Category: Bird Counts

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  

 

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

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