[birding] Finley birds
Mary Garrard
marygarrard at yahoo.com
Sun Jul 5 19:37:54 PDT 2009
Hi all, what's up with the delayed delivery of some of these messages? Am I the only one having this problem? The problem is that for about the past week or two, I didn't really pay attention to when this started, I will get new messages from this list that show up as having been sent a number of days before. Does the listowner have to approve them? No big deal, really, except that if there's something uniquely exciting it's good to know about it sooner rather than later!
Mary Garrard
_____________________________________________________________________________
"I hope you love birds too. It is economical. It saves going to heaven."
-Emily Dickinson
________________________________
From: Molly Monroe <monroemolly at hotmail.com>
To: list at midvalleybirding.org
Sent: Friday, July 3, 2009 9:49:00 AM
Subject: [birding] Finley birds
Just a few highlights from a day in the field yesterday (we're in the process of packing up for a move to the new office building Tuesday so my one day in the field was a good one!):
-A Western Kingbird was seen on Bald Top, hanging out in an oak tree. I think it was with some bluebirds and the lazuli buntings that hang out near the signs overlooking the farm field just south of the office. Neat to see it up there!
-On our way out to banding yesterday morning, I counted 58 Am White Pelicans which might be a high for Cabell Marsh! Would be interesting to see if these move from refuge to refuge or if there are large numbers moving up from Fern Ridge. I'm thinking about doing a same day census to get a total number.
-Although we had a very slow day banding (many birds are incubating and feeding chicks these last two weeks), our best bird yet was a Western Bluebird in a net near the edge of our treatment work on Pigeon Butte. This is a great sign of improvement to the oak habitat on that SE corner of the butte. What a beauty to have in hand! Last round, we caught a Wrentit and Lazuli Bunting in that same area, so although the total numbers are down, these unique species are just what we're hoping for in that restoration area. We spend our free time watching the Western wood-pewees busily feeding their chicks above the road. They fly around the nest area like bats and perch to wad up the insects (I had a big fly leg drop in my lap!) before delivering. The chicks are pretty big so I'm not expecting them to be there next time.
Have a great weekend,
Molly~
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