanting to ride our wave of recent luck a little longer, Tilden and I 
> returned to Myers Park in Lansing on Friday afternoon at about 4:30 PM.  We 
> don’t think we saw anything particularly rare, but the birding was fun and 
> challenging.
> 
>  
> 
> Immediately upon arrival, Tilden exclaimed with surprise and had his optics 
> up in a split-second.  Then he paused, relaxed, and pointed out a CASPIAN 
> TERN, a species we haven’t seen at rest so far this year.  I shared a little 
> of his shock to see that big red bill after scanning gull after gull these 
> past couple days on that beach!
> 
>  
> 
> Again we saw two SEMIPALMATED PLOVERS, and by this time the DUNLIN contingent 
> had swelled to at least four birds.  I could swear that I also saw a 
> yellowlegs fly to the tip of the spit (big, slim gray shorebird with a white 
> tail) but I couldn’t find it there a few seconds later. 
> 
>  
> 
> Even more puzzling were 15 little shorebirds that I think were SEMIPALMATED 
> SANDPIPERS.  They all had black legs.  Their bills all were completely 
> straight but also quite sharply pointed.  Upperparts were much more brown 
> than gray (though not brightly rufous), with a lot of dark-centered feathers. 
>  All had very fine streaks on the breast.  My instincts were nagging me the 
> whole time that they were Least Sandpipers that somehow all showed dark legs 
> (I wondered whether the extreme cold had anything to do with it).  In the 
> end, though, I concluded that analytic ID should trump impressions in this 
> case, largely because I haven’t closely studied Semipalmated Sandpipers in 
> breeding plumage, nor gotten a very good sense of variation in bill shape 
> with this species.  The field marks do seem to add up, on the whole.  (I feel 
> certain that these birds weren’t larger Calidris species, nor rare stints.  
> They did not have white rumps.)
> 
>  
> 
> Mark Chao
> 
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> -- 
> Jeff Gerbracht
> Lead Application Developer
> Neotropical Birds, Breeding Bird Atlas, eBird
> Cornell Lab of Ornithology
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