Hi Molly,

Did you ever manage to get on this mailing list?



David Kriegel AIA LEED AP



GranKriegel

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-----Original Message-----
From: bounce-128365271-88230...@list.cornell.edu <
bounce-128365271-88230...@list.cornell.edu> On Behalf Of New York State
Birds digest
Sent: Thursday, September 5, 2024 12:01 AM
To: nysbirds-l digest recipients <nysbird...@list.cornell.edu>
Subject: nysbirds-l digest: September 05, 2024



NYSBIRDS-L Digest for Thursday, September 05, 2024.



1. N.Y. County, NYC -to Tuesday, 9/3 - Virginia Rail, Pectoral SP, and many
many more migrants 2. Stone Bridge nighthawk watch



----------------------------------------------------------------------



Subject: N.Y. County, NYC -to Tuesday, 9/3 - Virginia Rail, Pectoral SP,
and many many more migrants

From: Tom Fiore <tom...@earthlink.net>

Date: Wed, 04 Sep 2024 09:23:19 +0000

X-Message-Number: 1



New York County -in N.Y. City- including Manhattan, Randalls, Governors,
and Roosevelt Islands and the adjacent waters and skies above - thru
Tuesday, September 3rd -



Easily the best day so far for diversity of species of birds in the county,
so far this entire season including all of August, and this start of
September, on Tuesday, 9-3.  Many areas - not just well-covered Central
Park in Manhattan - had very good species-diversity, with warblers still
very well-represented, and also a good selection of many more birds having
arrived.  On passage were such species as expected raptors, some vultures
including Black Vulture, the latter as is typical from n. Manhattan, and of
passing hummingbirds - all noted as Ruby-throated!, E. Kingbirds, Cedar
Waxwings in very good numbers, some Bobolinks and small numbers of other
icterids, including Baltimore Orioles, and also some shorebirds, and still
other types of birds. A smatter of sparrows were starting to show very
small increases - with some Savannah, Swamp, and even a few arriving
White-throated Sparrows having joined up with the sparrows already here, or
which had come in August. Among warblers, much sought for this month are
Connecticut Warblers and at least a few were noted, with some reports yet
to be confirmed, perhaps based on photos taken, and-or on textual details
of sightings. Key to seeing this species is usually much patience - and the
quiet approach.



A Virginia Rail was found and photographed at St. Paul's Chapel cemetery
which is just southwest of the s. edge of City Hall Park in lower Manhattan
along Broadway, the chapel and graveyard to the west - late in the day on
Tuesday, 9/3. Obviously, any visitors to such spaces as churchyards or
other outdoor sections of public places of worship should show common
respect to others, and do as told, if spoken to, by any guards or
caretakers. We birders obviously carry optics and may carry cameras, and
simple respect in such spaces is the minimum of acting responsibly, and
thanks to all for doing so. Note that there are some places of worship with
facilities and gardens, etc. which are not open to all of the public under
most circumstances in this county. The above-noted site is open.



A Pectoral Sandpiper was photographed at Inwood Hill Parks mudflats on
Monday, Sept. 2nd, a scarce species especially seen feeding in this county,
that sighting also late in the day but on Labor Day. Multiple other
shorebirds have been seen in the county in recent days, the more-regular
species in multiple locations, and some only as flybys.



A Philadelphia Vireo was studied at a location in the Central Park Ramble
during a Linnaean Society of New York guided -not-for-profit- bird walk
with many observers, on Tuesday. Also seen were Red-eyed, and Warbling
Vireos on that walk for comparisons to the smaller and finer-featured
Philly. The same walk also took in at least 16 migratory warbler species
for the many members and guests observing in the Ramble area. Thanks to all
involved, in leading and organizing for the non-profit group.



A single-observer -so far- sighting of Yellow-breasted Chat in Morningside
Park near 115th St., late in the day on Tuesday, could just-possibly be
even the same individual recently showing in Central Park, as that species
tends to jump around locally after initial discoveries in migration seasons
here, however it also could well be a different and newer bird from the
earlier one at Central Park, which had many observers, with tough viewing
as is typical for the species.



The E. Whip-poor-will of Sept. 2nd at Central Park in Manhattan was not
re-found the following day, however a number of Common Nighthawks were
again seen from a number of locations, primarily by those out later in the
day including on Tuesday, 9/3. Nighthawk season may extend thru the rest of
the month, but sooner is as likely to find success than waiting to late in
September. In N.Y. County, locations alongside the Hudson or East Rivers
may have good sightings, while many also try from Central Park and are
rewarded - as with all birding, patience and persistence may pay one
dividends.



Excellent diversity of many migrant birds has been seen on all four of the
larger islands of the county - all named above in the header to this
report, with Manhattan of course the most thoroughly-covered by birders
overall, but for all of the 3 other large islands, excellent birds are
out-there, with the chance of rarer species in any of those sites, and in
any of hundreds of locations in the county. We have had over twenty species
of migratory warblers appear on -each- of the 4 larger islands of N.Y.
County, in the past week - on Roosevelt Island, Governors Island, and
Randalls Island and of course throughout Manhattan island as well.



For a look at some of those many many sites with a guided group walk, led
for a -nonprofit- organization that works for conservation and the interest
of science, try looking into walks with, among others, the NYC Bird
Alliance, the Linnaean Society of New York, and the series-walks offered
thru the American Museum of Natural History. Multiple other -nonprofit-
groups also meet up for guided walks, some with special interests and-or
needs in mind. Such guided walks will be numerous over the coming weeks on
into later in the fall season - some, or perhaps most walks may require a
registration so to take part, contact the appropriate organization and look
for what is on offer. Guided bird and nature walks are to be offered all
around N.Y. City in addition to those in N.Y. County, and some, if not
most, will be possible via public transit.



More on the sightings all over the county in coming days. Thanks to many
keen, courteous observers out and about, some also photographing quietly,
for sightings of recent days in N.Y. County.



Good birding to all,



Tom Fiore

manhattan













----------------------------------------------------------------------



Subject: Stone Bridge nighthawk watch

From: John Turner <redknot...@gmail.com>

Date: Wed, 4 Sep 2024 21:55:38 -0400

X-Message-Number: 2



Recent results at the SB Nighthawk Watch have been mixed, Tonight was a

good night with 59 nighthawks passing by, mostly from east to west.   Last

night we only had five. On Labor Day the nighthawk watch was a popular
venue with 24 nighthawk fans in attendance.



*Directions to Stone Bridge Nighthawk Watch: *Take the Long Island
Expressway to Exit 62 (Nicolls Road). Take Nicolls Road north to the end
where it joins State Route 25A in a T-intersection (you'll go past signs to
Stony Brook University and go under the LIRR trestle right before the
intersection). Make a right on SR 25A heading east for just a few hundred
yards. Make a left at the next light, heading north on Main Street. Take
this to the end passing through three stop signs) At the fourth stop sign
look left and you'll see the stone bridge, in front of you is a post
office. Make a right and park in one of the many parking spots lining the
south side of the road.







---



END OF DIGEST

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