[bcbirdclub] Re: Sparrow Day Event

  • From: "Jerry Thornhill" <mjt@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "'BCBC Listserve'" <bcbirdclub@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2012 17:47:04 -0500

Sounds like a really fun day.  Certainly beats the heck out of sitting
around a table in Richmond, VA, listening to folks talk about birding stuff.

 

Jerry

 

-----Original Message-----
From: bcbirdclub-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:bcbirdclub-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Roger Mayhorn
Sent: Sunday, November 04, 2012 5:19 PM
To: BCBC Listserve
Subject: [bcbirdclub] Sparrow Day Event

 

Yesterday, Nov 3, 13 birders gathered at the home of David and Susan Raines
to enjoy their annual Sparrow Day celebration. With the morning starting out
with 29° and heavy frost, the fire David had going in the fire pit was
welcome, as was the warm coffee, sausage balls and pumpkin muffins Susan
provided.

The birding started early with David hearing the call of a Great Horned Owl
near dawn before other birders arrived. David also scared up a Great Blue
Heron from the small creek that runs along his property. It was probably the
same Great Blue that flew up from the creek just downstream as Lynda and I
arrived.

 

We found 44 species for the day. Some of the other highlights of the day
were the four hawk species that were seen circling overhead or zipping past
the bird feeders in the yard (complete list below).

While birding a back field lined with autumn olive bushes and willows the
group found a first of the season Fox Sparrow and a Winter Wren. A Belted
Kingfisher went chattering across the blue, fall sky and Blue Jays, Crows
and Pileated Woodpeckers could be heard in the surrounding woods. A
Red-breasted Nuthatch in the company of a small flock of Chickadees spent
several minutes gathering seeds from pine cones and hiding them in the
crevices of the bark of nearby tulip poplars. An adult Yellow-bellied
Sapsucker fed in a tree along the stream edge just in front of the Raines'
home, and Purple Finches and Pine Siskins were coming to the feeders or
working the trees nearby. A Brown Thrasher made trips to the sunflower seed
feeder. A Northern Mockingbird spent much of its time feeding from the
heavily fruited dogwood trees and the rest of its time trying to keep other
birds away. 

Six sparrow species were present, but the numbers were down to what they had
been just before the foot of snow that fell last week.

 

Those birders present for the day were  Don & Dawn Carrier, Peggy Herbert,
Tom Hunter, John & Sherry Kelly, Fred & Janice Martin, Roger & Lynda
Mayhorn, David & Susan Raines, Ed & Mary Talbott and Dave Worley. More
Sparrow Day photos are located at
http://www.pbase.com/mayhorn/sparrow_day_2012

 

 



 

Roger Mayhorn

Compton Mt

 

44 species

Turkey Vulture 22

Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 juv

Cooper's Hawk 1 juv

Red-shouldered Hawk 1

Red-tailed Hawk 1

Great Blue Heron 1

Mourning Dove 10

Great Horned Owl 1

Belted Kingfisher 1

Downy Woodpecker 1m

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 1 adult

Pileated Woodpecker 2

Eastern Phoebe 4

Blue Jay 9

American Crow 10

Common Raven 2

Carolina Chickadee 5

Tufted Titmouse 12

White-breasted Nuthatch 4

Red-breasted Nuthatch 2

Carolina Wren 6

Winter Wren 2

Golden-crowned Kinglet 2

Eastern Bluebird 8

Hermit Thrush 1

American Robin 1

Northern Mockingbird 2

Brown Thrasher 1

European Starling 27

Cedar Waxwing 4

Yellow-rumped Warbler 5

Eastern Towhee 3m

Chipping Sparrow 5

Field Sparrow 2

Fox Sparrow 1 (FOS)

Song Sparrow 6

White-throated Sparrow 6

Northern Cardinal 9 (4m, 5f)

Red-winged Blackbird 2m

Common Grackle 1

Purple Finch 6

House Finch 5 (1m, 4f)

Pine Siskin 4

Purple Pine Siskin 1 (species endemic only to the Raines property :)

American Goldfinch 7

JPEG image

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