[birding] Indigo Bunting still at EE Wilson Wildlife Area
Snetsinger, Thomas - FW
Thomas.Snetsinger at oregonstate.edu
Wed Sep 9 11:54:06 PDT 2009
Hi All,
It took me most of an hour, but I also found the bird around 930 this morning in the same location. Many thanks to Joel for finding it and the Armstrongs for keeping the trail warm,
cheers,
Tom Snetsinger
________________________________
From: list-bounces at midvalleybirding.org on behalf of Joel Geier
Sent: Wed 9/9/2009 10:38 AM
To: MidValley Birds; Oregon Birders OnLine
Subject: [birding] Indigo Bunting still at EE Wilson Wildlife Area
Hello folks,
Doug Robinson found the remarkably male INDIGO BUNTING in the same spot
as previously reported, again this morning. There is so far no
indication from either field or photos of it being a hybrid, just one
very motley looking bunting that also seems to be missing most its tail.
For any HUGOnauts or stintorians who might be en route to the Coast via
Corvallis, E.E. Wilson Wildlife Area is about 10 miles north of
Corvallis along Hwy 99W.
Turn east on to Camp Adair Rd., and park by the WW II memorial park and
gamebird pens which are on the left side, just past the entrance for the
headquarters. Walk or bicycle north past the guest hosts' RV and a big
old oak with a sign about the historic town of Wells. Then jog one block
west to get on the road that runs north from the HQ.
>From HQ go about 1/3 mile N, until you cross a ditch/canal that opens
into a big pond on the east side of the road. Continue 100 yards or so
to the south edge of an area that's signed as being closed to public
entry (on the east side of the road). Skirt east along the south
(open-to-public) side of this fence about 60-70 yards to where it
crosses a small ditch with cattails, then scan hawthorn/blackberry
clumps on north side of fence.
Happy birding,
Joel
P.S. My son Wil points out that most of the field marks described so far
would also work for Moulting Bunting, a species that is not found in
conventional field guides, but is written up in "A Field Guide to
Little-Known and Seldom-Seen Birds of North America."
--
Joel Geier
Camp Adair area north of Corvallis
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