Wallace and all, Just a few quick tidbits-- Both these species are usually found in Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hawkins, and Jefferson Counties in very small numbers, though occasionally impressive tallies are recorded on Cherokee Lake and Douglas Lake. My latest persnal observations for the species are as follows: Bufflehead: April 14 (2007) (Dutch Bottoms, Cocke Co.) Hooded Merganser: April 27 (2002) (Greene Co.); May 23 (2005) (Elizabethton, Carter Co.). Don Miller Greeneville, Greene Co., TN ----- Original Message ----- From: Wallace Coffey <jwcoffey@xxxxxxxxxx> To: Bristol-birds <bristol-birds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 19:38:14 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [Bristol-Birds] Hooded Mergansers and Buffleheads left early on. Area Birders: Among our wintering waterfowl, the Hooded Merganser and Bufflehead are the species to make an early exodus from the region for northern migration. Hooded Mergansers were fairly well gone by late March when Susan Hubley found 22 at Rogersville. Rob Biller had 10 lingering along the Watauga River on 15 April. There have been no others reported on Bristol Birds Net since. It first appeared that much of the Bristol area wintering population of more than nearly 300 birds had begun to disperse with a significant high pressure over the region Feb 6 and the last birds at Middlebrook Lake may have been 11 found Feb 28. The population of Bufflehead was still good at the Weir Dam on Mar 20 when Rick Knight counted 84. Michelle Talbott and Ed Talbott counted just 31 there a week later on Mar 29. Rob Biller had 15 along the Watauga River from Elizabethton to Wilbur Dam and 42 on Wilbur Lake April 5. Following those reports it appeared that, for the most part, wintering birds were essentially gone. The wintering population on the Bristol Christmas Bird Count tallied 265 Hooded Mergansers and 147 Bufflehead with Elizabethton at 159 Bufflehead. No other region counts had more than 10 Bufflehead and only Bristol had more than 10 Hooded Mergansers. While a few migrants may yet be seen, it is well to note that both species have lingered well into the summer months or summered in Northeast Tennessee over the years with a number of records for each. The same is not true of Southwest Virginia. If you have any additional late records or perspective, please post them to the net. Let's go birding...... Wallace Coffey Bristol, TN ************************************************* BRISTOL BIRDS NET LIST Bristol Birds Net Photo Gallery located at: http://photos.yahoo.com/ph/jwcoffeyy/album?.dir=/efd5 Be sure and visit the Bristol Bird Club website at: http://bristolbirdclub.org This is a regional birding list sponsored by the Bristol Bird Club to facilitate communications between birders and bird clubs of Southwest Virginia and Northeast Tennessee. -------------------------------------------------- You are subscribed to Bristol-Birds. To post to this mailing list, simply send an email to: bristol-birds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe, send an email to bristol-birds-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the one word 'unsubscribe' in the Subject field. -------------------------------------------------- Wallace Coffey, Moderator wallace@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (423)764-****