[TN-Bird] Re: Hooded Crane at Hiwassee Wildlife Refuge

  • From: Scott Somershoe <Scott.Somershoe@xxxxxx>
  • To: TN-Birds <tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2011 19:12:05 +0000

Thanks Chris for posting while I was tied up.

Two things on this bird and the Hiwassee Refuge:
1.  Since ABA has not acted on the other 2 records yet, it is not on the ABA 
list and is technically not countable (for the tickers out there).  That said, 
it is a fantastic bird and I suspect many folks will go to try to see the bird 
regardless.

2.  PLEASE remember that the Hiwassee Refuge is a refuge and it is CLOSED to 
all forms of use and trespass from now until 29 Feb 2012, except at the 
Observation platform.  You will be ticketed for going onto refuge property or 
walking refuge roads.  You can look for the bird from the designated 
Observation area, but you CANNOT go onto any other areas of the refuge.

I do not know if the bird has been seen today.

Thanks and good luck!
Scott Somershoe






Scott is tied up but has looked at the pics and forwarded them to me.  It's 
definitely a Hooded Crane.  This will be an interesting debate as to its 
origins.  There is only one previous report from the ABA area, of one in Carey, 
Idaho in April 2010.  So far as I can tell, ABA checklist committee has not 
acted on it and I cannot tell what, if anything, Idaho was done.  Captive birds 
are typically leg banded and the Idaho bird was not.  There is also some chance 
that this bird at Hiwassee is the same bird.

Chris Sloan
Nashville, TN
http://www.chrissloanphotography.com<http://www.chrissloanphotography.com/>


On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 10:14 AM, Charles Murray 
<dro_1945@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:dro_1945@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Yesterday,  Marie Sutton and Phyllis Deal  from Lexington, KY spotted a strange 
crane at the Hiwassee Wildlife Refuge from the gazebo in Meigs Co. I arrived on 
the scene and called Jen Davis, ICF crane tracker. She arrived, took some 
digiscope photos and took the following notes on the 'mystery bird.'

Crane Description:
Smaller than a Sandhill. A shorter beak than the Canadian Sandhills on the HWR. 
Makes a higher pitched call, and is not the same sound. Black body with long 
tertial feathers. White Neck. Red cap. Black around the eyes.

Jen contacted Bryant Tarr, crane curator at ICF. He believes the crane is a 
hooded crane. Jen has sent this description and some photos to Scott Somershoe.

Charles Murray
Birchwood, TN

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