[Birdnet] Lucin: Parula, B&W warbler, and Redstar
Colby Neuman
colby.neuman at gmail.com
Tue May 27 22:35:24 MDT 2008
David and others,
What were the sex and/or age of your 'eastern' warblers?
David's Cordilleran Flycatcher reminds me...
Have others outside of Washington County (well those folks too) observed
Cordilleran (or 'Western' type) Flycatchers in the lowlands this spring? I
have yet to see one so I wonder if they're going straight to their breeding
grounds or if I've just been unlucky in not seeing them down in the
valleys? Thanks for any information.
Colby
On Tue, May 27, 2008 at 2:25 PM, David Wheeler <dumpster_42 at yahoo.com>
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Larene & I went on another wild goose chase. We dipped on the Wood thrush,
> but Lucin did offer up several other unusual species to assuage our tears:
>
> 1) Northern parula
> 2) Black & white warbler
> 3) American redstart
>
> We saw all of these were most often in the trees around the main pond, with
> some forays into the Russian olives around the marshy "secondary pond" just
> to the west.
>
> There are several species of Empids moving through (Gray, Cordilleran,
> Dusky), plus a plethora of wood-pewees, lots of catbirds, and a Swainson's
> thrush. There was one lone but loud Eur. collared dove scratching about.
> Lots of warblers to be seen above those already mentioned: Yellow,
> Orange-crowned, "Audubon's", Common yellowthroats, MacGillivray's, and
> Wilson's.
>
> Happy birding,
>
> David
>
>
>
>
>
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