On most of the coast, Palms seem to move inland as winter moves along. They
like to hang around dairies and the like in the Coquille Valley. Around
Florence they tend to get off the outer coast and up into town or the upriver
bottomlands. I surmise that there is much more food upriver, and sometimes
better cover. I’m not surprised that one would wander up to Toledo.
Alan Contreras
acontrer56@xxxxxxxxx
Eugene, Oregon
www.alanlcontreras.com
http://osupress.oregonstate.edu/book/edge-of-awe
On Jan 31, 2019, at 4:52 PM, Range Bayer <range.bayer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Chuck Philo saw a Palm Warbler at the Toledo Post Office on 1/30. Palm
Warblers in Lincoln Co. are mostly seen near the coast and are rare so far
inland.
Magnolia Warbler (Setophaga magnolia) (1)
- Reported Jan 31, 2019 09:15 by Janet Lamberson
- Ona Beach SP, Lincoln, Oregon
- Map:
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&t=p&z=13&q=44.5213563,-124.0740108&ll=44.5213563,-124.0740108
<http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&t=p&z=13&q=44.5213563,-124.0740108&ll=44.5213563,-124.0740108>
- Checklist: https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S52246194 ;
<https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S52246194>
- Comments: "Foraging alone in spruce and birch trees close to creek, near
power pole in picnic area, hallway up the trees, 10:20 am; bright yellow
undersides, gray face and head, gray-black streaks along flanks, white
undertail with black tip. Continuing bird seen by many others."