And now for a reply that actually speaks to the subject line - the HOODED
WARBLER is still at Oakland Lake, left of (or south) of the Springfield
Blvd. staircase. It's usually back toward the hillside, but did come close
enough to the trail to be photographed on one occasion today.

 

Steve

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Shaibal Mitra
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2013 10:44 AM
To: 'NYSBIRDS'
Subject: RE: [nysbirds-l] Hooded W. at Oakland Lake and other stuff

 

As Steve notes, spring 1996 was something to behold and to remember! That
year there were no fewer than three instances of the kind he describes--30
April, 11 May, and 19 May--all foggy dawns after favorable nights for
movement to our southwest. Some springs lack even one such event, and I've
never again seen one quite like 19 May 96.  

 

For those who over-use the word 'fallout' to describe locally heavy generic
spring migration, those mornings offer a lesson in diction: Neotropical
migrant landbirds swirled like snowflakes in the foggy beams of the Fire
Island lighthouse before dawn, dropped into the puckerbrush, then swept
along the barrier beaches in astonishing numbers. On the 19th, these
migrants entered the banding station's nets mostly on the west sides
(indicating eastward movement) until about 7:00 am, whereupon the trend
shifted almost completely to strikes on the east sides. It was surreal:
Myrtle and Magnolia predominated among a nearly full suite of warblers;
scores of Ovenbirds rustled like leaves on the ground; I saw more
Philadelphia Vireos in two or three mornings than in all other spring
mornings on LI since.

 

My interpretation of what happened was that flocks of migrants departed
northward under favorable conditions from points south on the prior
evenings, were drifted out over the New York Bight by a westerly component
to their tail-winds, then ran into fog around dawn. This coincided with
their approach to Long Island's outer coast, and they literally fell out of
the sky at this first opportunity to gain land. Under this view, their
westward movement was one of reorientation--an attempt to regain their
intended longitude, possibly the Hudson River Valley.

 

Like Steve, I remember flocks of supposedly diurnal migrants streaming
westward on these mornings. I suppose the question remains, did these
originate from the south and arrive by night with the nocturnal migrants, or
were they already here or to our north, and did they then react to the local
weather by heading south?

 

Shai Mitra

Bay Shore

 

 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[[email protected]] on behalf of Steve Walter
[[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2013 9:40 AM
To: 'NYSBIRDS'
Subject: RE: [nysbirds-l] Hooded W. at Oakland Lake and other stuff

 

>I was introduced to this phenomenon on May 12, 1996 (if I remember
correctly). Being later in the season, there was a larger pool of
insectivores in the north. There was a dramatic flight that I observed from
the Rockaways (and others did from Jones Beach) which included multiple
swallow species, Chimney Swifts, and Eastern Kingbirds.

 

 

 

  _____  


 
<http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/magazine/septemberoctober_2012/features/am
ericas_bestbangforthebuck_co039461.php> Washington Monthly magazine ranks
the College of Staten Island as one of "America's Best-Bang-for-the-Buck
Colleges" 

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