Urner Club Meeting on Thursday, July 26, 2012. Program: The Lesser Sundas

The monthly meeting of the Urner Ornithological Club will be held Thursday, July 26, 2012. The meeting commences at 7:45 p.m. at the Scherman Hoffman Sanctuary of the New Jersey Audubon Society on Hardscrabble Road, Bernardsville, NJ.
All are welcome.

Glenn Mahler will present a program on The Lesser Sundas – Land of Birds and Dragons.

Susan Phelon will present a program on Finland at the August 30th meeting.
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Following are Notes from the 75th Urner Annual Dinner – May 31, 2012 written by Tim Vogel, president of the Urner Club and including a brief history of the club.

30 members and guests attended the dinner at the Olde Mill Inn’s Grain House in Bernardsville. Much of the Urner archives was on display including original field cards from the 1920’s (pre-Urner days), journals, letters from Urner to other notable birders, photos, the bound copies of the Urner Observers and other historical items. Rich Kane brought items including the group photo from the 50th dinner. Tom Halliwell put together a poster board of photos including the day we spread Irv Black’s ashes in Sandy Hook bay.

As a reminder the Urner archives are stored at the Sherman Hoffman Sanctuary and are available for review.
Bill Boyle did a grand job of welcoming our guest speakers, Pat and Clay Sutton. They presented an amazing slide show about birds and birding at Cape May. Sprinkled throughout the presentation was quite a bit of the history of Cape May.

Tim Vogel’s Welcoming Notes

In the mid 1930s there was a growing interest in organizing a bird club in northern NJ so that people didn’t have to travel to the Linnaean Society meetings in NYC.
On April 5, 1937 a letter went out from Charles Urner.
“There will be a meeting at my house, 596 Westminster Avenue, Elizabeth, 8pm, Friday April 9 to consider organizing a Union-Essex Bird Club. Hope you can come”

17 birders attended and the name Union-Essex Bird Club was adopted

During the early meetings the club met at Mr. Urner’s home, the Newark YMCA and the Old First Church in Newark.
In 1938 Ed Lang, on the staff of the Newark Museum, persuaded the Newark Museum to allow the club to hold meetings there.

The sudden and unexpected death of Mr. Urner in June 1938 was a blow to the young club. He had been returning from a Linnaean Society meeting when his heart failed. In his NY Times obituary, it was noted that in 1935 he was reported to hold the amateur record for bird identification in the East, having seen as many as 170 different birds in one day in his native state of NJ. Shortly after, the club’s name was changed to the Urner Ornithological Club in his honor. Mr. Urner’s life and contributions were celebrated in a memoriam published by NJAS and is contained in one of the bound books from the archives.

The club’s early history was well documented by Gilbert Cant and Al Eynon’s The Origin and History of the Urner Ornithological Club, April 1947.

I’ve spent some time reading through the club’s archives over the past couple of months and it has been a walk through early NJ birding history. Since the beginning, the club has been actively involved in field research, hawk watching, Christmas counts and club trips. There are field cards from the 1920s on display here tonight, letters written by Mr. Urner and other field notes, photos and items of interest.
Also of note was Al Eynon’s “Some Remarks on the Big Day”, April 1952. Big days, it seems, were taking place as early as the 1920s. Competition was strong especially between the NY and NJ birders, including noteworthy birders such as: Urner, Allan Cruickshank, Ludlow Griscom, T. Donald Carter and Robert Cushman Murphy.

A review of the 1943 membership list includes a young Bill Weiss of Rutherford who is here tonight and I believe our senior member leaving only Dick Thorsell whose current status is unknown and Charlie Mayhood with memberships dating back to the 1940s. I’m open for any comments on the subject or if I missed someone.

Moving forward

At the 25th anniversary in 1962 the guest speaker was Roger Tory Peterson and he was introduced by long time member Dudley Ross. Peterson and Ross were good friends, in fact Peterson lived in the Ross household for a time he separated from his first wife.

At the 50th anniversary dinner Peterson again was our speaker and again he was introduced by his friend Dudley Ross. I had met Dudley at his home in Springfield MA. While sitting in his living room listening to his stories, looking around his living room, I noted that there were a number of original Peterson paintings on display, gifts from a grateful friend. I asked him if we would consider coming to the 50th dinner. When he found out that Peterson was coming, he agreed. The club offered to put him up in the hotel as we were doing with Peterson. At the time he was 86. Dudley drove the 3 hours down, dined with his good friend and drove home that night. He told me later on that it was one of the dumbest things he had ever done.

The club met monthly for years at the Newark Museum. During spring meetings we often heard the Nighthawks calling as they hunted across the city’s buildings.
After Irv Black, the museum’s supervisor of science, retired, the club settled into the Turtle Back Zoo for a few years and finally to NJAS’s Sherman Hoffman Sanctuary where we meet now. For those of you who may have forgotten – we meet the last Thursday of the month @7:45. All are welcome. We get some pretty impressive programs and some lively discussions.

I took a look at the first annual meeting that I attended – 1969 at the Black Horse Inn in Mendham. It was $5.00

After 75 years the club has seem many changes, changes to the membership, changes to our meeting places, changes to our travels but mostly we’ve seen changes in how we communicate amongst each other. There was a time – not that long ago – when one would wait for the weekly changing of the rare bird alert or pour over field notes when they arrived in the mail.
Today information is available immediately and because of that birders’ travel patterns, locally and worldwide, have changed to pursue their goals. Nothing wrong with that I just wonder what the “old timers” would think. I was fortunate to have met and birded with several of the founding members but I can’t imagine they would object to today’s birding activities.

I encourage everybody to take a look at the archives, to see the many accomplishments of the club. Also check the membership list through the years. Some pretty formidable birders, professional and amateur, have been Urner members. The club’s archives are stored at Sherman Hoffman and are available for you to enjoy and learn from them.

Thanks and again welcome.

Good birding,

Urner Ornithological Club

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The Fifty-third Supplement to the American Ornithologists’ Union Check-list of North American Birds, July 17, 2012

Just when you thought you had digested all of last year’s changes, here we go again:
The Fifty-third Supplement to the American Ornithologists’ Union Check-list of North American Birds.

Kenn Kaufmann and Rick Wright have done a lot of the dirty work of sorting it all out. Read it about it at their blogs (click their names for the links).

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Double-crested Cormorants at Boonton Reservoir, July 15, 2012

It is doubtful that a timeline record of Double-crested Cormorants (DCCO) at Boonton Reservoir exists. Consider it started as of today. 300 DCCOs were at the Reservoir – mostly on the north and south sides of the island with others scattered throughout the Reservoir. Of course, this is a speck in the ocean compared to coastal migration counts (35,500 at Cape May Hawkwatch, Oct. 17, 2009) but this is easily the highest count recorded for summering residents in Morris and Somerset Counties according to the eBird database. As far as is known, this is also the highest count, so far, for July 2012 from any one location in New Jersey. Phalacrocorax auritus has come a long way in the Mocosoco area. (Click on the photo for a larger image)

(Photo by J. Klizas)

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Common Ravens in Morris Plains, July 13, 2012

At 4:00 this afternoon, 4 Common Ravens were in a tall Norway Spruce at the southwest corner of Speedwell and West Hanover Avenues in Morris Plains. The Ravens left the roost and flew westerly towards Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital. This is the second sighting of Ravens in this area in the past two weeks. On June 30, a single Common Raven flew over the Greater Morristown YMCA on Horsehill Rd. in Cedar Knolls.

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New Cliff Swallow nest site in Somerset Co.; Shorebirds in Hanover Township, July 12, 2012

Jeff Ellerbusch reports 7-8 Cliff Swallow nests, 5 that are active, above the Raritan River on the I-287 bridge that crosses over Weston Canal Rd. in Franklin Township. N. Rough-winged, Bank, Barn, Tree Swallows and Purple Martins also were seen over the river. This continues the expansion of known Cliff Swallow nests in the Morris and Somerset County area. The nest sites include the Easton Ave./ D&R Canal I-287 Bridge nest site also in Franklin Township. Jeff states that there were no nests at the Weston Canal bridge and only one active nest at the Easton Avenue bridge in 2011 (there are at least 6 at Easton Ave. in 2012). Morris County’s only known Cliff Swallow nest site is the Rt. 202 overpass at the Boonton Reservoir. 20 Cliff Swallows were seen there this past Sunday. The history of the Boonton Cliffs is unknown.
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Melanie Lane Pond in Hanover Township has been active with shorebirds and wading birds the past week. As reported on July 7, a record (for Morris County) 20 Great Egrets were present on that date. The number has leveled to about 7 since then. A handful of Great Blue Heron juveniles remain. A pair of Green Herons is usually present or flying overhead. Considered a Morris rarity as of last week, the Black-crowned Night-Heron becomes officially categorized as a MoCo trash bird: 3 adult or nearly adult Black-crowned Night Herons have been present most mornings this week. Shorebirds are coming in. 25 Least Sandpipers, 3 Lesser Yellowlegs, 3 Spotted Sandipers, 1 Solitary Sandpiper, and the Morris County Killdeer Association (Eastern Chapter) of at least 16 members have been at the pond this week.

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Camera part found at Glenhurst Meadow, July 8, 2012

A piece of a camera was found at Glenhurst Meadow on Sunday, July 8. If you think you may have lost it, send a note to

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Waders and Shorebirds, Morris County, July 7, 2012

eBird is an exciting tool and is the present and future of birding. Its deficiency is with the past. It will be a great boon to avian research if everyone enters his or her entire birding database into eBird. This will create the complete history of birding at the touch of a qwerty keyboard or the swipe of an iPad. This writer is as guilty as anyone for not practicing what he preaches. There are close to thirty years of notepads and scraps of paper sitting in boxes and years worth of AviSys data for me to go through. I await the magic export/import button to sort all of it and enter it into eBird.

There were twenty Great Egrets at Melanie Lane Pond, in Hanover Township this morning. The previous high this year was eleven. eBird states the previous all-time high in Morris County was twelve. Who is to know? Is there another repository other than eBird? Records of NJ Birds? It is a great resource but besides some issues on the New Jersey Audubon web site, it is not searchable. I am new school – give me a search engine, please. Time is short and my patience thin for sifting through all of that.

Therefore, as it stands, a new record for the number of Great Egrets in one sighting at one place in Morris County was set today: 20. Period. eBird says so. Get your records in there, people!

Also at Melanie Lane Pond were 5 Great Blue Herons, 2 Green Herons, 2 Spotted Sandpipers and the resident 6 Killdeer. The morning’s 3 Least Sandpipers grew to 10 in the afternoon (Thanks, Jamie). These represent the first peep of the summer 2012 season in Morris County.

The view of the pond from Mount Melanie (a presumed landfill).

Great Egrets at Melanie Lane Pond.

One of the many juvenile Great Blue Herons hangin’ at the pond in the last few weeks.

(Photos by J. Klizas)

Yesterday, Jamie Glydon was able to get the following picture of Chatham’s adult Black-crowned Night-Heron. This is the first known adult record for Morris County in 2012. The other reports from the Great Swamp and Melanie Lane Pond were of immature Night-Herons.

(Photo by J. Glydon)

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Solitary Sandpiper and Herons in Morris; Alder Flycatcher and Bank Swallow in Somerset, July 5, 2012

The summer shorebird season is officially underway in the Mocosoco region. A returning Solitary Sandpiper (SOSA) put in a brief appearance this morning at Melanie Pond in Hanover Township. After posing cooperatively for some photographs, the SOSA lifted off, uttered its high-pitched flight call and continued flying south. According to eBird data this is the first SOSA in New Jersey this month. 8 Great Blue Herons, all juveniles, and up to 11 Great Egrets have been at the pond in the past week.

Please note: the bridge connecting Ridgedale Avenue to Melanie Lane is being reconstructed and will be closed for approximately two years. The only access to Melanie Lane is via Algonquin Parkway.

Solitary Sandpiper, 1st of the summer season, at Melanie Pond, July 5, 2012
(Photo by J. Klizas)

Andrew Holloway reports a Black-crowned Night-Heron in the Passaic River at Stanley Park in Chatham on June 27. This hard-to-find species in Morris County has been at this location in years past.

Mike Newlon eBirded the Alder Flycatcher at Glenhurst Meadows again this morning. This is a remarkable record for a species rarely recorded this late in the season anywhere in New Jersey and especially in the Mocosoco region.

On July 4, Jeff Ellerbusch found a Bank Swallow at the garden area of Glenhurst Meadows. This area attracts six swallow species in late July-early August according to Jeff, so this seems a little early. Last year’s first Bank Swallow at Glenhurst was July 21.

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Cliff Swallows nesting in Morris, other field notes, July 1, 2012

Jamie Glydon saw Cliff Swallows flying near the Rt. 202 overpass at the Boonton Reservoir this morning. Later, he and I were able to visually confirm two nests under the bridge with the potential for at least another three or more that are out of view. At least eight Cliff Swallows are in the area. Two Cliff Swallows seen on the Greenbank Rd. side of the reservoir are probably part of the same group. Cliff Swallow is not a common nester in Morris County. The New Jersey breeding bird atlas from the 1990’s (Birds of New Jersey by J. Walsh, V. Elia, R. Kane and T. Halliwell (N.J. Audubon Society, 1999)) has confirmed nesting in the southwest part of Morris County, probable in the southern part and possible in the northern section. Unless someone knows otherwise, the Boonton Cliff Swallows represent the only currently active nest of this species in Morris County. Five active nests on the I-287 Bridge in Franklin Township account for the only known nesting colony in Somerset County. The Boonton Cliffs are easily viewed from the footbridge next to the overpass. However, creativity or the skills of Spiderman are necessary to view the nests.

Rt. 202 overpass, Boonton Reservoir – home of the Cliff Swallows (click on the picture for a larger image)

Nest with an adult.

Another occupied nest

(Photos by Jonathan Klizas)

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Elsewhere, Jamie reports that the adult Red-headed Woodpecker continues for a second consecutive summer in the Beaver Swamp of the Tourne in Boonton Township.
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The Taylor Road area of the Rockaway River WMA in Jefferson Township that Tim Vogel reported on yesterday can add Hooded Warbler to its list. This is an interesting area worth exploring further. The Eastern Hemlock section is, unfortunately, under attack from the Wooly Adelgid as shown by the picture below.

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Vickie Schwartz eBirded (listed) three male Dickcissels from Negri-Nepote Grasslands in Franklin Township. This represents a high count for males at this location this year.

Posted in Morris County, Somerset County | 1 Comment

Birds of Berkshire Valley, Morris County, June 30, 2012

From Tim Vogel:

Saturday, June 30, 2012
Berkshire Valley Rd. and Taylor Rd., Jefferson Township:
Broad-winged Hawk – 1
Veery, Wood Thrush, Scarlet Tanager, Indigo Bunting.
Warblers: Black-throated Green, Blue-winged, Worm-eating, Black-and-White, Louisana Waterthrush, Ovenbird.

From route 15N to Berkshire Valley (BV) Rd. travel east, fields on left continue down BV Rd. until you cross Rockaway River. Most of area is Fish and Game property. I explored an area on the east side of BV Rd. and along the Rockaway. It was full of healthy hemlocks and heavily defended by deer flies. Immediately after crossing the Rockaway turn left onto Taylor Rd. This runs for several miles and is mostly fish and game on both sides of the road. Lots of hemlock forest. This where I had the Black-throated Green.

This road runs to Route 15. I wish I had been here about a month ago – next year!
Last time through, wood turtle (dead) and box turtle.

Cedar Lake, Denville – Ring billed Gulls (6) have returned – seems a bit early
Out of area – Mississippi kite (2) Sterling Forest Visitors’ Center, Orange county, NY

Tim Vogel
Denville

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