Yesterday evening (15 Aug), for the first time in about a week, I was able to 
confirm that there are still 2 OSPREYS at Cass Park. Previous to that week I 
had consistently seen 2, generally not close together but in the same vicinity 
and within sight of each other. Then for several days I saw at least one 
Osprey, and sometimes I had suspicious multiple sightings but not provably of 
more than one bird. An Osprey would be perched atop a pole in Union Fields, or 
in a tree along the Inlet, or flying over the Inlet, often carrying a small 
fish. One evening there were at least 2 Ospreys farther north between Treman 
Marina and Jetty Woods, but I assumed these were members of the family which 
nested on the platform in the field at Treman. And I missed a couple evenings. 
I wondered if the Cass female had migrated, as Candace had said is typical, 
that the female leaves first, when pairs have nested. But yesterday evening I 
briefly saw the Cass pair atop the same the same pole in Union Field and facing 
each other on adjacent lights, the closest together I'd seen them in a long 
time. This view was brief. Shortly thereafter one of them was coursing over the 
ball fields among the poles there and finally perching awkwardly in the thin 
top of a dead tree in the woods just to the west. I don't think it was trying 
to break off a branch but I would not have been surprised if that were the 
result. Anyway, the birds continue here. Sometimes non-news seems noteworthy.

During the past several days I have seen a MERLIN 3 times around Ithaca. At 
1:20pm yesterday one flew west across Trumansburg Road near the Finger Lakes 
School of Massage. The previous evening at 6:33pm from Franklin Plaza I saw one 
flying north across NYS-13. And on Monday about 6:30pm one flew southeast over 
NYS-13 where it crosses Six-mile Creek. These were each a brief view of a fast 
bird, I assume based locally, but I have no idea how many individuals or 
territories are involved. They just cover so much ground so quickly.

On Thursday morning (14 Aug) the CAROLINA WRENS fledged from the flower pot 
hanging from the eaves of our back porch. I did not witness the event, but saw 
at least 3 of the young flying quite competently between vines and trellises in 
my small vineyard in occasional the company of a worn adult. (Laurie peeked in 
the nest and counted 4 nestlings a few days earlier). The fledglings had Winter 
Wren-style tails but new brightly patterned Carolina Wren face patterns with 
odd bits of down protruding from their heads. When we picnicked on the porch 
during their nesting phase the adult wrens were nervous but still would 
eventually feed their young. Typically a bird carrying a food item would 
approach in the adjacent peach tree, then drop to the ground among the flowers, 
then flit up to the railing, then up to the eaves, then to porch roof and peer 
over the gutter at us from a few locations, then back to the eaves (again 
multiple locations), then work its way down the wires that suspend the 
planter. To anyone paying attention to birds, the procedure seemed designed to 
attract attention to them and the nest. The actual feeding was quite brief, 
even when combined with carrying away a fecal sac. If the bird had just gone 
straight to the nest, fed the young, and continued the same direction, I think 
it would have been far less conspicuous.

--Dave Nutter
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