[birdky] Re: Rare Bird Alert: Eared Grebe
- From: "Christina W" <hiker80@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: lhays2@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, birdky@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2007 03:33:24 +0000
Lana,
The eared grebe is at Woodbridge Apartments, which is in the east end of
Louisville Metro at 40242 zip code, near Oxmoor Mall and U of L Shelby
Campus in between two major roads, New LaGrange Rd. and Shelbyville Rd. I
think the county is Jefferson county, and it is near St. Matthews, Lyndon,
and Middletown.
Woodbridge Apartments, located on Ormsby Lane ( I mistakenly called the road
Ormsby Station Rd in the previous e-mail. Sorry about the confusion.), has a
map at this website:
http://www.moveitonup.com/states_kentucky.asp#
Christina
From: Lana Hays <lhays2@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: hiker80@xxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [birdky] Rare Bird Alert: Eared Grebe
Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 20:25:49 -0400
Christina
Your grebe sounds fascinating and if he'd stick around until the weekend
I'd like to take a look. Just one question.......what city/ county is it
located in?
Thanks,
Lana Hays
On Mar 21, 2007, at 8:14 PM, Christina W wrote:
Hello,
I just wanted to let everyone know about a definitively identified eared
grebe (Podiceps nigricollis) that is still today (March 21, 5:30 PM to
8:00 PM) at the Woodbridge Apartments small lake off of Ormsby Lane,
which is off of New LaGrange Rd. This tiny energetic fast swimming and
diving inquisitive bird has been here since at least evening of Saturday,
March 17th.
This eared grebe was observed at dusk today playfully dunking goose
feathers in water repeatedly. Much later this evening, the bird tried
unsuccessfully to swallow a blue gill fish that was too big for its crop.
This bird is not shy and stays in the lake, so it should be easy to
identify if you can catch it long enough on the surface. On average, it
stay under water at least 16 seconds, and resurfaces at different
locations. Plumage is a mix of winter plumage (at front neck, behind ear
hole, and white lower side feathers) and breeding adult plumage
(brown/golden feathers covering ear hole, and brown lower side feathers).
The bird has a dark gray beak that differentiates it from Western and
Clark's grebes, and bright crimson red eyes that distinguishes it from
red- necked grebe. Golden brown feathers covering ear hole are great
field marks, too. According to my National Geographic Field Guide, it is
"rare in Eastern North America," and its present location may be just a
tiny bit north of "its irregular or irruptive range in some winters"
(dotted blue lines on map).
If you do decide to check out this eared grebe, beware of a particularly
aggressive Canadian goose with possible partial albinism (at front of
head in between beak and eyes, and also lighter than normal feathers on
neck), and its normal Canadian goose partner. I have never seen a
Canadian goose before with such markings. Could this bird be a hybrid of
wild and domesticated Canadian goose? It is rather overweight, so I think
this is at least a possibility.
Take Care,
Christina Wiegand
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Lana Hays
www.lanahays.com
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- Follow-Ups:
- [birdky] Re: Rare Bird Alert: Eared Grebe
- From: Christina W
Other related posts:
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- » [birdky] Re: Rare Bird Alert: Eared Grebe
From: Lana Hays <lhays2@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: hiker80@xxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [birdky] Rare Bird Alert: Eared Grebe Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 20:25:49 -0400 ChristinaYour grebe sounds fascinating and if he'd stick around until the weekend I'd like to take a look. Just one question.......what city/ county is it located in?
Thanks, Lana Hays On Mar 21, 2007, at 8:14 PM, Christina W wrote:
Hello,I just wanted to let everyone know about a definitively identified eared grebe (Podiceps nigricollis) that is still today (March 21, 5:30 PM to 8:00 PM) at the Woodbridge Apartments small lake off of Ormsby Lane, which is off of New LaGrange Rd. This tiny energetic fast swimming and diving inquisitive bird has been here since at least evening of Saturday, March 17th.This eared grebe was observed at dusk today playfully dunking goose feathers in water repeatedly. Much later this evening, the bird tried unsuccessfully to swallow a blue gill fish that was too big for its crop. This bird is not shy and stays in the lake, so it should be easy to identify if you can catch it long enough on the surface. On average, it stay under water at least 16 seconds, and resurfaces at different locations. Plumage is a mix of winter plumage (at front neck, behind ear hole, and white lower side feathers) and breeding adult plumage (brown/golden feathers covering ear hole, and brown lower side feathers). The bird has a dark gray beak that differentiates it from Western and Clark's grebes, and bright crimson red eyes that distinguishes it from red- necked grebe. Golden brown feathers covering ear hole are great field marks, too. According to my National Geographic Field Guide, it is "rare in Eastern North America," and its present location may be just a tiny bit north of "its irregular or irruptive range in some winters" (dotted blue lines on map).If you do decide to check out this eared grebe, beware of a particularly aggressive Canadian goose with possible partial albinism (at front of head in between beak and eyes, and also lighter than normal feathers on neck), and its normal Canadian goose partner. I have never seen a Canadian goose before with such markings. Could this bird be a hybrid of wild and domesticated Canadian goose? It is rather overweight, so I think this is at least a possibility.Take Care, Christina Wiegand _________________________________________________________________Get a FREE Web site, company branded e-mail and more from Microsoft Office Live! http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/mcrssaub0050001411mrt/ direct/01/================NOTES TO SUBSCRIBERS==============The BIRDKY Mailing List requires you to sign your messages with first & last name, city, & state abbreviation.-------------------------------------------------- To post to this mailing list, send e-mail to: birdky@xxxxxxxxxxxxx-------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, send e-mail to:birdky-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'unsubscribe' in the Subject line.* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Visit the Kentucky Ornithological Societyweb site at http://www.biology.eku.edu/kos.htm* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * BIRDKY List Manager: Gary Ritchison, Richmond, KYE-mail: gary.ritchison@xxxxxxx
Lana Hays www.lanahays.com
- [birdky] Re: Rare Bird Alert: Eared Grebe
- From: Christina W