Saturday, November 14, 2009

Report of 11/14/09 Duck Watch

Lake Park birders,

See the message from Jym Mooney that I am forwarding below.

--- Paul Hunter
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
http://lakeparkbirds.blogspot.com/
=====================================================
The Lake Park Duck Watch this morning attracted 13 birders. Buffleheads, mallards, and gadwalls were the main ducks observed, although we did find a couple each of common goldeneye and greater scaup. At least one distant flight of ducks was identified as red-breasted mergansers. Most folks got looks at common loons (three total observed), and I found a red-throated loon and also saw a great egret fly overhead shortly before the group gathered.

Jym Mooney, Milwaukee

=================

[Jym, Thanks for forwarding your list and leading the Duck Watch.]

Lake Park 11/14/09
10:00 AM
1 hour(s) 30 minute(s)
Jym Mooney

80 Canada Goose
20 Gadwall
25 Mallard
2 Greater Scaup
50 Bufflehead
2 Common Goldeneye
10 Red-breasted Merganser
1 Red-throated Loon
3 Common Loon
1 Great Egret
X Ring-billed Gull
X Herring Gull
2 American Crow

Sunday, November 8, 2009

kestrel 11/7/09

Begin forwarded message:

From: Jym Mooney <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Date: November 8, 2009 4:45:48 PM CST

Had a flyby kestrel yesterday morning at Lake Park, and astoundingly
good
looks at an adult Cooper's hawk. I flushed it walking up Locust
Ravine. It
perched on a bare limb between the two feeder sites, and allowed me to
circle it (at a respectful distance) and get excellent views from all
angles. Sparrows were almost non-existent yesterday morning
(although the
Cooper's may have had something to do with that), but I did find two YR
warblers still hanging around.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Nelson's sparrow at Lake Park, 10/31

On Nov 1, 2009, at 10:54 AM, Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins wrote:

Hi Paul & Brian,

I got back supportive comments from John I., Steve Lubahn, and Peter
Fissel,
and I feel more confident that I did indeed find a Nelson's sparrow
yesterday at Lake Park. I plan to submit a report to WSO since this
appears
to be a fairly late migrant.

Very exciting to add another life bird to my list. I was actually
searching
the rocks and brush along the lakefront yesterday hoping I might find a
Harris's sparrow for my year list, but what the heck, I guess I'll
take a
Nelson's!

Jym

-----Original Message-----
From: Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins [mailto:hopmoon@milwpc.com]
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 1:38 PM
To: 'steven lubahn'; Wisbirdn
Subject: Possible Nelson's sparrow at Lake Park, 10/31

I had an intriguing sparrow this morning on the lakefront along the
soccer
field east of Lake Park. It first popped up onto a rock within brushy
vegetation on the north end of the shoreline, just before the water
treatment plant. This was the only chance I got to get any optics on
it (my
bins). My first impression was a buffy face, not otherwise heavily
marked,
and I caught my breath as I realized it might be a Nelson's or LeConte's
sparrow. The bird quickly dropped and kept low and moving in the brush,
finally flushing about ten feet into some tall dry grasses and brush
closer
to the fence. I thought I had lost it, until while circling the
grassy spot
I suddenly realized it was just a few feet in front of me, lurking
down low
in the vegetation. For the next 15 minutes I was able to get fleeting
glimpses, just eyeballing, as I was too close for optics. Finally a
large
SUV came around the corner in the water plant side of the fence and
the bird
flushed into the long row of bushes that parallels the fence, and I
did not
find it again.

My impressions were that this was a very small sparrow, and very
secretive.
Once I saw it run quickly a couple of feet within the grass and
brush. The
bill looked proportionate to its size (not stubby like a LeConte's).
The
top of the head was dark with a grey crown stripe, and once I saw the
bird
from behind and noted a grey nape as well. The back was dark with a
couple
of rough white streaks; I was reminded of the "saddle" on a marsh
wren by
the pattern, although on this sparrow the whole back had the
pattern. When
it flushed the first time I noted that the spread tail feathers seemed
pointy and separate (not an even end of tail edge like most of our
common
sparrows).

I did not get a look at the breast or belly of this bird. What holds me
back from being sure it was a Nelson's was that the face color was
not the
bright orange that Sibley illustrates. It was more buffy. (The
light was
not optimal, as it was overcast this morning when I found the bird.)

I have never seen a Nelson's sparrow before, so before I make the call I
wanted to solicit comment from some of our sparrow experts out there.

Thanks for any suggestions/comments.

Jym Mooney, Milwaukee

Lake Park, Milwaukee 11/1

------------------------------

From: "Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins" <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park, Milwaukee 11/1
Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 11:56:09 -0600

Lake Park was noticeably quieter this morning. Buffleheads, which I
first
saw yesterday, now number around 40, and there were also gadwalls, a
wigeon,
and greater scaup on the lake. The highlights of the morning were a
beautiful orange-crowned warbler and a juvenile red-headed woodpecker.

Jym Mooney, Milwaukee

eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 11/2/09

Lake Park birders,

See the message from Wis Bird Net that I am forwarding below.

--- Paul Hunter
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
http://lakeparkbirds.blogspot.com/
=====================================================


Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:38:35 -0800 (PST)
From: Mike Goodman <goodman4835@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: [wisb] Fw: eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 11/2/09

Mike Goodman,South Milwaukee

North Point very quiet- Bufflehead,mallard scaup

Location: Lake Park - Locust Ravine
Observation date: 11/2/09
Notes: RH woodpecker Immature
Number of species: 13

Canada Goose 10
Cooper's Hawk 1
Red-headed Woodpecker 1
American Crow 5
Black-capped Chickadee 3
White-breasted Nuthatch 2
Brown Creeper 1
Fox Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 1
White-throated Sparrow 5
Dark-eyed Junco (Slate-colored) 3
American Goldfinch 20
House Sparrow 5

Also seen [8] chipmunks & [9] squirrels

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)