Pine Siskins; Sunday Field Notes, Sep. 28, 2014

The radar looked promising overnight for a migrant-filled morning. Ground-truthing showed less activity than hoped for but a nice mix of species were reported in the mocosocoBirds region nonetheless.


Glenhurst Meadows had 6 Swainson’s Thrushes and 1 Gray-cheeked/Bicknell’s Thrush type as pre-dawn calling flyovers. Dawn provided more flyover species such as 7 American Pipits, 1 Purple Finch and 3 Pine Siskins (Jeff Ellerbusch, Simon Lane, Mike Almendinger).

Other species observed during the morning at Glenhurst Meadows were Philadelphia Vireo, at least 10 warbler species, 5 Lincoln’s Sparrows, Chimney Swifts, Tree Swallow, and 7 woodpecker species (m.obs).

Immature Red-headed Woodpecker, Glenhurst Meadows, NJ, Sep. 28, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Immature Red-headed Woodpecker, Glenhurst Meadows, NJ, Sep. 28, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)


Roger Johnson had the following at a dry Lincoln Park Gravel Pits:
– 1 Pied-billed Grebe
– 2 Great Blue Herons
– 8 Green-winged Teal, 2 Blue-winged Teal
– 1 immature Red-shouldered Hawk
– 5 Killdeer, 2 Greater Yellowlegs, 3 Solitary Sandpipers, 1 Wilson’s Snipe
– 1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet
– 2 Swainson’s Thrushes, 1 Hermit Thrush
– 1 Brown Thrasher
– ~300 American Robins feeding on the mud flats like shore birds
– 1 Blue-headed Vireo, 4 Red-eyed Vireos
Warblers: 1 Northern Parula, 1 Magnolia, 2 Black-throated Green, 1 Blackburnian, ~40 Palm, 1 immature male Bay-breasted, 3 Blackpoll, 1 Black-and-white, 2 American Redstarts, 6 Common Yellowthroats.
– 1 Indigo Bunting
– Eastern Towhee, 4 Field Sparrows, 8 Savannah Sparrows, 1 Lincoln Sparrow, 20 Song Sparrows
– 1 female Purple Finch

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69 Raptors at Chimney Rock, Martinsville, NJ, Sep. 27, 2014

Chimney Rock
Martinsville, NJ, USA
Daily Raptor Counts : 9/27/2014

Species Day’s Count Month Total Season Total
BV 0 0 0
TV 0 0 0
OS 6 217 217
BE 2 102 102
NH 1 30 30
SS 22 699 699
CH 4 71 71
NG 0 0 0
RS 0 11 11
BW 20 6283 6283
RT 0 0 0
RL 0 0 0
GE 0 0 0
AK 6 536 536
ML 8 118 118
PG 0 3 3
UI 0 19 19
Total 69 8089 8089
Hours 10.0 229.3 229.3

Notes : Nice mix on NNE wind. 20 Broad-wingeds. No firsts of season
reported today but 11 warbler species is very good and included
Cape May. 7 late nighthawks.

John Kee

Daily Totals
Bird Checklist Query
2014 Summary (standard)
Species Checklist for Sept 27, 2014
Hourly Stats Report

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21 Raptors at Wildcat Ridge, Hibernia, NJ, Sep. 27, 2014

Wildcat Ridge
Hibernia, New Jersey, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Sep 27, 2014
Species Day’s Count Month Total Season Total
Black Vulture 0 0 0
Turkey Vulture 0 0 0
Osprey 2 59 63
Bald Eagle 0 42 47
Northern Harrier 0 13 13
Sharp-shinned Hawk 9 156 156
Cooper’s Hawk 4 63 66
Northern Goshawk 0 0 0
Red-shouldered Hawk 0 4 4
Broad-winged Hawk 3 6462 6463
Red-tailed Hawk 0 6 6
Golden Eagle 0 0 0
American Kestrel 3 31 35
Merlin 0 4 5
Peregrine Falcon 0 2 2
Unknown Raptor 0 13 15
Total: 21 6855 6875

 

Observation start time: 07:00:00
Observation end time: 14:00:00
Total observation time: 7 hours
Official Counter Tom Gorman
Observers:

Visitors:
THANKS TO ALL OF THE VISITORS WHO ASSISTED IN SPOTTING THE NOTED RAPTORS. VISITORS: 74 INCLUDING HOPATCONG BOY SCOUT TROOP 88.

Weather:
TEMP RANGE: 51-77F WINDS 0-3 MPH VARIABLE 0% CLOUD COVER. THE ONLY “CLOUD COVER” WAS PROVIDED BY NUMEROUS CONTRAILS. VISIBILITY 25 MILES WITH HAZE BEYOND

Raptor Observations:
THE RAPTORS OBSERVED WERE AT MID TO LOW ALTITUDES AND BASICALLY DIRECTLY OVER THE VALLEY REGION. THE 3 BROAD-WINGED HAWKS CAME OFF OF THE LEFT SIDE OF MARCELLA RIDGE.

Non-raptor Observations:
MONARCH BUTTERFLY: 63 OTHER BIRDS: RAVEN, WILD TURKEY, BLUE JAYS, YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER, N. CARDINAL, A. ROBIN, E. BLUE BIRD, E. PHOEBE, MOURNING DOVE, CORMORANT, CROWS, CEDAR WAXWING AND LOCAL TV, BV AND RED-TAILED HAWKS FROM 0915 TO ~1045 THE WATCH EXPERIENCED ANOTHER SERIES OF FLYING ANTS BY THE THOUSANDS, IN THEIR BREEDING “DANCE”. ONE YOUNG GIRL FOUND ABOUT 15′ BEHIND THE WATCH, A 2-2.3 FOOT E. HOGNOSE SNAKE.

Predictions:
RANGE 54-80F WITH CLEAR SKIES CHANGING TO PARTLY CLOUDY BY MID DAY.


Report submitted by ()
Wildcat Ridge information may be found at: http://www.njfishandwildlife.com/wldcthwk.htm

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Migrants+, American Pipits, Pine Siskins, Purple Finches, Sep. 27, 2014

The radar of the eastern United States was lit up with migration activity last night and before dawn this morning. Here are various reports from the mocosocoBirds area.


Glenhurst Meadows had Turkey and Black Vultures; 7 raptor species; Killdeer, Solitary Sandpiper and American Woodcock; a sweep of the woodpeckers (i.e., 7 species); Golden-crowned and Ruby-crowned Kinglets; 11 Swainson’s Thrushes (mostly pre-dawn vocals heading west); 6 American Pipits (flyovers); 11 warbler species; 8 sparrow species including Lincoln’s and White-throated; Indigo Bunting; Bobolink; 2 flyover Purple Finches; 2 flyover Pine Siskins (Jeff Ellerbusch).


Chimney Rock had Golden-crowned and Ruby-crowned Kinglets; 2 Swainson’s Thrushes; 10 warbler species including Cape May, Magnolia, Blackburnian, Blackpoll, Black-throated Blue and Black-throated Green; 2 Purple Finches (Simon Lane).


Northern Waterthrush, Troy Meadows, NJ, Sep., 27, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Northern Waterthrush, Troy Meadows, NJ, Sep., 27, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Troy Meadows had Northern Waterthrush, American Redstart, Blackpoll, Yellow-rumped and Black-throated Green Warblers, Lincoln’s and White-throated Sparrows and Scarlet Tanagers (J. Klizas).

Swamp Sparrow, Troy Meadows, NJ, Sep., 27, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

Swamp Sparrow, Troy Meadows, NJ, Sep., 27, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

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60 Raptors at Chimney Rock, Martinsville, NJ, Sep. 26, 2014

Chimney Rock
Martinsville, NJ, USA
Daily Raptor Counts : 9/26/2014

Species Day’s Count Month Total Season Total
BV 0 0 0
TV 0 0 0
OS 4 211 211
BE 5 100 100
NH 1 29 29
SS 32 677 677
CH 6 67 67
NG 0 0 0
RS 2 11 11
BW 3 6263 6263
RT 0 0 0
RL 0 0 0
GE 0 0 0
AK 5 530 530
ML 2 110 110
PG 0 3 3
UI 0 19 19
Total 60 8020 8020
Hours 10.0 219.3 219.3

John Kee

Daily Totals
Bird Checklist Query
2014 Summary (standard)
Species Checklist for Sept 26, 2014
Hourly Stats Report

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A Golden Eagle passes through Morris on Sep. 18, 2014

Golden Eagle
Golden Eagle at Chimney Rock, NJ, Oct. 25, 2013 (photo by Jeff Ellerbusch).

A Golden Eagle remains one of the most thrilling species of birds to see no matter where one is encountered.  In New Jersey, the local hawk watches are the most likely viewing places at the right time of year as well as some southern New Jersey locations in winter.

A September record for Golden Eagle in Morris County is noteworthy, unexpected and possibly unprecedented. Golden Eagles usually pass through Northern New Jersey from mid-October into November. What makes the following record all the more interesting is that it was not viewed at all by any Homo sapiens but was tracked via a transmitter with her location (yes, it is a female given the name “Freedom Hills”) determined by coordinates.

As the eBird record reviewer for Morris and Somerset Counties, this writer sees all of the species flagged as rare in both of these counties. Golden Eagle is, of course, filtered as rare. Seeing a Golden Eagle entry from Hedden Park in Randolph Twp. a few days ago caused an eyebrow or two to be raised. A letter ensued to the observer, Scott Somershoe, and his fascinating account is excerpted below.

From Scott Somershoe:
“We are working with the Eastern Golden Eagle working group and have been trapping wintering Golden’s and attaching GSM transmitters in Alabama and Tennessee. This particular individual (named “Freedom Hills”) is a second year female and she’s already in southern West Virginia! She didn’t go far north this summer. This bird has a transmitter funded by my buddies in Alabama…With these transmitters we get a data point with date, time, lat-long (accurate to 1 m at times), speed, and altitude every 15 min during daylight hours, which is very detailed info on migration routes. I can access the data daily after the transmitter sends data via cell towers (if they are in range of a tower). I’ve been putting in a few records for these birds along their travels south, mostly for this bird since she is fairly early and I figure it may be of interest to local records committees (I’m a regional compiler for middle TN records) and birders (although the bird has long since passed by on its way south). Nice data point to know a Golden has already passed through your neck of the woods though!”

Scott replied when asked how far north the Golden Eagle traveled this summer: “She spent the summer in the Gaspe Peninsula of southern Quebec with some time in New Brunswick to the immediate south. She wandered over the entire area. Being a second year bird, she has no territory or anything, so the young ones move around a lot. The Gaspe has the southernmost known breeding Goldens, but maybe there’s a pair or two in Maine somewhere…We’ve opened a big can of worms with Goldens in TN. Maybe 4-5 get adequately documented each winter, but at one of our bait sites (trail camera) last year on the TN/AL line we had SEVEN different birds in 5 days. I’m still working on trying to estimate a minimum number of goldens at a couple of our bait sites, but in that neck of the woods west of Chattanooga, I have no doubt that 75-100 goldens winter and pass thru there on migration. There’s lot of data behind my theory.”

Scott manages a web site describing the Tennessee Golden Eagles:
http://www.tnwatchablewildlife.org/ GoldenEagles.cfm

Keep looking up.

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Common Loons and Dunlin in Morris, Sep. 25, 2015

Common Loons and Dunlin at Boonton Reservoir

Common Loons, Boonton Reservoir, NJ, Sep. 25, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Common Loons, Boonton Reservoir, NJ, Sep. 25, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Much needed rain visited Morris and Somerset Counties through the night into the morning. Boonton Reservoir was generally quiet. Even the usual 100 or so Ring-billed Gulls were absent.

Highlight number one of the afternoon was the first Common Loons of the autumn season in Morris and Somerset Counties, five to be exact. One loon sang the tremolo call at one point.

Shorebird numbers were scant with 1 Killdeer, 2 Semipalmated Plovers, 2 Least Sandpipers and 2 Semipalmated Sandpipers. Highlight number two is the only Dunlin reported so far in 2014 from Morris and Somerset Counties. The distant, heavily cropped ID photo is below.

Dunlin, Boonton Reservoir, NJ, Sep. 25, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Dunlin, Boonton Reservoir, NJ, Sep. 25, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

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10 Raptors at Wildcat Ridge, Hibernia, NJ, Sep. 24, 2014

Wildcat Ridge
Hibernia, New Jersey, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Sep 24, 2014
Species Day’s Count Month Total Season Total
Black Vulture 0 0 0
Turkey Vulture 0 0 0
Osprey 1 57 61
Bald Eagle 0 42 47
Northern Harrier 0 13 13
Sharp-shinned Hawk 3 147 147
Cooper’s Hawk 0 59 62
Northern Goshawk 0 0 0
Red-shouldered Hawk 0 4 4
Broad-winged Hawk 6 6459 6460
Red-tailed Hawk 0 6 6
Golden Eagle 0 0 0
American Kestrel 0 28 32
Merlin 0 4 5
Peregrine Falcon 0 2 2
Unknown Raptor 0 13 15
Total: 10 6834 6854


Observation start time: 09:00:00
Observation end time: 13:00:00
Total observation time: 4 hours
Official Counter Frank Budney
Observers:

Visitors:
Visitors = 4

Weather:
Mostly cloudy with a few patches of blue sky (100% to 75%) and haze beyond 7 miles nearly obliterating the NYC skyline. Temperature range, 58º F to 68º F. Visibility 7 to 10 miles. Wind, ENE to ESE 3 to 5 mph with occasional gust to 10 mph.

Raptor Observations:
First bird of the day occurred at 0918 in front of the ledge. A lone Osprey came from behind the lookout, dipped down below the ledge they caught an updraft and headed SE. At 0950 a mixed flight of 7 to 10 TV’s and BV’s took to the air from the power lines. Mixed in with the vultures was a kettle (5) of BW’s who came up from the same location as the vultures. Two of the SS’s arrived shortly thereafter in front of and at treetop level of the ledge. A local RT passed by the ledge carrying a stick in its talons just after 1115. The final bird of the day was a lone BW over the Tourne at 1143.

Non-raptor Observations:
Raven, Tufted Titmouse, Black-capped Chickadee, Cedar Waxwing.


Report submitted by Fred Vanderburgh
Wildcat Ridge information may be found at: http://www.njfishandwildlife.com/wldcthwk.htm

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51 Raptors at Chimney Rock, Martinsville, NJ, Sep. 24, 2014

Chimney Rock
Martinsville, NJ, USA
Daily Raptor Counts : 9/24/2014

Species Day’s Count Month Total Season Total
BV 0 0 0
TV 0 0 0
OS 8 207 207
BE 2 95 95
NH 0 28 28
SS 17 645 645
CH 3 61 61
NG 0 0 0
RS 0 9 9
BW 8 6260 6260
RT 0 0 0
RL 0 0 0
GE 0 0 0
AK 11 525 525
ML 1 108 108
PG 0 3 3
UI 1 19 19
Total 51 7960 7960
Hours 10.0 209.3 209.3

Notes : 51 Raptors on winds from the East isn’t bad. While no first of
season birds were reported today, a blue-headed vireo was
ommited on yesterday’s list. Tomorrow looks like it will be a
rainout.

John Kee

Daily Totals
Bird Checklist Query
2014 Summary (standard)
Species Checklist for Sept 24, 2014
Hourly Stats Report

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906 Raptors at Chimney Rock, Martinsville, NJ, Sep. 23, 2014

Chimney Rock
Martinsville, NJ, USA
Daily Raptor Counts : 9/23/2014

Species Day’s Count Month Total Season Total
BV 0 0 0
TV 0 0 0
OS 17 199 199
BE 12 93 93
NH 2 28 28
SS 80 628 628
CH 4 58 58
NG 0 0 0
RS 1 9 9
BW 731 6252 6252
RT 0 0 0
RL 0 0 0
GE 0 0 0
AK 42 514 514
ML 13 107 107
PG 0 3 3
UI 4 18 18
Total 906 7909 7909
Hours 10.5 199.3 199.3

Notes : Variable to West wind. Nice migrant flight on the good winds. 12 Bald Eagles, 731 Broad-winged Hawks. Another 44 American Kestrels following the extraordinary Kestrel flight on Monday 9/22. The 222 Kestrels recorded Monday was the second best single day total ever, coming close to the 256 recorded on 9/23/1995. Other highlights for today with many thanks to Jeff Ellerbusch, were 17 species of warblers and Philadelphia Vireo. Firsts of season Purple Finch and Palm Warbler. A Solitary Sandpiper was seen for the second day. Many Tree Swallows and Chimney Swifts winged their way through as well as some late Nighthawks. Red bat was recorded both Monday and today.

John Kee

Daily Totals
Bird Checklist Query
2014 Summary (standard)
Species Checklist for Sept 23, 2014
Hourly Stats Report

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