Monday, May 31, 2010

Lake Park birders,

See the message from
http://www.birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/WISC.html
Wis Bird Net that I am forwarding below.


--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
---------
From: Brian Hansen <rawshooter@gmail.com>
Subject: [wisb] Hooded warbler lake park Milwaukee
Date: Sun, 30 May 2010 08:42:10 -0500

Right now by the wood footbridge by the feeders singing like crazy

Brian Hansen
Milwaukee

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

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Ruby Throat 5/22

Lake Park birders,

See the message from Judith Huf that I am forwarding below.


--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
---------

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Judith Huf" <judith@huf-roth.net>
Date: May 25, 2010 6:42:52 AM CDT
To: <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Subject: Re: [wisb] Warbler Walk report 5/22


Paul,

I forgot to tell Dennis on Saturday, that I had seen a Ruby-throated
Hummingbird earlier about 8 am. buzzing a Gnatcatcher in trees near
the soccerfield.

Judith Huf
--------------------------------------------------

Monday, May 24, 2010

Warbler Walk report 5/22

Lake Park birders,

See the report from Dennis Casper that I am forwarding below.


--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
---------
Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17, April 24, May 1, May 8, May 15, May 22
Fall 2010: Aug 21, Aug 28, Sept 4, Sept 11, Sept 18, Sept 25
Meet at the Warming House on the north end of the park.
=====================================================

Lake Park Warbler Walk (#6)
May 22, 2010
by Dennis Casper

Close to thirty birders turned out for the final Warbler Walk of the
2010 spring season. The day was lightly overcast and foggy, with
moderate temperatures in the 60's. There were a number of new faces
in the group, several of whom were excellent birders who provided
much-appreciated assistance in locating and identifying birds for the
group as a whole. The walk began in the usual spot just to the north
of the wooden rustic bridge over Locust St. Ravine. Not much activity
was observable from that area or from the bridge itself, so the group
quickly moved out into open area south and west of the ravine,
between the ravine and the baseball diamond. There, lo and behold!,
the activity in the trees was frenetic. Many warblers were spotted
and enjoyed, several vireos as well, and birds of numerous other
species. As a result, much of the walk was spent in this area. And it
was here that the crowning glory of the day's birding was achieved.
Someone's sharp eyes ferreted out amidst the leaves high in a treetop
a Yellow-billed Cuckoo and then just a bit later high in another
treetop a Black-billed Cuckoo! The birds stayed put for some time,
allowing most if not all to get a look at them. What a remarkable,
unusual "double-play"! Finally dragging ourselves away from this
area, we continued along the ravine, across the pedestrian bridge,
past the pavilion and the golf course, to the Wolcott statue. There
was much less activity throughout this stretch, though new birds were
added periodically all along. Then a final flurry of activity was
discovered in the trees behind the maintenance shed across from the
statue, and the dozen or so remaining birders enjoyed some more time
spotting busy warblers and vireos. The walk ended at that point about
10:30. Those still present helped work out the day's check list, and
then the group disbanded.

Thanks to all who participated and helped out. I hope that everyone
had a satisfying morning of birding and that those who were new to
our walks or to Lake Park will want to come again. Thanks also to
Paul Hunter for organizing the season and leading several walks and
to Jym Mooney for also leading walks and helping out on most others.
Fall warbler walks will begin in late August, so stay tuned. Have a
great summer and happy birding!


Birds Observed, May 22, 2010: Total Species=60

3 Ring-billed Gull
1 Caspian Tern
1 Mourning Dove
1 Black-billed Cuckoo
1 Yellow-billed Cuckoo
1 Common Nighthawk
3 Chimney Swift
2 Red-headed Woodpecker
2 Red-bellied Woodpecker
6 Downy Woodpecker

1 Hairy Woodpecker
3 Eastern Wood-Pewee
4 Least Flycatcher
2 Eastern Phoebe
3 Great Crested Flycatcher
1 Blue-headed Vireo
4 Philadelphia Vireo
10 Red-eyed Vireo
2 Blue Jay
4 American Crow

2 Tree Swallow
7 Black-capped Chickadee
4 White-breasted Nuthatch
2 House Wren
8 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
2 Eastern Bluebird
10 American Robin
3 Gray Catbird
4 European Starling
2 Cedar Waxwing

1 Golden-winged Warbler
1 Tennessee Warbler
1 Orange-crowned Warbler
1 Nashville Warbler
3 Chestnut-sided Warbler
5 Magnolia Warbler
1 Yellow-rumped Warbler
2 Black-throated Green Warbler
4 Blackburnian Warbler
1 Palm Warbler

2 Bay-breasted Warbler
10 Blackpoll Warbler
4 Black-and-White Warbler
10 American Redstart
1 Mourning Warbler
1 Common Yellowthroat
6 Wilson's Warbler
4 Canada Warbler
1 Scarlet Tanager
5 Chipping Sparrow


3 White-throated Sparrow
3 White-crowned Sparrow
4 Northern Cardinal
1 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
6 Indigo Bunting
5 Brown-headed Cowbird
2 Baltimore Oriole
3 House Finch
8 American Goldfinch
4 House Sparrow

Friday, May 21, 2010

5/20 Mourning Warbler at Lake Park

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

Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 21:14:44 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park - Milwaukee
From: Katie Zientek <katiezientek111@gmail.com>

Nice birdy day at Lake Park this afternoon, despite a loud picnic going on..
must they play rap music? But anyway, got a MOURNING WARBLER almost
immediately. Wonderful bird, very active too. Also saw Common Yellowthroats
everywhere, American Redstarts, Canada, Wilson's, Black-throated Green,
Magnolia Warblers, Swainson's Thrushes, Veery, Lincoln's Sparrow.. also what
I think was a Willow Flycatcher.. can someone help ID? Also a Great Crested
Flycatcher made an appearance. Overall an excellent walk in the
Ravine. LakePark never disappoints!
Willow Flycatcher? :

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4016/4625922540_4ac84ee166_b.jpg


Katie Zientek

New Berlin - Waukesha County

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

Fwd: Warbler Walk Report - Lake Park - Milwaukee , 5/15/10

Lake Park Birders,

I am not sure whether I sent the report below to you all already.

Dennis Casper will be leading the last vernal Warbler Walk of 2010
tomorrow. After that the walks start again in fall on August 21st.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
---------
Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17, April 24, May 1, May 8, May 15, May 22
Fall 2010: Aug 21, Aug 28, Sept 4, Sept 11, Sept 18, Sept 25
Meet at the Warming House on the north end of the park.
=====================================================

Warbler Walk Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/15/10

About 20 birders gathered on the wooden Rustic Bridge at 8:30 AM.
About 15 minutes into the walk we crossed paths with Scott Diehl
leading several beginning birders from the Wisconsin Humane Society.
Scott noticed a Northern Mockingbird flying over the treetops and
pointed it out to all of us. The white-wing patches and long tail
clinched the identification, though a brief sighting never completely
satisfies the desire to savor such a rare bird. Later we completed a
"mimic thrush slam" by seeing a Brown Thrasher and a Gray Catbird.

Warblers spread themselves in small numbers throughout the park, but
some allowed good looks. One drab yellow warbler defied exact
identification, however. Most birds sang meekly, but fortunately the
flycatchers identified themselves by calling fairly frequently.

After the official end of the Walk, 10 AM, several of us carefully
scanned the shades of the primaries of the dozen or so small terns
patrolling Lake Michigan about 30 - 40 meters offshore to find both
Common and Forster's Terns, along with their larger, loud cousins,
the Caspian Terns.

We then continued north along the lake shore to find the Song and
Savannah Sparrows skulking among the bushy, rocky shore line. In the
hedge row just south of the Linwood water treatment plant, we saw 2
Baltimore Orioles, a handful of warblers, Red-winged Blackbirds, 2
Eastern Bluebirds and the Gray Catbird -- not quite as productive as
Chicago's "Magic Hedge", but productive nonetheless.

Jym Mooney started birding in Lake Park at about 6 AM. He saw
several species not seen by the rest of the group, as noted with "JM"
on the list below.

2 Mallard- JM = Jym Mooney before Warbler Walk
20 Double-crested Cormorant
1 Cooper's Hawk Dolores Knopfelmacher: Captured small
songbird on ground under shrub on golf course.
4 Spotted Sandpiper- JM
2 Sanderling Fly by on lake shore. Large wing stripe, no
breast spots.
40 Ring-billed Gull
15 Herring Gull (American)
8 Caspian Tern
10 Common Tern gray wings
2 Forster's Tern frosty wings
1 Mourning Dove- JM
10 Chimney Swift
1 Ruby-throated Hummingbird Steve Morse: Near M Coles
Community Room at top of Grand Staircase.
2 Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted)- JM
1 Eastern Wood-Pewee
1 Yellow-bellied Flycatcher - JM
2 Least Flycatcher Che-bek!
1 Eastern Phoebe
2 Great Crested Flycatcher
30 Blue Jay Migrating north in small flocks at treetop level
3 American Crow
2 Tree
Swallow

in nest box on NE
corner of lawn bowling court
1 Northern Rough-winged Swallow
10 Barn Swallow
100 swallow sp. flying low over Lake Michigan about 100 meters
offshore
8 Black-capped Chickadee
1 White-breasted Nuthatch
1 House Wren
1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet- JM
10 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
3 Eastern Bluebird 1 at lawn bowling court. 2 near Linwood
water treatment plant
10 American Robin 0
1 Gray Catbird near Linwood water treatment plant
1 Northern Mockingbird with Scott Diehl's group. Flew over
Locust Ravine
1 Brown Thrasher at Wolcott Statue feeder
5 European Starling
1 Nashville Warbler- JM
2 Yellow Warbler near Linwood water treatment plant
2 Chestnut-sided Warbler
4 Magnolia Warbler
1 Black-throated Green Warbler
1 Blackburnian Warbler- JM
10 Palm Warbler mostly near Linwood water treatment plant
2 Black-and-white Warbler
2 American Redstart at Rustic (wooden) Bridge over Locust Ravine
2 Ovenbird Seen, not heard
3 Common Yellowthroat
1 Wilson's Warbler- JM
1 warbler sp. Female yellow vs female Wilson's, near Linwood
water treatment plant
1 Scarlet Tanager- JM
1 Chipping Sparrow
2 Savannah Sparrow Along lake shore near rugby field
2 Song Sparrow Along lake shore near rugby field
1 Lincoln's Sparrow- JM
1 Swamp Sparrow- JM
20 White-crowned Sparrow
2 Northern Cardinal
2 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
3 Indigo Bunting At Locust Ravine feeder
12 Red-winged Blackbird near Linwood water treatment plant
1 Common Grackle - JM
15 Brown-headed Cowbird
2 Baltimore Oriole
6 House Finch
10 American Goldfinch
2 House Sparrow

5/14 warblers

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

From: "Evan Barrientos" <ebarrientos@wi.rr.com>
Subject: [wisb] Fw: eBird Report - Lake Park (general) , 5/14/10
Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 20:13:34 -0500

This is a tad late, from last Saturday. Weather was windy, at first the
place was so quiet I thought I would go home. Then I discovered all the
warblers were in the ravine. Here's what I saw:
Evan B
Milwaukee
----- Original Message -----
From: <do-not-reply@ebird.org>
To: <ebarrientos@wi.rr.com>
Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 6:40 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Lake Park (general) , 5/14/10

Location: Lake Park (general)
Observation date: 5/14/10
Number of species: 21

Black-capped Chickadee 57
White-breasted Nuthatch 2
House Wren 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 5
Veery 1
Gray Catbird 1
Northern Parula 1
Chestnut-sided Warbler 7
Magnolia Warbler 7
Cape May Warbler 1
Black-throated Blue Warbler 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 1
Black-throated Green Warbler 2
Palm Warbler 7
Black-and-white Warbler 3
American Redstart 7
Ovenbird 3
Wilson's Warbler 1
Canada Warbler 1
Northern Cardinal 4
Brown-headed Cowbird 2

5/14 & 5/15 warblers

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

From: Paul Sparks <paul.sparks@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 15 May 2010 13:10:52 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park, Milwaukee County 5/14 & 5/15

Yesterday morning was pretty good for warblers at Lake Park. I had 16
species; Northern Parula, Myrtle, Palm, Black-throated Blue, Black-throated
Green, Ovenbird, Orange-crowned, American Redstart, Nashville, Common
Yellowthroat, Magnolia, Chesnut-sided, Blackpoll, Black & White, Wilson's, &
good looks at a Canada. Others saw Yellow, Cape May, Golden Winged, &
Blackburnian. Today wasn't as good, but I added a Northern Waterthrush to
the warbler list and someone else saw a Mourning Warbler. This morning also
brought great looks at a Great Crested Flycatcher, Brown Thrashers, Least
Flycatcher, Eastern Towhee, and Indigo Buntings.
Some photos from the past couple of days;
Magnolia; http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/4609530284/

Northern Parula; http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/4608922215/

Great Crested Flycatcher; http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/4608922055/

Least Flycatcher; http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/4609529840/

Black-throated Green; http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/4608921699/

Black-throated Blue; http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/4608921513/

The rest of my spring set is here;
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bookguy/sets/72157623749575316/

Paul Sparks
Glendale, Milwaukee County

--
www.paulcsparks.com

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

Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/14/10

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

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins" <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Date: May 14, 2010 4:08:59 PM CDT
To: "Paul Hunter" <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/14/10

In addition, I heard reports of a Golden-Winged Warbler and a Least
Flycatcher this morning, and Brian Hansen saw a Connecticut Warbler
yesterday (just before he tumbled down the muddy hillside trail...no
harm
done to either Brian or camera!).

Jym

-----Original Message-----
From: do-not-reply@ebird.org [mailto:do-not-reply@ebird.org]
Sent: Friday, May 14, 2010 1:46 PM
To: hopmoon@milwpc.com
Subject: eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/14/10

Location: Lake Park - Locust Ravine
Observation date: 5/14/10
Number of species: 46

Caspian Tern 2
Chimney Swift 10
Red-bellied Woodpecker 1
Downy Woodpecker 2
Hairy Woodpecker 1
Eastern Wood-Pewee 2
Empidonax sp. 1
Eastern Phoebe 2
Blue Jay 3
American Crow 1
Tree Swallow 1
Black-capped Chickadee 6
White-breasted Nuthatch 1
House Wren 3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 8
Eastern Bluebird 1
American Robin 5
Gray Catbird 1
European Starling 2
Cedar Waxwing 10
Nashville Warbler 6
Northern Parula 1
Yellow Warbler 1
Chestnut-sided Warbler 1
Magnolia Warbler 8
Black-throated Blue Warbler 1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 1
Black-throated Green Warbler 2
Blackburnian Warbler 1
Palm Warbler 10
Black-and-white Warbler 2
American Redstart 5
Ovenbird 7
Mourning Warbler 1
Common Yellowthroat 6
Canada Warbler 2
Chipping Sparrow 8
Lincoln's Sparrow 1
White-throated Sparrow 1
White-crowned Sparrow 5
Northern Cardinal 4
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Baltimore Oriole 1
House Finch 2
American Goldfinch 4
House Sparrow 1

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

Fwd: Report - Warbler Walk , 5/8/10

Begin forwarded message:

From: Paul Hunter <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Date: May 11, 2010 9:19:49 PM CDT
Subject: Report - Warbler Walk , 5/8/10


Lake Park birders,

See my report on the Warbler Walk on 5/8/10 below.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html

Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 DC
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper
=====================================================

Report of the Fourth Vernal Walk Warbler of 2010 on May 8th
at Lake Park in Milwaukee by Paul Hunter

Some 20 or so birders, including two first-time Warbler Walkers,
braved the cold northwestern breezes to see a reasonable smattering
of hardy avian migrants.

Buzzy calls of White-crowned Sparrows at the feeders in Locust Ravine
greeted us as we ventured out from the Warming House. A Red-headed
woodpecker made a brief appearance at the suet feeder. Jym Mooney
pointed out an Ovenbird walking among the leaves. In the tree top
above that Paul Hunter found a Rose-breasted Grosbeak.

As we made our way down Locust Ravine, Judith Huf brought our
attention to the Phoebe nest under the wrought iron bridge. At the
base of the Grand Staircase we looked up to see a Turkey Vulture
chased by crows. The bushes behind the Wolcott Statue yielded 3
Brown Thrashers, but were otherwise quiet, presumably from the breeze
and lawn mowing.

The northwesterly breeze concentrated the warblers and swallows below
the bluffs where the sun struggled to provide warmth out of the
wind. Sam Corbo diligently scanned the swallows literally swirling
over our heads and at our feet to find the Cliff Swallows. Judith
Huf pointed out the many Barn Swallows skimming over Lake Michigan
just off shore. We all strolled slowly along the bluff working hard
to find the Wilson's and Blackburnian Warblers.


Turkey Vulture 1 - chased by crows
Ring-billed Gull 10
Herring Gull (American) 4
Caspian Tern 2
Chimney Swift 6
Red-headed Woodpecker 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 1
Downy Woodpecker 3
Hairy Woodpecker 2
Least Flycatcher 1
Eastern Phoebe 1
American Crow 3
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 20
Barn Swallow 250
Cliff Swallow 3
Black-capped Chickadee 8
White-breasted Nuthatch 1
House Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 8
American Robin 6
Brown Thrasher 3
Nashville Warbler 3
Yellow Warbler 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 8
Blackburnian Warbler 1
Palm Warbler 20
Black-and-white Warbler 4
American Redstart 2
Ovenbird 1
Common Yellowthroat 2
Orange-crowned Warbler 1
Wilson's Warbler 1
Eastern Towhee 5
Chipping Sparrow 3
White-throated Sparrow 6
White-crowned Sparrow 12
Northern Cardinal 3
Rose-breasted Grosbeak 1
Common Grackle 4
Brown-headed Cowbird 4
House Finch 2
American Goldfinch 6
House Sparrow 2

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

After five hours of tramping around the park, Jym Mooney saw 57
species and added the following to the list above:

Mallard 4
Red-breasted Merganser 16
Double-crested Cormorant 16
Blue Jay 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Gray Catbird 2
European Starling 4
Clay-colored Sparrow 1
Field Sparrow 1
Savannah Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 1
Swamp Sparrow 1

Fwd: 5/1/10 Warbler Walk Report

Begin forwarded message:

From: Paul Hunter <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Date: May 10, 2010 1:49:21 AM CDT
Subject: 5/1/10 Warbler Walk Report

Lake Park birders,

I just realized I didn't send out the report of the 5/1 Warbler
Walk. See below.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html

Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 DC
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper
=====================================================


Report of Warbler Walk on May 1, 2010
at Lake Park in Milwaukee by Dennis Casper

An amazing 50 (or nearly so) enthusiastic birders turned out on this
glorious May Day to celebrate the holiday in their own joyous
fashion. And May Day did not disappoint. With sunny, bright blue
skies and temperatures in the mid-60's, conditions for birding were
ideal. The large group of birders, led by a somewhat overwhelmed
Dennis Casper, lent able assistance (for which he is extremely
grateful) by Jym Mooney, Judith Huf, Ron Gutschow, Sam Corbo, and
other expert birders, traversed Lake Park from the Rustic Bridge over
Locust St. ravine to the Wolcott Statue area south of the golf
course, wending its way along the Locust St. ravine, across the
pedestrian bridge, and around the Pavilion, to its final destination.
The birds were not, perhaps, as forthcoming or as numerous as they
might have been, and some effort and patience were required to spot
many of the birds that the day produced. But in the end, our efforts
were amazingly successful—our final tabulation registered 62 species!
In many cases, only one or a few individuals of a species were
observed, making it all the more remarkable that we compiled so large
a list. And this list is a compilation—of reports from many sources,
both the many smaller groups into which the large group divided as it
stretched out along its route and a number of individuals (such as
Jym Mooney, Brian Hansen, Judith Huf, and Sam Corbo) who went off on
their own to explore areas of the park to which the main body of
birders did not go. Of the many marvelous sights of the morning,
perhaps the most spectacular and satisfying came at the beginning:
four beautiful Red-headed Woodpeckers busily flying from tree to tree
in the Locust St. ravine. But a close second (in my mind) was the
brilliant orange and black of a Baltimore Oriole high in a treetop
near the good General Wolcott.

Thanks much to all who joined our walk and to all who helped out
(especially Dolores Knopfelmacher, who who opened up the Warming
House, made the coffee, kept track of sightings, and generally made
sure that all was ready for the walk). Lake Park's next Warbler Walk,
the fourth of the season, will be this coming Saturday, May 8,
starting as usual at 8:30 a.m. at the Warming House. All are
welcome. And may the birding be even better!

Birds Observed, May 1, 2010: Total Species=62

2 Canada Goose
2 Mallard
40 Red-breasted Merganser
30 Double-crested Cormorant
1 Cooper's Hawk
1 Peregrine Falcon
1 Piping Plover
1 Spotted Sandpiper
1 Bonaparte's Gull
12 Ring-billed Gull

2 Herring Gull
1 Caspian Tern
3 Mourning Dove
1 Chimney Swift
4 Red-headed Woodpecker
1 Red-bellied Woodpecker
6 Downy Woodpecker
1 Hairy Woodpecker
1 Eastern Phoebe
1 Great Crested Flycatcher

1 Eastern Kingbird
1 Warbling Vireo
1 Blue Jay
4 American Crow
1 Northern Rough-winged Swallow
12 Black-capped Chickadee
3 White-breasted Nuthatch
1 House Wren
1 Winter Wren
1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet

10 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
2 Eastern Bluebird
15 American Robin
1 Gray Catbird
1 European Starling
1 Nashville Warbler
1 Yellow Warbler
1 Black-throated Blue Warbler
11 Yellow-rumped Warbler
2 Black-throated Green Warbler

7 Palm Warbler
1 Black-and-White Warbler
1 Common Yellowthroat
6 Chipping Sparrow
2 Clay-colored Sparrow
2 Field Sparrow
1 Savannah Sparrow
1 Song Sparrow
1 Swamp Sparrow
3 White-throated Sparrow


3 White-crowned Sparrow
5 Northern Cardinal
1 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
4 Indigo Bunting
24 Red-winged Blackbird
2 Common Grackle
8 Brown-headed Cowbird
1 Baltimore Oriole
1 Purple Finch
2 House Finch

7 American Goldfinch
4 House Sparrow

5/4 Kentucky Warbler

From: Barbara Johnson <barbjoh@hotmail.com>
Date: May 4, 2010 8:42:19 PM CDT
To: Paul Hunter <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Subject: Kentucky Warbler

Hi Paul,
I saw the Kentucky Warbler on Monday morning [5/4] around 10:30 in
the southern end of the Locust Ravine. It came out of the brush to
bathe in the stream with the Yellow-rumped Warblers. Barb Johnson

5/5 warblers, white-eyed vireo

=====================================================
Date: Wed, 5 May 2010 23:41:37 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park Milwaukee today
From: Brian Hansen <rawshooter@gmail.com>

Great day to be birding/photographing as many of you found out for
yourselves. I got out of the car at 7am in the rain and the park was about
as loud with birds calling as I have ever heard it. I spent about 10 hours
in Lake Park today. I had a guiding gig till 1:00 then came back about 3
and stayed till 7pm. 17 species of Warblers with Palms being the highest
concentration. I had FOY Golden-winged, Blackburnian, Chestnut-sided,
Magnolia, Ovenbird, and American Redstart. Also had FOY Veery and
Gray-cheeked Thrush, Lincoln Sparrow, Warbling Vireo, Scarlet Tanager and
Eastern Kingbird (actually saw the Kingbird last night and again this
morning). Too tired to look at photos but got some decent shots. My best
looks were this morning but I was helping my client get shots instead of
taking them myself but I am happy with some of the stuff I got in the
afternoon. I'll post some tomorrow for those who care - too tired now.
And... I added a lifer WHITE-EYED VIREO at the wrought iron bridge.

Lastly I found a dead Coopers Hawk with two leg bands. I wrote down the
info and will send it in.

I will be out there again in the morning hoping for more of the same. I
probably won't have a job Friday so if anyone is hiring let me know :)

Nice prediction Terri W!!!!!!!!

Brian Hansen
Milwaukee - east side

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

Fwd: Piping Plover - Milw Bradford Beach

Begin forwarded message:

From: Paul Hunter <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Date: May 1, 2010 8:54:21 AM CDT
To: wisbirdn@freelists.org
Subject: Piping Plover - Milw Bradford Beach

Jym Mooney reported seeing a Piping Plover on Bradford Beach at about
7:40 am on Saturday May 1st.

4/30 Black-throated Blue Warbler

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

Date: Fri, 30 Apr 2010 13:37:48 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Black-throated Blue Warbler, Lake Park, MKE County
From: Sam Corbo <skcorbo@gmail.com>

Hey folks,
I ran into Robin Squier and Maria Terres at Lake Park today. We had good
looks at a Black-throated Blue Warbler among many new arrivals along Locust
Ravine. I later had the cooperative bird singing in the northern 'half' of
Locust Ravine, last heard in the pines that hide the electrical boxes above
the eastern edge of the ravine. Definitely a big influx overnight as many
others have reported!

Warblers: Palm (most numerous), Yellow-rumped (many), Nashville (~15),
Black-throated Green (2), Yellow (1), Pine (1), Northern Waterthrush (1),
Common Yellowthroat (1), Black-throated Blue (1)

--
Sam Corbo
skcorbo@gmail.com
Milwaukee, WI

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

4/22 Prothonotary Warbler,

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

Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2010 21:32:19 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Prothonotary Warbler, Lake Park, Milwaukee
From: Sam Corbo <skcorbo@gmail.com>

Hey folks,
I birded the Milwaukee lakefront today. Overall, fairly quiet (except for
hundreds of Bonaparte's Gulls from McKinley Marina north to Lake Park). I
was walking north through Locust Ravine at Lake Park around 6 PM when I saw
a flash of bright yellow drop into the trailside creek. I was very
surprised when I threw up my binoculars and saw that it was a PROTHONOTARY
WARBLER. The bird bathed in the creek for about 30 seconds, before
continuing preening in a nearby bush for about another minute. I was
unableto relocate the bird after that.

Good birding!!!
Sam Corbo

--
Sam Corbo
skcorbo@gmail.com
Milwaukee, WI

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

Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2010 21:52:51 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park Milwaukee today
From: Jim Edlhuber <jimedlhuber@gmail.com>

On a walk down at Lake Park this morning, there was some activity,
Blue Gray Gnatcatchers, Yellow Rumps and Ruby-crowned Kinglets to name a few.
A link to see the images:

http://picasaweb.google.com/JimEdlhuber/
LakeParkMilwaukeeApril222010#5463126011292752738


Jim Edlhuber
Town of Genesee, Waukesha Co

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

4/15 warblers and sparrows

Date: Thu, 15 Apr 2010 10:54:52 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park Milwaukee this morning
From: Brian Hansen <rawshooter@gmail.com>

Just quick note before I head out to do yard work.
Started at Lake Park around 7am this morning. Quite of few FOYs (in caps)
but I haven't been out in a few days. Many YELLOW-RUMPED , 1 PINE, 1
PALMAND 1 BLACK AND WHITE WARBLER, 5 BLUE GRAY GNATCATCHERS, 3 CHIPPING
SPARROWS, 1 SWAMP SPARROW and 6 White-throated Sparrows. 1 EASTERN TOWHEE,
at least 3 pairs of Bluebirds checking out boxes, sapsuckers and flickers
all over and other common residents.

Brian Hansen
Milwaukee

4/2 Lake Park Bird Sightings

Lake Park birders,

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

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
=====================================================
------------------------------

From: "Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins" <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2010 22:08:39 -0500

....

A brief 30-minute walk through Locust Ravine in Lake Park (Milwaukee)
this
afternoon turned up two Winter Wrens.

Jym Mooney, Milwaukee


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

Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2010 08:38:45 -0700 (PDT)
From: Mike Goodman <goodman4835@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: [wisb] Milwaukee county lake shore & parks

[Year round resident species deleted. PH]

Mike Goodman-South Milwaukee :
Location: Lake Park - Locust Ravine
Observation date: 4/2/10
Number of species: 21

Mallard 2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 5
Northern Flicker 3
Eastern Phoebe 1
American Crow 10
Tree Swallow 1
American Robin 40
European Starling 6
Song Sparrow 5
Dark-eyed Junco (Slate-colored) 8
Common Grackle 2
Brown-headed Cowbird 8


Location: Warnimont
Observation date: 4/2/10
Number of species: 20

Red-breasted Merganser 20
Belted Kingfisher 1
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 6
Northern Flicker 8
American Robin 70
Fox Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 20
Dark-eyed Junco(Slate-colored) 5
Red-winged Blackbird 50
Common Grackle 10
Brown-headed Cowbird 20


Location: Milwaukee Coast
Guard Impoundment
Observation date: 4/2/10
Number of species: 11

Northern Shoveler 1
Killdeer 6
Song Sparrow 5
Red-winged Blackbird 8
Eastern Meadowlark 1
Common Grackle 3

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

Monday, May 17, 2010

Lake Park 5/16

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

From: "Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins" <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park 5/16 - Milwaukee
Date: Sun, 16 May 2010 10:40:10 -0500

Pretty quiet this morning at Lake Park. Only had three warbler species
(Palm, Nashville, and Northern Parula). However, I did spot a Winter
Wren,
and I heard a Yellow-Billed Cuckoo calling, both in Locust Ravine
north of
the wrought iron bridge.

Jym Mooney, Milwaukee

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

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Warbler Walk Report - Lake Park - Milwaukee , 5/15/10

Wisconsin birders,

See my report below. Dennis Casper will be leading the last vernal
Warbler Walk of 2010 next week. After that the walks start again in
fall on August 21st.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
---------
Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17, April 24, May 1, May 8, May 15, May 22
Fall 2010: Aug 21, Aug 28, Sept 4, Sept 11, Sept 18, Sept 25
Meet at the Warming House on the north end of the park.
=====================================================

Warbler Walk Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/15/10

About 20 birders gathered on the wooden Rustic Bridge at 8:30 AM.
About 15 minutes into the walk we crossed paths with Scott Diehl
leading several beginning birders from the Wisconsin Humane Society.
Scott noticed a Northern Mockingbird flying over the treetops and
pointed it out to all of us. The white-wing patches and long tail
clinched the identification, though a brief sighting never completely
satisfies the desire to savor such a rare bird. Later we completed a
"mimic thrush slam" by seeing a Brown Thrasher and a Gray Catbird.

Warblers spread themselves in small numbers throughout the park, but
some allowed good looks. One drab yellow warbler defied exact
identification, however. Most birds sang meekly, but fortunately the
flycatchers identified themselves by calling fairly frequently.

After the official end of the Walk, 10 AM, several of us carefully
scanned the shades of the primaries of the dozen or so small terns
patrolling Lake Michigan about 30 - 40 meters offshore to find both
Common and Forster's Terns, along with their larger, loud cousins,
the Caspian Terns.

We then continued north along the lake shore to find the Song and
Savannah Sparrows skulking among the bushy, rocky shore line. In the
hedge row just south of the Linwood water treatment plant, we saw 2
Baltimore Orioles, a handful of warblers, Red-winged Blackbirds, 2
Eastern Bluebirds and the Gray Catbird -- not quite as productive as
Chicago's "Magic Hedge", but productive nonetheless.

Jym Mooney started birding in Lake Park at about 6 AM. He saw
several species not seen by the rest of the group, as noted with "JM"
on the list below.

2 Mallard- JM = Jym Mooney before Warbler Walk
20 Double-crested Cormorant
1 Cooper's Hawk Dolores Knopfelmacher: Captured small
songbird on ground under shrub on golf course.
4 Spotted Sandpiper- JM
2 Sanderling Fly by on lake shore. Large wing stripe, no
breast spots.
40 Ring-billed Gull
15 Herring Gull (American)
8 Caspian Tern
10 Common Tern gray wings
2 Forster's Tern frosty wings
1 Mourning Dove- JM
10 Chimney Swift
1 Ruby-throated Hummingbird Steve Morse: Near M Coles
Community Room at top of Grand Staircase.
2 Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted)- JM
1 Eastern Wood-Pewee
1 Yellow-bellied Flycatcher - JM
2 Least Flycatcher Che-bek!
1 Eastern Phoebe
2 Great Crested Flycatcher
30 Blue Jay Migrating north in small flocks at treetop level
3 American Crow
2 Tree
Swallow

in nest box on NE
corner of lawn bowling court
1 Northern Rough-winged Swallow
10 Barn Swallow
100 swallow sp. flying low over Lake Michigan about 100 meters
offshore
8 Black-capped Chickadee
1 White-breasted Nuthatch
1 House Wren
1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet- JM
10 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
3 Eastern Bluebird 1 at lawn bowling court. 2 near Linwood
water treatment plant
10 American Robin 0
1 Gray Catbird near Linwood water treatment plant
1 Northern Mockingbird with Scott Diehl's group. Flew over
Locust Ravine
1 Brown Thrasher at Wolcott Statue feeder
5 European Starling
1 Nashville Warbler- JM
2 Yellow Warbler near Linwood water treatment plant
2 Chestnut-sided Warbler
4 Magnolia Warbler
1 Black-throated Green Warbler
1 Blackburnian Warbler- JM
10 Palm Warbler mostly near Linwood water treatment plant
2 Black-and-white Warbler
2 American Redstart at Rustic (wooden) Bridge over Locust Ravine
2 Ovenbird Seen, not heard
3 Common Yellowthroat
1 Wilson's Warbler- JM
1 warbler sp. Female yellow vs female Wilson's, near Linwood
water treatment plant
1 Scarlet Tanager- JM
1 Chipping Sparrow
2 Savannah Sparrow Along lake shore near rugby field
2 Song Sparrow Along lake shore near rugby field
1 Lincoln's Sparrow- JM
1 Swamp Sparrow- JM
20 White-crowned Sparrow
2 Northern Cardinal
2 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
3 Indigo Bunting At Locust Ravine feeder
12 Red-winged Blackbird near Linwood water treatment plant
1 Common Grackle - JM
15 Brown-headed Cowbird
2 Baltimore Oriole
6 House Finch
10 American Goldfinch
2 House Sparrow

Fwd: eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/14/10

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins" <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Date: May 14, 2010 4:08:59 PM CDT
To: "Paul Hunter" <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/14/10

In addition, I heard reports of a Golden-Winged Warbler and a Least
Flycatcher this morning, and Brian Hansen saw a Connecticut Warbler
yesterday (just before he tumbled down the muddy hillside trail...no
harm
done to either Brian or camera!).

Jym

-----Original Message-----
From: do-not-reply@ebird.org [mailto:do-not-reply@ebird.org]
Sent: Friday, May 14, 2010 1:46 PM
To: hopmoon@milwpc.com
Subject: eBird Report - Lake Park - Locust Ravine , 5/14/10

Location: Lake Park - Locust Ravine
Observation date: 5/14/10
Number of species: 46

Caspian Tern 2
Chimney Swift 10
Red-bellied Woodpecker 1
Downy Woodpecker 2
Hairy Woodpecker 1
Eastern Wood-Pewee 2
Empidonax sp. 1
Eastern Phoebe 2
Blue Jay 3
American Crow 1
Tree Swallow 1
Black-capped Chickadee 6
White-breasted Nuthatch 1
House Wren 3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 8
Eastern Bluebird 1
American Robin 5
Gray Catbird 1
European Starling 2
Cedar Waxwing 10
Nashville Warbler 6
Northern Parula 1
Yellow Warbler 1
Chestnut-sided Warbler 1
Magnolia Warbler 8
Black-throated Blue Warbler 1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 1
Black-throated Green Warbler 2
Blackburnian Warbler 1
Palm Warbler 10
Black-and-white Warbler 2
American Redstart 5
Ovenbird 7
Mourning Warbler 1
Common Yellowthroat 6
Canada Warbler 2
Chipping Sparrow 8
Lincoln's Sparrow 1
White-throated Sparrow 1
White-crowned Sparrow 5
Northern Cardinal 4
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Baltimore Oriole 1
House Finch 2
American Goldfinch 4
House Sparrow 1

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

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Report - Warbler Walk , 5/8/10, add Northern Waterthrush

Begin forwarded message:

From: Sam Corbo <skcorbo@gmail.com>
Date: May 11, 2010 11:18:08 PM CDT
Subject: Report - Warbler Walk , 5/8/10

There was also a N. Waterthrush that sang from the bluff along
Lincoln Memorial as we approached the bottom of North Ravine.

Report - Warbler Walk , 5/8/10

Lake Park birders,

See my report on the Warbler Walk on 5/8/10 below.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html

Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 DC
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper
=====================================================

Report of the Fourth Vernal Walk Warbler of 2010 on May 8th
at Lake Park in Milwaukee by Paul Hunter

Some 20 or so birders, including two first-time Warbler Walkers,
braved the cold northwestern breezes to see a reasonable smattering
of hardy avian migrants.

Buzzy calls of White-crowned Sparrows at the feeders in Locust Ravine
greeted us as we ventured out from the Warming House. A Red-headed
woodpecker made a brief appearance at the suet feeder. Jym Mooney
pointed out an Ovenbird walking among the leaves. In the tree top
above that Paul Hunter found a Rose-breasted Grosbeak.

As we made our way down Locust Ravine, Judith Huf brought our
attention to the Phoebe nest under the wrought iron bridge. At the
base of the Grand Staircase we looked up to see a Turkey Vulture
chased by crows. The bushes behind the Wolcott Statue yielded 3
Brown Thrashers, but were otherwise quiet, presumably from the breeze
and lawn mowing.

The northwesterly breeze concentrated the warblers and swallows below
the bluffs where the sun struggled to provide warmth out of the
wind. Sam Corbo diligently scanned the swallows literally swirling
over our heads and at our feet to find the Cliff Swallows. Judith
Huf pointed out the many Barn Swallows skimming over Lake Michigan
just off shore. We all strolled slowly along the bluff working hard
to find the Wilson's and Blackburnian Warblers.


Turkey Vulture 1 - chased by crows
Ring-billed Gull 10
Herring Gull (American) 4
Caspian Tern 2
Chimney Swift 6
Red-headed Woodpecker 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 1
Downy Woodpecker 3
Hairy Woodpecker 2
Least Flycatcher 1
Eastern Phoebe 1
American Crow 3
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 20
Barn Swallow 250
Cliff Swallow 3
Black-capped Chickadee 8
White-breasted Nuthatch 1
House Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 8
American Robin 6
Brown Thrasher 3
Nashville Warbler 3
Yellow Warbler 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 8
Blackburnian Warbler 1
Palm Warbler 20
Black-and-white Warbler 4
American Redstart 2
Ovenbird 1
Common Yellowthroat 2
Orange-crowned Warbler 1
Wilson's Warbler 1
Eastern Towhee 5
Chipping Sparrow 3
White-throated Sparrow 6
White-crowned Sparrow 12
Northern Cardinal 3
Rose-breasted Grosbeak 1
Common Grackle 4
Brown-headed Cowbird 4
House Finch 2
American Goldfinch 6
House Sparrow 2

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

After five hours of tramping around the park, Jym Mooney saw 57
species and added the following to the list above:

Mallard 4
Red-breasted Merganser 16
Double-crested Cormorant 16
Blue Jay 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Gray Catbird 2
European Starling 4
Clay-colored Sparrow 1
Field Sparrow 1
Savannah Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 1
Swamp Sparrow 1

Monday, May 10, 2010

5/1/10 Warbler Walk Report

Lake Park birders,

I just realized I didn't send out the report of the 5/1 Warbler
Walk. See below.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html

Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 DC
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper
=====================================================


Report of Warbler Walk on May 1, 2010
at Lake Park in Milwaukee by Dennis Casper

An amazing 50 (or nearly so) enthusiastic birders turned out on this
glorious May Day to celebrate the holiday in their own joyous
fashion. And May Day did not disappoint. With sunny, bright blue
skies and temperatures in the mid-60's, conditions for birding were
ideal. The large group of birders, led by a somewhat overwhelmed
Dennis Casper, lent able assistance (for which he is extremely
grateful) by Jym Mooney, Judith Huf, Ron Gutschow, Sam Corbo, and
other expert birders, traversed Lake Park from the Rustic Bridge over
Locust St. ravine to the Wolcott Statue area south of the golf
course, wending its way along the Locust St. ravine, across the
pedestrian bridge, and around the Pavilion, to its final destination.
The birds were not, perhaps, as forthcoming or as numerous as they
might have been, and some effort and patience were required to spot
many of the birds that the day produced. But in the end, our efforts
were amazingly successful—our final tabulation registered 62 species!
In many cases, only one or a few individuals of a species were
observed, making it all the more remarkable that we compiled so large
a list. And this list is a compilation—of reports from many sources,
both the many smaller groups into which the large group divided as it
stretched out along its route and a number of individuals (such as
Jym Mooney, Brian Hansen, Judith Huf, and Sam Corbo) who went off on
their own to explore areas of the park to which the main body of
birders did not go. Of the many marvelous sights of the morning,
perhaps the most spectacular and satisfying came at the beginning:
four beautiful Red-headed Woodpeckers busily flying from tree to tree
in the Locust St. ravine. But a close second (in my mind) was the
brilliant orange and black of a Baltimore Oriole high in a treetop
near the good General Wolcott.

Thanks much to all who joined our walk and to all who helped out
(especially Dolores Knopfelmacher, who who opened up the Warming
House, made the coffee, kept track of sightings, and generally made
sure that all was ready for the walk). Lake Park's next Warbler Walk,
the fourth of the season, will be this coming Saturday, May 8,
starting as usual at 8:30 a.m. at the Warming House. All are
welcome. And may the birding be even better!

Birds Observed, May 1, 2010: Total Species=62

2 Canada Goose
2 Mallard
40 Red-breasted Merganser
30 Double-crested Cormorant
1 Cooper's Hawk
1 Peregrine Falcon
1 Piping Plover
1 Spotted Sandpiper
1 Bonaparte's Gull
12 Ring-billed Gull

2 Herring Gull
1 Caspian Tern
3 Mourning Dove
1 Chimney Swift
4 Red-headed Woodpecker
1 Red-bellied Woodpecker
6 Downy Woodpecker
1 Hairy Woodpecker
1 Eastern Phoebe
1 Great Crested Flycatcher

1 Eastern Kingbird
1 Warbling Vireo
1 Blue Jay
4 American Crow
1 Northern Rough-winged Swallow
12 Black-capped Chickadee
3 White-breasted Nuthatch
1 House Wren
1 Winter Wren
1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet

10 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
2 Eastern Bluebird
15 American Robin
1 Gray Catbird
1 European Starling
1 Nashville Warbler
1 Yellow Warbler
1 Black-throated Blue Warbler
11 Yellow-rumped Warbler
2 Black-throated Green Warbler

7 Palm Warbler
1 Black-and-White Warbler
1 Common Yellowthroat
6 Chipping Sparrow
2 Clay-colored Sparrow
2 Field Sparrow
1 Savannah Sparrow
1 Song Sparrow
1 Swamp Sparrow
3 White-throated Sparrow


3 White-crowned Sparrow
5 Northern Cardinal
1 Rose-breasted Grosbeak
4 Indigo Bunting
24 Red-winged Blackbird
2 Common Grackle
8 Brown-headed Cowbird
1 Baltimore Oriole
1 Purple Finch
2 House Finch

7 American Goldfinch
4 House Sparrow

Sunday, May 9, 2010

5/1/10 Lake Park bird sightings

Lake Park birders,

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

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html

Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 JM
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper

=====================================================
------------------------------

Date: Sat, 1 May 2010 10:30:35 -0500
Subject: [wisb] 4 Red-headed Woodpeckers Lake Park Milwaukee
From: Brian Hansen <rawshooter@gmail.com>

With a little luck we may have 2 pair of Red-headed Woodpeckers this
year
nesting in Lake Park. This morning another person and I saw 4 different
ones at the same time in the Locust Ravine just south of the wooden
footbridge. Also a great morning for migrants. There must have been 40
people + for the Warbler walk and I am sure a report will be coming
in on
their sightings. I had FOY Clay-colored Sparrows and a Black-
throated Blue
Warbler and BT Green Warbler.
Brian Hansen
Milwaukee - east side

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

From: "Jym Mooney & Carol Lee Hopkins" <hopmoon@milwpc.com>
Subject: [wisb] Re: Piping Plover - Milw Bradford Beach
Date: Sat, 1 May 2010 11:43:53 -0500

Thanks for forwarding this to the list so quickly, Paul.

The PIPING PLOVER was later seen by several folks from the Lake Park
Warbler
Walk, and was still present at 10:30. It was found on the north end of
Bradford Beach, and was very cooperative. It has a complete breast
band,
and I almost blew it off as a semi-palmated plover, but something
made me
look more closely. The upper parts were pale gray, and the
underparts clean
white. The face did not have the dark eye-band like SP plovers;
rather the
face was light gray with a whitish eyebrow, which really made the
large dark
eye stand out. The breast band was black and thin; there was a black
line
across the brow, bright orange legs, and a short, thick bill. The bill
appeared mostly dark to me, but another later observer told me they
detected
a lightening of the darkness at the base of the bill.

A lifer for me, and very nice to be able to share it with the Warbler
Walk
group today.

Jym Mooney, Milwaukee

-----Original Message-----
From: wisbirdn-bounce@freelists.org [mailto:wisbirdn-
bounce@freelists.org]
On Behalf Of Paul Hunter
Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2010 8:54 AM
To: wisbirdn@freelists.org
Subject: [wisb] Piping Plover - Milw Bradford Beach

Jym Mooney reported seeing a Piping Plover on Bradford Beach at about
7:40 am on Saturday May 1st.


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

From: Chris West <little_blue_birdie@msn.com>
Subject: [wisb] lake park whooping crane
Date: Sat, 1 May 2010 14:42:22 -0500

Hi all, my friend ethan just called to tell me that he just saw a
whooping crane flying north over lake park in milwaukee.
crazy! Chris w, richland county

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

Date: Sat, 1 May 2010 21:40:06 -0700 (PDT)
From: Suzanne Harp <suzharp@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park Milw 5/1

Hi,
Here's our list from earlier 5/1 afternoon (1-4)
Late posting since we drove back to Madison

Red headed WP -2 males
Flicker
Wood thrush
BT Green warbler
BT Blue warbler
Palm warblers
Yellow rumped- myrtle warblers
Common Yellow throat warbler
5 male Baltimore orioles
Lots o' BG gnatcatchers
RC kinglet
WT sparrows
WC sparrows
Indigo bunting
Towhee
Phoebe
Red-eyed vireo
Blue headed vireo
Coopers hawk scaring everyone
Flock of Cormorants flying over

Best,
Suzanne H
Madison

Saturday, May 8, 2010

4/22/10 Prothonotary Warbler

Lake Park birders,

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

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
=====================================================


Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2010 21:32:19 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Prothonotary Warbler, Lake Park, Milwaukee
From: Sam Corbo <skcorbo@gmail.com>

Hey folks,
I birded the Milwaukee lakefront today. Overall, fairly quiet
(except for
hundreds of Bonaparte's Gulls from McKinley Marina north to Lake
Park). I
was walking north through Locust Ravine at Lake Park around 6 PM when
I saw
a flash of bright yellow drop into the trailside creek. I was very
surprised when I threw up my binoculars and saw that it was a
PROTHONOTARY
WARBLER. The bird bathed in the creek for about 30 seconds, before
continuing preening in a nearby bush for about another minute. I was
unable
to relocate the bird after that.

Good birding!!!
Sam Corbo

--
Sam Corbo
skcorbo@gmail.com
Milwaukee, WI


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

Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2010 21:52:51 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Lake Park Milwaukee today
From: Jim Edlhuber <jimedlhuber@gmail.com>

On a walk down at Lake Park this morning, there was some activity,
Blue Gray
Blue Gray Gnatcatchers, Yellow Rumps and Ruby-crowned Kinglets to name a
few.
A link to see the images:

http://picasaweb.google.com/JimEdlhuber/
LakeParkMilwaukeeApril222010#5463126011292752738


Jim Edlhuber
Town of Genesee, Waukesha Co

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

5/3/10 Kentucky Warbler

Lake Park birders,

See the messages from Barbara Johnson that I am forwarding below.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html

Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 JM
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper
=====================================================

Begin forwarded message:

From: Barbara Johnson <barbjoh@hotmail.com>
Date: May 4, 2010 8:42:19 PM CDT
To: Paul Hunter <phunter1@wi.rr.com>
Subject: Kentucky Warbler

Hi Paul,
I saw the Kentucky Warbler on Monday morning [5/4] around 10:30 in
the southern end of the Locust Ravine. It came out of the brush to
bathe in the stream with the Yellow-rumped Warblers. Barb Johnson

Hotmail is redefining busy with tools for the New Busy. Get more from
your inbox. See how.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Re: 5/1 Warbler Walk announcement

Lake Park birders,

I am on call this weekend. Dennis Casper will be leading the Warbler
Walk on Saturday, May 1.

--- Paul Hunter
Whitefish Bay, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
http://home.roadrunner.com/~phunter1/lakeparkbirds.html
=====================================================
Warbler Walks at Lake Park, - Saturdays, 8:30 to 10:00 AM
Spring 2010: April 17 JM, April 24 PH, May 1 DC, May 8 PH, May 15 PH,
May 22 JM
Leaders: PH = Paul Hunter, JM = Jim Mooney, DC = Dennis Casper
- Meet on the WEST side of the Warming House near the tennis courts
on the north end of the park.
- Cancelled if weather forecast calls for thunderstorms or steady
winds of over 20 mph
- These free, informal walks are open to the general public of all ages.
- Recreational birders familiar with Lake Park volunteer to lead
people of all skill levels to the best birding spots in the park.
- Beginning birders are especially welcome. Camaraderie and
discussion of diverse environmental issues are encouraged.
=====================================================

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Date: Fri, 30 Apr 2010 13:37:48 -0500
Subject: [wisb] Black-throated Blue Warbler, Lake Park, MKE County
From: Sam Corbo <skcorbo@gmail.com>

Hey folks,
I ran into Robin Squier and Maria Terres at Lake Park today. We had
good
looks at a Black-throated Blue Warbler among many new arrivals along
Locust
Ravine. I later had the cooperative bird singing in the northern
'half' of
Locust Ravine, last heard in the pines that hide the electrical boxes
above
the eastern edge of the ravine. Definitely a big influx overnight as
many
others have reported!

Warblers: Palm (most numerous), Yellow-rumped (many), Nashville (~15),
Black-throated Green (2), Yellow (1), Pine (1), Northern Waterthrush
(1),
Common Yellowthroat (1), Black-throated Blue (1)

--
Sam Corbo
skcorbo@gmail.com
Milwaukee, WI

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