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Greenstone Hollow Trip Report – 4/16/22 – Submitted by Christopher Fisher

Trip Guide – Christopher Fisher

Greenstone Hollow Trip Report for walk on 4/16/22 – 8am.

Weather – Sunny, Temperature 55ºF – 59ºF

Attendees:

Chris Fisher, Diane Fisher, Matthew Poltorak, Sue Gagliardi, Edee Vassar, Davis Smith, Laura Ray, Peter Bulkley, Abby Wolcott, Joan Craig, Niki Bonnett, Carol Michaels, Beverly Greenspan, Doug Murray, Karen Walsh, Larry Lunden

Description – We walked 1.7 miles covering most of the trails in the refuge.  Below is a picture of the track of the paths we covered.

Birds Seen (reported to e-bird) – 36 species

Canada Goose  5
Mallard  5
American Black Duck  2
Ring-necked Pheasant  1
Mourning Dove  8
Great Blue Heron  2
Turkey Vulture  1
Red-tailed Hawk  1
Downy Woodpecker  3
Northern Flicker  1
Eastern Phoebe  2
Blue Jay  3
American Crow  5
Common Raven  1
Black-capped Chickadee  1
Tufted Titmouse  1
Tree Swallow  7
Ruby-crowned Kinglet  1
White-breasted Nuthatch  1
Carolina Wren  3
European Starling  1
Eastern Bluebird  1
American Robin  8
House Sparrow  6
House Finch  1
American Goldfinch  2
Chipping Sparrow  3
White-throated Sparrow  2
Song Sparrow  4
Eastern Towhee  1
Red-winged Blackbird  8
Brown-headed Cowbird  4
Common Grackle  3
Palm Warbler  2
Yellow-rumped Warbler  1
Northern Cardinal  8

Additional Notes:

  •  The Bluebird was carrying nesting material indicating possible nesting activity
  • We identified a flowering Spice Bush.
  • We identified a Callery Pear Tree also known as a Bradford Pear which was growing along the trail.

Study group-April 9, 2022 Hartford Riverfront Boathouse, Riverside Park -submitted by Annette Pasek

Trip Leader/Coordinator – Annette Pasek

April 9th, 2022, Meeting Location – The Hartford Riverfront Boathouse, Riverside Park

20 Leibert Rd, Hartford

Group of six, Cynthia, Jon, Maggie, Annette, Debra and Susan

Start time 11 am, Chilly 50 degrees and rain – 11:45 at the finish of our study and before our walk. After a brief wait in our cars the walk preceded, the group walked south on the west promenade walkway until water across the path stopped the group. The walk continued north of the boathouse with stationary views only due to water over the path northward. 21 species were noted.

Canada Goose
Mallard
Hooded Merganser

Mourning Dove
Killdeer

Double-crested Cormorant
Red-tailed Hawk
Downy Woodpecker

Northern Flicker
Eastern Phoebe
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Carolina Wren
European Starling
American Robin

House Sparrow
House Finch
Song Sparrow
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
warbler sp. (parulidae sp.)
Northern Cardinal

Discussion of inland shorebirds and migratory, Killdeer, Spotted Sandpiper, Solitary Sandpiper, Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs and Upland Sandpiper. Literature and dvd’s were shared. Extra binoculars were used by beginner birders.

This was the first of seasonal study group, a reprise to the original Hartford Audubon Study Group Club which began in 1908.

Sachuest Point NWR – 3/26/2022 Rhode Island Trip Report by Paul Desjardins

On Saturday March 26, 2022  fourteen people gathered for my annual trip to the Rhode Island shoreline. The starting point was at Sachuest Point N W R. There to greet us was a cock Ring Necked Pheasant who casually walked across the parking lot affording great close up looks! I was informed by a veteran Rhode Island birder that pheasants are countable only on Block Island but it was still nice to see. As we began our walk we soon encountered various waterfowl including all three scoter species and numerous Harlequin Ducks, both loons, several Horned Grebes, Great Cormorants and many Purple Sandpipers. For reasons unknown we usually miss the species so it was a real treat to see so many!

Next we went to Trustom Pond N W R where we always pick up on passerines. However, with the bird feeders having been taken down over concerns about avian flu there was little action here. We then proceeded to the area where the waterfowl congregate only to see the water almost devoid of them!  We did see several Common Mergansers that are uncommon here but as we walked further down the trail to the observation platform we encountered hundreds of ducks. So that is where they were out of sight. The raft included hundreds of Greater Scaups, Ring Necked Duck, Ruddy Ducks and best of all a drake Canvasback.

Upon returning to the parking lot everyone wanted to call it quits except myself and another birder who has a home near a birding spot called Deep Hole in Matunuck. Here we picked up several Hooded Mergansers, another Ring Necked Duck and best of all a Glaucous Gull and Iceland Gull side by side! We ended with 53 species.

Paul Desjardins, guide

Silver Sand Trip Report – 3/20/2022 Submitted by leader Maggie Peretto

Silver Sands Trip Report

Five people joined me at Silver Sands this morning.

Pleasant weather and 35 species of birds made it a very Pleasant walk.

We were surprised with a couple of Monk parakeets at the start of the walk.

Everyone enjoyed watching and listening the Clapper rail in the marsh and very close to the boardwalk.

Thank you to the participants.

Good birding and enjoy spring.

Maggie Peretto. Manchester, CT

 

2/26/2022 Birding with Your Phone Workshop – Report

2/26/2022 Birding with Your Phone Workshop – Report

Ever go birding and see someone bent over their phone, doing something about birds but you can’t tell what it is?  You’re not alone – many birders are using many apps to improve our skills and log our observations.  This was the impetus for creating our Birding With Your Phone workshop, presented in February for our third year in a row, and the second time to be held virtually over Zoom.

Ken Elkins of Audubon Connecticut once again expertly led our attendees through a variety of apps designed for smart phones.  He showed screenshots and provided navigating advice for a number of apps including the Audubon Field Guide, Merlin, iNaturalist, BirdNet, and the Warbler Guide, among others.  He ended the program by giving tips about using eBird.   Shown below is a link to a you tube recording of the session.

https://youtu.be/0gubQ9jh2Zc

If you could share any feedback from the evaluations you sent after the workshop, that would be appreciated. All in all, it was another helpful, informative workshop – thank you, Ken!

Sarah Faulkner

2021 HARTFORD CHRISTMAS BIRD COUNT SUMMARY

2021 HARTFORD CHRISTMAS BIRD COUNT SUMMARY

(The 2021 Hartford Christmas Bird Count is dedicated to the memory of long time Area Captain and former HAS President, Gil Kleiner. Gil, we missed you covering Windsor on this year’s Count!)

Last year’s Hartford Christmas Bird Count featured a foot of snow on the ground.  This year, there was none!  What’s more, warm temperatures throughout the fall kept even small ponds open. So, on a day without snow and ice, and temperature reaching well into the thirties, why were there so many complaints throughout the State about how few birds were seen on the first weekend of the Christmas Count season?  Let us consider some plausible explanations.  First, the lack of freezing temperatures may have kept waterfowl, raptors and other birds from moving southward out of northern New England.  Would these same conditions, however, allow some species to linger in our area rather than move to warmer climes for winter?  Second, the mild, open conditions also allowed birds to find food over a wide area and kept them from clustering in sheltered areas near restricted food supplies.  Third, a big issue on Count Day was a cold 10-15 mph northwest wind that made it feel much colder than it actually was.  When birding, wind is not your friend, as many birds remain hidden away.  Wind gusts atop the Hartford Landfill probably exceeded 20 mph on Count Day!

 

So, was the Count a bust?  Hardly!  In spite of the fact there were 85 field observers, 27 fewer than participated in 2020, and we covered almost 75 fewer party miles than two years ago (2019), overall numbers were not terrible.  Our 87 species was three below our ten year average of 90.1 species.  If only we could have found the three Count Period species (birds seen three days prior to or three days following the Count, but not on Count Day), we would have hit 90!  Alas, the Cackling Goose at Wethersfield’s Mill Woods Park, American Coots in South Windsor and at Batterson Pond, and the American Pipits in the Rocky Hill Meadows could not be located on Count Day.  We did, however, total 45,870 individual birds on the Count, over 14,000 more than in 2020.  Of course, two species, Canada Goose and American Crow, made up more than half the total.   In fact, Canada Goose reached a ten year high count, perhaps not surprising without snow covering the fields, lawns and golf courses.

Other ten year high counts were reached by Turkey Vulture, Bald Eagle (tie), Common Raven, Gray Catbird, Eurasian Starling, Vesper Sparrow, Yellow-rumped Warbler and Red-winged Blackbird.  Eagles and ravens have been increasing in our area, while several others no doubt benefited from the mild conditions of late fall.  Highlights for the Count included four Pink-footed Geese in South Windsor. This marks the first time this species has been included in our Count Circle.  Other rarities included a Pied-billed Grebe and a Northern Shrike, also seen in South Windsor. The grebe last appeared on our Count in 2012, while this marks the fourth time in the past ten years that a single shrike has made the Count, the last in 2018.  A female Greater Scaup in Hartford’s “sewage lagoon” pond near Riverside Park marked this species’ second appearance since 2012, while the American Wigeons in East Hartford marked this handsome duck’s first appearance since 2016.  Other birds of note included an Iceland Gull in Wethersfield (more on gulls, later), single Snow and White-fronted Geese from the Rocky Hill Meadows, a pair of Northern Pintails, an American Kestrel and a Marsh Wren in Glastonbury, and single Hermit Thrushes in Glastonbury and Hartford.  Finally, there is no doubt that the Glastonbury Meadows is the place to be if you are a sparrow.  The Meadows produced 10 sparrow species including fox sparrow seen for the first time since 2017, a record high five Vesper Sparrow, and a Lincoln’s Sparrow for the second time in three years!  An eleventh species, Field Sparrow, was nearby in Glastonbury.  In addition, of 149 American Tree Sparrows seen on the Count, 128 came from the meadows, although this number is far below record years when the farm fields were left unplowed.  The Meadows also produced the Count’s only White-crowned and Swamp Sparrows, and also, the only Rusty Blackbirds and one of Glastonbury’s two Ruby-Crowned Kinglets.

There were several significant misses in 2021.   Following last winter’s irruption of Red-breasted Nuthatch, this species went undetected for the second time in three years.  Barred Owl and Merlin were both missed for the first time since 2000.  In the case of the owl, wind did not make early morning owling easy.  In fact, only a single Great Horned Owl was tallied.  The Merlin miss was surprising as this species seemed to be relatively common earlier in the fall.  The big shocker, however, was the absence of Great Black-backed Gull, which has been declining since the closure of the land fills about ten years ago.  The last time this gull failed to appear on our Count was in 1963, 58 years ago!  Only Ring-billed Gulls with their penchant for sitting on parking lots, seem to be holding steady with the highest total since 2016.  A number of songbirds came in at ten year lows, and one must wonder how great a role the wind played when it came to Black-capped Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, Northern Mockingbird, Cedar Waxwing (only a single bird reported from Glastonbury), and Northern Cardinal.  Hopefully, this is a one year blip, and does not continue into the future?  Finally, as anticipated, not a single winter finch was recorded on our Count this year.  It will be interesting to learn how other Connecticut Counts fared when it came to siskins, redpolls, etc.

I would like to thank the area captains, without whose participation this Count would not be successful.  Thank you, also, to all those field observers, owlers, and feeder watchers for giving up some time during the Holiday Season to go out and tally birds.  The Christmas Bird Count, begun in 1900, is the longest running of all “citizen-science” field studies.  Over time, the Count offers valuable information about trends in bird populations during the early winter.    I hope to hear from you all again next year (and on the Summer Bird Count, the second weekend in June). Happy New Year!

Jay Kaplan, Compiler

Hartford Christmas Bird Count

Lewis farm Sanctuary 10/19/21- Trip Report submitted by leader Abby Wolcott

Lewis farm Sanctuary 10/19/21 – Written by Trip Leader Abby Wolcott

Quick facts:  53 degrees and sunny

4 people on the trip

10 species of birds seen or heard

Length of trip: 2 miles, 2  plus hours

An intimate group of birders gathered at the trail head on this crisp October morning.  As we headed off, a flock of geese provided some overhead entertainment as they demonstrated their telltale  chevron flight pattern above us.  We had our binoculars at the ready as the conversation unfolded regarding  what we had been seeing in our travels and some of the  local trips that were especially memorable.

After crossing the brook we started to hear more birds and scanned the treetops for activity.  We ambled along and saw a flock of yellow rumped warblers and made note that our snow bird, the dark eyed junco was back.  We were happy to see him and reminded ourselves to keep our shovels and ski parkas at the ready in the next few weeks.

We watched a red bellied woodpecker as he worked on a dead limb.  He was cooperative enough to do this as the sun shone on his back revealing what a beautiful bird he is. This viewing  prompted a discussion on the changes of birds seen here in New England over the past few decades. It was encouraging to note the increase in many  species in these parts.

Jays and crows provided some background noise as we looped around the trail.  We stopped to listen to two pileated woodpeckers calling out  but it was too much to ask of them to reveal themselves on this fine morning.  We told ourselves we would meet the king of woodpeckers on  another day and our quest continued.

On our return route we spied a bird of mystery in the tree tops and he remains thus.   He darted  about  and did not cooperate for the camera or binoculars but provided a source of speculation for some birders who had been around the block.

Heading around the white pine grove we day dreamed about owls.  They were not to be seen today but we stopped to see chickadees flitting and were reminded of E.B. White’s accurate observation that chickadees   “demonstrate the power of positive thinking.” That they did, but we really didn’t need much help as we were immersed in the beauty of nature and making connections with new friends who share a love of birds.

2021 HAS Big Sit Field Trip Report by Jay Kaplan

2021 HAS Big Sit Field Trip Report –     October 10, 2021

Six members and friends of the Hartford Audubon Society met on the Society’s Platform at Station 43, South Windsor before dawn on Sunday, October 10, 2021 to participate in the annual “Big Sit.”  Conceived and administered by the New Haven Bird Club, the objective of the Big Sit is to count as many bird species as possible from the confines of a 17’ diameter circle on a day during the second weekend in October.  Our HAS Big Sit was initiated over 20 years ago by former HAS President, Betty Kleiner.  This year’s “Sit” would be an abbreviated version as much of our group had work and other responsibilities later that day.  Dawn at Station 43, however, is nothing short of exhilarating, as the early morning hours usually provide the greatest excitement.   There is no place I’d rather be!

 

As per usual, our day began with a few snippets of song here and there, as sparrows, wrens and other birds began to stir.  Unfortunately, there were no owls to be hard this morning.  The wood ducks soon began to make their presence known.  The Connecticut River Valley is a prime migration corridor for these beautiful ducks, and we can usually count hundreds of silhouettes moving across our view as dawn approaches.  Smaller, and utilizing a different flight pattern than the occasional mallards and black ducks, the “woodies” are too numerous to even count and they did not disappoint!  The weather forecast this day was not ideal.  It was warm, humid, and the sky was overcast.  With no wind, it had not been a good night for songbird migration.  An exception was a substantial movement of red-winged blackbirds.  When watching blackbird flocks, one must be vigilant for the odd species or two mixing in. Vigilance, however, was unnecessary for the single rusty blackbird that dropped into the brush directly in front of us, then flew into a tree adjacent to the platform and chortled, providing everyone with a nice view.

 

The other species that was moving in big numbers on this day was Canada Geese.  Sharp-eyed Annette Pasek noted a single snow goose in one of the skeins of Canadas as they headed southward.  It was to be the only non-Canada goose out of the thousands that moved past us that morning.   By 9 AM, it was determined that we would end our abbreviated Big Sit.  Two of us had to go to work, and another had already left for Maine.  Late highlights included two juvenile northern harriers and a calling pileated woodpecker.   It should be noted that the rain that was supposed to arrive by mid-morning never materialized.  The forecast was, however, enough to deter any other birders from making the trip into the marsh that day.

Jay Kaplan

Big Sit Birds

  1. Snow Goose
  2. Canada Goose
  3. Wood Duck
  4. American Black
  5. Mallard
  6. Killdeer
  7. Northern Harrier
  8. Cooper’s Hawk
  9. Red-tailed Hawk
  10. Mourning Dove
  11. Yellow-bellied Woodpecker
  12. Red-bellied Sapsucker
  13. Downy Woodpecker
  14. Pileated Woodpecker
  15. Northern Flicker
  16. Eastern Phoebe
  17. Blue Jay
  18. American Crow
  19. Tree Swallow
  20. Ruby-crowned Kinglet
  21. House Wren
  22. Marsh Wren
  23. CarolinaWren
  24. European Starling
  25. Gray Catbird
  26. American Robin
  27. American Pipit
  28. White-throated Sparrow
  29. Song Sparrow
  30. Swamp Sparrow
  31. Red-winged Blackbird
  32. Rusty Blackbird
  33. Common Blackbird
  34. Yellow-rumped Warbler
  35. Northern Cardinal

 

Trip Report for Greenstone Hollow Walk,  Oct 9, 2021

Trip Report for Greenstone Hollow Walk,  Oct 9, 2021

Leaders – Diane & Chris Fisher

Participants – 18 ( including leaders)

Weather – Overcast, upper 50’s to low 60’s

Length of Trip/Terrain – Approximately 8am – 11am – about 1.9 miles total.  Terrain was mostly flat mowed paths, easy walking – some wet areas.  At about 9:45 we returned to the starting point after birding the trails immediately adjacent to Ridge Blvd on both sides.  At that point some people had to leave.  9 of us continued on to the back of the property.

Highlights of Birds Seen – We saw 21 species of birds which was reported on e-bird.  We started with several large flocks of birds flying around.  These included Red-winged Blackbirds, Starlings and Cedar Waxwings.  We had good looks at the Northern Flicker in the scope and the White-throated Sparrows had returned en masse!  Merle Yoder, a photographer and member, stayed afterwards on his own and also photographed Common Yellowthroat and Ruby-crowned Kinglet.  They were not included in the “official” list since they weren’t seen during the trip.

Here is the bird list as recorded by Larry Lunden:

Canada Goose  20
Great Blue Heron  1
Red-bellied Woodpecker  2
Downy Woodpecker  1
Northern Flicker  1
Blue Jay  13
Black-capped Chickadee  3
Carolina Wren  2
European Starling  60
Gray Catbird  3
Northern Mockingbird  1
American Robin  6
Cedar Waxwing  45
House Finch  2
American Goldfinch  5
White-throated Sparrow  25
Song Sparrow  1
Eastern Towhee  3
Red-winged Blackbird  90
Yellow-rumped Warbler  7
Northern Cardinal  2

Merle Yoder shared some of his photos taken on this trip below.

 

Hilltop Farm – Suffield Trip Report 9/8/2021: Trip Leader – Joan Heffernan   

Trip report submitted by Trip Leader Joan Heffernan below

September 8, 2021 Time:  8:30-11:30   2 hours

Fourteen participants met at Hilltop Farm in Suffield, CT at 8:30 AM.  This late summer, partly sunny day began at 67 degrees and soon rose to a sunny 77 degrees.  The original plan had to be adapted a bit because of heavy summer storm damage.  The farm property has sustained significant tree loss in recent weeks.  Our beloved oak which proudly stood by the white barn for over 200 years was our most significant loss.   Although our leader is a novice birder, she is an active volunteer at the farm and very familiar with the property and pointed out where species can be found at different times of the year.   Today we identified 23 species.  We began our walk near the entrance marquee.  From there we walked south and then east on a gravely road on town owned property.  We passed haying fields that are home to Red-winged Blackbirds and Bob-o-Links although not present today.  Near the base of the hill we hooked a left onto a narrow path that led us to a boardwalk.  On the right side of the path, in a wetland area, we saw newly planted native species (nestled in with beautiful goldenrod) purchased with HAS grants from 2020 & 2021 which were well watered this year!  We stopped to observe the resident eagle’s nest, either through our binoculars or binoculars mounted here for patron viewing. All was quiet today but a fledging left in early July.  Birders were encouraged to come back and visit in December and beyond when the eagles are actively rehabbing their dwelling. Our walk continued from the boardwalk back onto the gravely road past a tobacco barn and we then headed north, parallel to the CT River.  We next followed a wooded trail where we witnessed the storm destruction from this summer.  We did manage to circumvent downed trees and were able to view the inland pond home to Wood Ducks and Great Blue Herons. The GBH did a flyover, the ducks were hiding!  After looping around and exiting the woods, we head west up the hill with meadows on our left and wetlands on the right where the Red-headed Woodpeckers lived in fall 2019 and spring 2020.  We crossed back south through the farmer’s field to bypass some yellow jackets buzzing near one of the fallen trees.  We had fashioned “steps” over the trees but took the alternate route to avoid the bees.   We stopped at the Community Garden where many Hummingbirds, Goldfinches and a female Red-winged Blackbird were actively eating among the rainbow of blooming flowers.  Common Nighthawks were seen here on 8/24-a lifer for the leader! Continuing up the hill, we then visited the Corn Crib area which is being nurtured to create an area where less active individuals can sit and enjoy birds, bees and butterflies in the Butterfly & Pollinator Gardens where HAS grant money was also used to purchase plants.  I forgot to mention and point out the Phoebe nests under the corn crib. (seven )

We also viewed a Hummingbird Garden on the side of former manure shed and another raised bed (Pollinator Garden) on the base of what used to be a silo.  I wish that the Creamery being built was open (stay tuned) to end our trek with a cold gelato treat but perhaps on your next visit!  Birders that stayed until the end were invited into the cathedral barn, which is also under renovation at this Non Profit Organization which is on the National Register of Historic Places since 2005.  You can learn more about this property here:   https://www.hilltopfarmsuffield.org/

Birds Sighted: Black-capped Chickadee, European Starlings, Northern Flicker, Mourning Dove, Blue Jay, American Crow, Song Sparrow, Gray Catbird, Hummingbirds, Chimney Swift, Carolina Wren, American Goldfinch, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Wood Peewee, Warbling Vireo, Great Blue Heron, Belted Kingfisher, Tufted Titmouse, Eastern Phoebe, Red-winged Blackbird, American Robin, White-breasted Nuthatch,  and Northern Mockingbird.  We even saw a bat!

 

Hartford Summer Bird Count Summary – June 12-13, 2021

HARTFORD SUMMER BIRD COUNT SUMMARY –  JUNE 12-13 2021

As we moved through spring, Connecticut began to loosen up its COVID 19 restrictions, and people began to once again travel and attend events in mid-June.  As such, coverage of our area during the Hartford Summer Bird Count was spotty in certain areas.  Although the number of observers at 54, and total party hours at 168 were below the record numbers of last year (65 observers and 198 party hours), they were still well ahead of participatory totals in 2019.  Several long time participants, however, were unavailable this year and their absence surely impacted our results, especially with regard to species totals.

Total species came in at 104, a decrease of seven from 2020.  It was no surprise that last year’s unprecedented Western Meadowlark, accepted by the Avian Records Committee as the first sighting of this species in Hartford County, was not seen this year.  Additional species seen in 2020, but not in 2021, include Black Duck, Broad-winged Hawk, American Kestrel, American Woodcock, both Black-billed and Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Blue-headed Vireo, Worm-eating and Yellow-rumped Warbler.  Other species, not found last year, made an appearance on this year’s list including a Black-crowned Night Heron at Hartford’s sewage lagoon, a Red-headed Woodpecker in Wethersfield/Rocky Hill, and two Northern Parulas in East Hartford.  Other birds of note included a Sharp-shinned Hawk in Glastonbury and Brown Thrashers in Glastonbury and Bloomfield.  Glastonbury’s Purple Martin colony has now increased to 7 birds.  Mute Swan, unreported in 2020, appeared in three areas totaling 15 individual birds.

Other species came very close to being unreported this year.  The marshes of South Glastonbury did not produce Virginia Rails this year, but a single individual, along with a least bittern, was found near Station 43, South Windsor.  Other species producing but a single individual included Eastern Screech Owl in Windsor, and Winter Wren, Black-and-white and Black-throated Green Warbler in West Hartford.

Several species showed little or no change over last year.  Cliff Swallows were reported from the same three towns and totaled 40 birds, the same number reported in 2020.  Eastern Meadowlarks and Bobolinks were still present, but in fewer numbers than seen in the previous year. The four meadowlarks were found only at the former Hartford landfill site.  Last year, there were eight.  The bobolinks were reported in the same four areas, but there were 40 compared to last year’s 46.

In addition to lack of coverage, there are other concerns for the future of the Summer Bird.  Potential loss of habitat due to development, and to the encroachment of invasive plant species in critical habitats remain concerns.

The University of Hartford remains off limits to public visitors, denying access to a productive area along the Park River on the Hartford/West Hartford line.

We have been fortunate in terms of the weather on our Count weekend, but prolonged heat waves and torrential rains are always a concern leading up to Count Week.

This marks the 31st year for the Hartford SBC, providing information on the status of breeding bird populations in the Hartford area.  In this, the final breeding season of the Connecticut Breeding Bird Atlas project, the Summer Bird Count continued to add valuable data to this worthy effort.  As compiler, I thank the area captains and the 55 participants who donated their time to participate in the Count this year.  Results of ours and the other Connecticut SBCs will be published in an upcoming edition of The Connecticut Warbler, quarterly journal of the Connecticut Ornithological Association.  For more information on the atlasing project, go to www.ctbirdatlas.org  A full accounting of the species found on the Hartford Count is available by e-mailing me at jaybrd49@aol.com

Jay Kaplan, Compiler

Hartford Summer Bird Count

Fisher Meadows Avon, CT – May 22, 2021 Trip Report

Fisher Meadows Avon, CT

May 22nd 2021

Brian Toal – trip leader

 

15 birders joined us for our annual walk around Fisher Meadows recreation area in Avon. We had mostly resident species singing behind thick foliage, so it was a good lesson in learning the common bird songs. A highlight was 7 Blackpoll warblers that those with good ears were able to hear. Resident species found included: blue winged warbler, Warbling vireo, American redstart, Great crested flycatcher , Willow flycatcher and Yellow warbler. A Bald eagle gave us some excitement as it flew down the Farmington river. Near the end of the walk, we heard a Cuckoo that seemed to be a yellow billed. Some of the group stayed behind to try to get a better look at the cuckoo. The brown thrasher and orchard oriole that have been found in past years were not located . 46 species were seen or heard overall.

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