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2023 BirdAThon results

Congratulations to all participants and thank you to those who joined us for dinner. It was great seeing you.

Team name: Jumpin Jimini Jubilee Jays
Highest Score: 96 points

Annette Pasek, Merle Yoder and Lisa Lukawizc.

Roger’s Tee Birds
Doug and Shirley Beach
John Weeks and Chris Chinni

87 points

CoolPixChix
Sue Gowen and Debbie Bishop.
86 points
Very creative and fun team picture
Note the earrings – See below.
The Blazers

Maggie and Jack Peretto with our mascot Blaze. 64 points

Roberta Gowing and Elaine Payne birded part of the day

60 points.

Sarah Faulkner neighborhood walk

25 points.

Station 43 was rocking as always.
 Greenstone Hollow produced some good birds.

Soon I will see you all looking for warblers.

Thank you for participating on our third BirdAThon!!!!
Maggie Peretto

Birding With Your Phone Workshop Program Report – 2/25/2023

Birding With Your Phone Workshop
Program report 2-25-2023, by Sarah Faulkner
Hartford Audubon was once again delighted to host Ken Elkins, Director of the Coastal Center at Milford Point for Connecticut Audubon, for our fourth annual program to explore the phone apps that support birding.  With over thirty participants, Ken presented and discussed the apps below and answered questions.  Ken noted that almost all the apps have more robust websites than what is found on the apps.  Look to the websites for help options, keys to symbols, and more.
  • Ebird – from Cornell University, phone app as well as website org
  • Merlin – from Cornell University, phone app as well as website https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/
  • Birdnet – separate database/software than Merlin’s, from Cornell University plus other research organizations. Phone app as well as website.  Based on citizen science, more accurate than Merlin.  https://birdnet.cornell.edu/
  • Online bird guides such as AudubonSibley’s IIiBird, and the Warbler Guide
  • Bird, Plant, and other Nature identifying apps:
    • Seek – developed by team with iNaturalist – gives identification answer immediately
    • iNaturalist- Uses a very large database and is a learning app – can be useful for identification but use with caution.  Has a worldwide database, shares photos with other naturalists, engages with others in the field, once something has been confirmed by two others, stores information in a large database.
    • AllTrails – helpful to find your way in the field
    • eButterfly – can be used to identify butterflies
    • Plantnet – for plant identification

Here is a link to the Birding With Your Phone video recording

 

Hartford County Big January results

It is with great pleasure that I’m sending out the Hartford County Big January results, sponsored by the Hartford Audubon Society.  All winners will receive a certificate from Hartford Audubon.  The winner of the top species count in Hartford County – which this year was a tie! – and the winner of the Golden Grebe for the most notable bird, will be awarded at our May banquet.  Thanks to everyone who participated, and congratulations!
Sarah Faulkner
HAS Board Member and Past-President
Hartford Audubon Big January Results for birds seen in Hartford County in January, 2023
* Youth (ages 4-10) who must see at least 25 species to enter
* Teen (ages 11-17) who must see at least 35 species to enter
* Weekend Warrior (adults ages 18 and up who can’t get outdoors during the week) who must see at least 50 species to enter
* Adults (ages 18 and up who can get outdoors during the week) who must see at least 60 species to enter.
Jamie Meyers 96
Jay Kaplan 96
Maggie Peretto 92
Debbie Bishop 90
Susan Gowen 90
Annette Pasek 86
Barry Marsh 85
Sarah Faulkner 85
Andrew Dasinger 77
Paul Cianfaglione 77
Joan Heffernan 74
Tom Heffernan 71
Lisa Lukawicz 71
Alex Sauerbrunn 69
Connor Hogan 68
John Weeks 67
Sara Zagorski 66
David Lawton 64
Debi Wheeler 61
Matthew Ufford 61
Debbie McTigue 60
Denise Jernigan 58
Alison Wilcox 55
Thatcher Slocum 53
Chris Wilcox 53
Russ Smiley 53
Paul Mahler 52
Michele McDermott 52
Davis Smith 51
Christine Chinni 51
Cameron Aiken 50
Sophie Chen 51, Teen category
Sebastian Lawton 35, Teen category

Hartford County Big January results

It is with great pleasure that I’m sending out the Hartford County Big January results, sponsored by the Hartford Audubon Society.  All winners will receive a certificate from Hartford Audubon.  The winner of the top species count in Hartford County – which this year was a tie! – and the winner of the Golden Grebe for the most notable bird, will be awarded at our May banquet.  Thanks to everyone who participated, and congratulations!
Sarah Faulkner
HAS Board Member and Past-President
 
Hartford Audubon Big January Results for birds seen in Hartford County in January, 2023
* Youth (ages 4-10) who must see at least 25 species to enter
* Teen (ages 11-17) who must see at least 35 species to enter
* Weekend Warrior (adults ages 18 and up who can’t get outdoors during the week) who must see at least 50 species to enter
* Adults (ages 18 and up who can get outdoors during the week) who must see at least 60 species to enter.
Jamie Meyers 96
Jay Kaplan 96
Maggie Peretto 92
Debbie Bishop 90
Susan Gowen 90
Annette Pasek 86
Barry Marsh 85
Sarah Faulkner 85
Andrew Dasinger 77
Paul Cianfaglione 77
Joan Heffernan 74
Tom Heffernan 71
Lisa Lukawicz 71
Alex Sauerbrunn 69
Connor Hogan 68
John Weeks 67
Sara Zagorski 66
David Lawton 64
Debi Wheeler 61
Matthew Ufford 61
Debbie McTigue 60
Denise Jernigan 58
Alison Wilcox 55
Thatcher Slocum 53
Chris Wilcox 53
Russ Smiley 53
Paul Mahler 52
Michele McDermott 52
Davis Smith 51
Christine Chinni 51
Cameron Aiken 50
Sophie Chen 51, Teen category
Sebastian Lawton 35, Teen category

Second Annual (2023) Hartford Audubon “Big January” Photo contest

Second Annual (2023) Hartford Audubon “Big January” Photo conte

Hello members,

Happy New Year!

January 2023 is here and we are birding and take photos while birding.

We are inviting you to submit 1 to 6 of your current Big January pictures, one per category.  You do NOT have to have competed in Big January to enter – any January, 2023 photos taken in the Hartford County are eligible!

There are six categories:

  1. Best overall of bird(s)
  2. Bird behavior
  3. Rarest bird
  4. Birders (people!)
  5. Oops/ the one that got away…
  6. Funniest

Deadlines:

By February 20th submit one picture per category to Mona Cavallero at mcavallero1@comcast.net.  Please use the attached form for submissions.

Big January 2023 Photo Submission Form

By February 28th Mona will number and upload all photos to the HAS website.

By March 31st the three judges who are professional bird photographers will select the winners. They will review the photos on the website and agree on the winning selections.  We will again invite Julian Hough, Chris Fisher and Sam Fried to be our judges!

Winners will be announced and ribbons presented at the HAS Spring banquet.

The six selected photos will be printed, framed and displayed at the banquet and given as awards to the winners.

All photos will be part of the large screen display at the banquet.

Please enter the contest – we can’t wait to see the images you’ve gathered in this cold, snowy month!

Send all questions to Maggie Peretto at wings.mp@gmail.com  

 

January 2023 Photo Contest!

Second Annual (2023) Hartford Audubon “Big January” Photo contest

Hello Hartford Audubon members,

Happy New Year!

January 2023 is here and we are birding and taking photos while doing so!

We are inviting you to submit 1 to 6 of your current Big January pictures, one per category.  You do NOT have to have competed in Big January to enter – any January, 2023 photos taken in the Hartford County are eligible!

There are six categories:

  1. Best overall of bird(s)
  2. Bird behavior
  3. Rarest bird
  4. Birders (people!)
  5. Oops/ the one that got away…
  6. Funniest

Deadlines:

By February 20th submit one picture per category to Mona Cavallero at mcavallero1@comcast.net.  Please use the form below for submissions.

Big January 2023 Photo Submission Form

By February 28th Mona will number and upload all photos to the HAS website.

By March 31st the three judges who are professional bird photographers will select the winners. They will review the photos on the website and agree on the winning selections.  We will again invite Julian Hough, Chris Fisher and Sam Fried to be our judges!

Winners will be announced and ribbons presented at the HAS Spring banquet.

The six selected photos will be printed, framed and displayed at the banquet and given as awards to the winners.

All photos will be part of the large screen display at the banquet.

Please enter the contest – we can’t wait to see the images you’ve gathered in this cold, snowy month!

10/15/2022 – People’s State Forest Bird Walk Trip Report

Peoples State Forest Beaver Brook Area Bird Walk – 10/15/22 – Submitted by Sylvia Halkin

It was a lovely autumn day with a blue sky and fog in the valleys on the drive to the park for our 9:30 start time.  Our cars quickly filled the little picnic parking area, but Beaver Brook Road was wide enough for roadside parking, so we lined up along one side, and then gathered for a quick round of introductions.  I was grateful that at least 4 people among our 19 were experienced HAS field trip leaders, very familiar with the park, or both, and for their bird-finding and ID skills and those of other excellent birders in our group!  Many thanks to all my de facto co-leaders!  We crossed a little bridge and walked down the road, quickly spotting a flock of White-throated Sparrows foraging under the yellow-leaved arc of a roadside blackberry vine.  We lingered, listening to Black-capped Chickadees, Tufted Titmice, a Downy Woodpecker, and Red- and White-breasted Nuthatches in the trees, with both species of nuthatches and a Tufted Titmouse periodically descending to forage on the road near the sparrows. Were they all collecting fine gravel bits to help their gizzards grind up seeds and tough insects?  Or just checking out their fellow newly arrived companions for the upcoming season of safety in numbers as multiple species join up to forage in flocks?  Merlin’s Sound ID app let us know we had not just a pair of Red-breasted Nuthatches, but a group spread through the trees around us; their calls continued to be part of the soundscape throughout the morning’s walk.  After we identified the birds we could see and hear, we continued up the road; once we left the initial flock, the woods were relatively silent, demonstrating the non-breeding season birding phenomenon of either being surrounded by a mixed-species flock foraging in their species-specific ways, or being in the bird-sparse area between nomadic flocks.  The first long boardwalk started about half a mile down the road from the picnic parking area, across from a signposted former junction with the Agnes Bowen Trail.  The boardwalk took us over a wet area with sphagnum moss and other low-lying evergreen plants; shrubs and small trees including red-leaved blueberries, red-berried American/winterberry holly, and evergreen mountain laurel grew beside the boardwalk.  A Brown Creeper was heard and seen, and a Black-capped Chickadee appeared in a bare treetop.  In the woods at the end of the boardwalk, a second Brown Creeper was heard.  Soon we came to a second boardwalk, shorter than the first, that ended at a platform over a pond with water lily leaves, a Wood Duck nest box (but no waterfowl present), and shrubs, small trees, and interesting grasses and sedges along the edge.  A Northern Cardinal made a brief appearance, a small group of Yellow-rumped Warblers were foraging in the shrubs, an American Goldfinch was heard, and we spent a while watching a large praying mantis slowly making its way through a tangle of plant stems, its forelegs waving in the air and the aqua-green underside of its abdomen bright against the brown of the twigs and the rest of its body.  We returned along the road, spotting a Hermit Thrush, a Barred Owl (which flew off toward the first boardwalk), and a Turkey Vulture flying overhead, in addition to hearing and seeing more of the populous Red-breasted Nuthatches, with their Black-capped Chickadee companions.  We stopped while Chris Fisher used his PictureThis app to identify the beautiful peachy-orange large-leaved viburnum we kept seeing along the boardwalks and the road:  hobblebush, with big flat buds for next year’s growth sticking up between the paired leaves at the branch tips.  A small bear crossed the road far ahead of us and moved down the bank, long gone by the time we got there.  Yellow-leaved sassafras and young tuliptrees kept our eyes busy as we returned to our cars and bade farewells.  Special thanks to Sally Rieger for finding and guiding me along this great walk in the summer, and to Chris Fisher for keeping a count of the birds and reporting them to eBird, as well as helping me to lead this trip.

Bird species seen and/or heard, with approximate numbers of individuals:

1  Turkey Vulture
1  Red-shouldered Hawk
1  Barred Owl
2  Red-bellied Woodpecker
4  Downy Woodpecker
12  Blue Jay
2  American Crow
25  Black-capped Chickadee
10  Tufted Titmouse
18  Red-breasted Nuthatch
7  White-breasted Nuthatch
2  Brown Creeper
1  Hermit Thrush
1  American Goldfinch
3  Dark-eyed Junco
16  White-throated Sparrow
5  Yellow-rumped Warbler
1  Northern Cardinal

9/25/2022 – Bird and Nature Hike – Mary Conklin Preserve Trip Report

Bird and Nature Hike at the Mary Conklin Preserve, Canton.  Sarah Faulkner led a 2-hour leisurely hike for both the Canton Land Trust and the Hartford Audubon Society on September 25th.  Attended by 14 people, we were treated to a sunny, cool and beautiful Sunday morning.  Many attendees were using apps to help with bird identification, such as Merlin and eBird.  Merlin helped us identify the calls of many birds, although not many species were found on this quiet hike. The group made numerous stops to seek birds or identify plants or other items in nature and had a wonderful time. The highlights included a female scarlet tanager, numerous catbirds, and Eastern phoebes. 

9/25/2022 – Mary Conklin Preserve Bird Walk / Trip Report

Bird and Nature Hike at the Mary Conklin Preserve, Canton

Sarah Faulkner led a 2-hour leisurely hike for both the Canton Land Trust and the Hartford Audubon Society on September 25th.  Attended by 14 people, we were treated to a sunny, cool and beautiful Sunday morning.  Many attendees were using apps to help with bird identification, such as Merlin and eBird.  Merlin helped us identify the calls of many birds, although not many species were found on this quiet hike. The group made numerous stops to seek birds or identify plants or other items in nature,and had a wonderful time.  The highlights included a female scarlet tanager, numerous catbirds, and Eastern phoebes. 

10/8/2022 – Greenstone Hollow Bird Walk – Trip Report

Greenstone Hollow Bird Walk – 10/8/22 – Submitted by Chris Fisher
Seventeen hardy souls turned up at 8am on a beautiful but cool (48ºF) fall morning to wander around Greenstone Hollow.  We spent about the first half hour watching a variety of birds along both sides of Ridge Blvd near the entrance to the refuge.  A Crow, lots of Blue Jays, a large flock of Cedar Waxwings, Mallards, Mourning Doves, a House Finch, Swamp Sparrows and Eastern Phoebes were all present around the North and South Beaver Ponds.  We then walked to the Maple Grove Overlook, on to the Old Farm Rd., the Chickadee Trail and the North Blackbird Marsh Overlook where we picked up additional birds – Red-bellied, Downy and Pileated Woodpeckers and a Northern Flicker; a Red-tailed Hawk and Turkey Vulture; an American Robin and an unidentified Thrush; White-throated, Song and Swamp Sparrows and couple of Eastern Bluebirds.   After visiting the butterfly garden we crossed to the South side of Ridge Boulevard and followed the Twisted Tree and Wood Thrush trails back to the South Beaver Marsh overlook. Along the way we saw Catbirds, an Eastern Towhee that several people (and Merlin) heard but we couldn’t coax out, and pretty good looks at a juvenile Yellow-bellied Sapsucker.  At the Beaver Marsh overlook we saw several more sparrows, another Turkey Vulture, Yellow-rumped Warblers and woodpeckers. At this point it was about 10:20 and we’d gone past our 2 hour walk time.  Most people had to leave, but an intrepid group of 4 of us then walked all the rest of the trails on the north side of the road – mostly just to explore the refuge.  However we did get some really good looks at a Hermit Thrush, some more Yellow-rumped Warblers, Chickadees and a couple of Red-tailed Hawks playing against the blue sky.
Altogether we spent about 3-½ hours and walked just about 2 miles.  Special thanks to Abby Gundrum and Diane Fisher for helping to keep track of all the birds seen and to Abby for submitting the report to E-bird.  Below is a list of the birds seen and the participants on the walk.

9/29/2022 – Cruisin with Bird n Brews – Trip Report

Cruisin with bird n brews

Thursday 9/29, 2022 Cruisin with Birds and Brews. Location, South Glastonbury’s bucolic farm setting and CT river space. Started with the walk portion at 3 p.m. With group assembled we watched gulls, ducks, warblers, herons and more from the Ferry Rd parking lot. Next we moved onto the south walking trail and covered 1/3 of a mile. We were a group of 8. The birding levels ranged from new birders to those with many decades of experience. The weather was mild and somewhat dim skies made for challenging IDs of migrating warblers. The group’s tally was 38 species plus an additional – taxonomic. The additional taxonomic – a set of warblers flew from one treetop to the next in the darkening skies. The consensus for the best bird seen was a Northern Thrasher, this striking bird was seen during the walk on the short path, at the paths south end. This bird of the Mimidae family was with many additional birds, all who were working on Virginia Creeper berries. Other highlights, a single Broad-winged Hawk making its way south, many warbler species yellow-rump, parula, magnolia, black and white, blackpoll, redstart. A pair of Belted Kingfishers graced our presence as well as Four woodpecker species. A fun last minute sighting of a Blue-headed Vireo added to our total number. In abundance were cat bird, white-throated sparrow, starling, crow, jay and mallard. On an aside, one of the country’s longest running continuous ferries dating back to 1655 motored back and forth from Glastonbury and Rocky hill. This walk doesn’t end at the ferry, per the norm, we head to Hops on the Hill for happy hour, where we had views from other collectors antique cars. 

Annette Pasek, President
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