There is a definite pecking order for feeding on carcasses. Goldens are at
the top, followed by Balds. Then the hawks and vultures. Even a little
kestrel will feed in desperate, cold times.
On Dec 29, 2017 8:56 AM, <va-bird-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Send va-bird mailing list submissions to
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Today's Topics:
1. Hermit Thrush (Otis Sowell, Jr.)
2. Is This Unusual? (morann@xxxxxxx)
3. Re: Is This Unusual? (Marlene A Condon)
4. Re: Is This Unusual? (nanjyoung@xxxxxxxx)
5. Re: Is This Unusual? (Phillip Arsenault)
6. Re: Is This Unusual? (david.boltz4@xxxxxxxxx)
7. Re: Hermit Thrush (P 3)
8. Re: Is This Unusual? (Leslie Sturges)
9. Rough-legged Hawk & more (Augusta/Staunton today) (Gabriel Mapel)
10. Western Tanager, City Point, Hopewell - 12-28-17 (akb)
11. Re: Is This Unusual? (nanjyoung@xxxxxxxx)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 09:39:20 -0500
From: "Otis Sowell, Jr." <otissowell@xxxxxxxxx>
To: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Va-bird] Hermit Thrush
Message-ID: <C35B38FA-2A93-4D7F-A796-1CC25C41995C@xxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Hello to all!
A beautiful Hermit Thrush visited my yard yesterday afternoon. It was the
second opportunity i have had to get a few acceptable photos of it.
Photos can be seen here: http://www.otissowellphotography.com/
Wild-Birds-Ducks-and-Geese/i-twNGSRB/A
Otis Sowell, Jr.
Fluvanna County, Virginia.
------------------------------
Message: 2
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 10:15:04 -0500
From: morann@xxxxxxx
To: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID: <1609db0e53b-c0d-6a4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday from
Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped
eating and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he
obviously got unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just
flew and landed a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon
thereafter so as not to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish
in Oregon but I'd never seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 10:31:11 -0500
From: Marlene A Condon <marlenecondon@xxxxxxx>
To: morann@xxxxxxx, va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID: <1609dbfa7e0-1716-322fa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Hi Ann,
Yes, it is normal. Even some species of small birds eat roadkill,
especially when it's so terribly cold.
Happy New Year!
Sincerely,
Marlene
-----Original Message-----
From: morann--- via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, Dec 28, 2017 10:15 am
Subject: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday from
Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped
eating and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he
obviously got unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just
flew and landed a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon
thereafter so as not to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish
in Oregon but I'd never seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
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to unsubscribe, or modify your preferences please visit
https://mailman.listserve.com/listmanager/listinfo/va-bird ***
------------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 11:24:55 -0500
From: <nanjyoung@xxxxxxxx>
To: "Marlene A Condon" <marlenecondon@xxxxxxx>, <morann@xxxxxxx>,
<va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID: <BE93CFC0C6214A37A06E9A7328670332@NancyPC>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
reply-type=original
Some years ago (25 or more) I saw Golden Eagles feasting on a carcass in a
field in Ohio across the road from my aunt's farmhouse. I called my aunt to
come see and she said "Oh they're just vultures." But we went closer to get
a better look and she agreed they were eagles. We were so surprised. But
the
birds were huge and brown colored and they were not vultures.
Nancy Young
Botetourt County
-----Original Message-----
From: Marlene A Condon via va-bird
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2017 10:31 AM
To: morann@xxxxxxx ; va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Hi Ann,
Yes, it is normal. Even some species of small birds eat roadkill,
especially when it's so terribly cold.
Happy New Year!
Sincerely,
Marlene
-----Original Message-----
From: morann--- via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, Dec 28, 2017 10:15 am
Subject: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday from
Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle
was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped eating
and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he obviously got
unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just flew and
landed
a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon thereafter so as
not
to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish in Oregon but I'd
never
seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
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unsubscribe, or modify your preferences please visit
https://mailman.listserve.com/listmanager/listinfo/va-bird ***
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------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 11:37:30 -0500
From: Phillip Arsenault <pandbarsenault@xxxxxxx>
To: nanjyoung@xxxxxxxx
Cc: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID: <6357E0A5-701D-4F2A-A6B6-244B652F9DD0@xxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Yes they do feed on carcasses and that is how they get lead poisoning if
the eat a deer that has been shot and consume the lead.
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 28, 2017, at 11:24 AM, Nancy Young via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
a field in Ohio across the road from my aunt's farmhouse. I called my aunt
Some years ago (25 or more) I saw Golden Eagles feasting on a carcass in
to come see and she said "Oh they're just vultures." But we went closer to
get a better look and she agreed they were eagles. We were so surprised.
But the birds were huge and brown colored and they were not vultures.
especially when it's so terribly cold.
Nancy Young
Botetourt County
-----Original Message----- From: Marlene A Condon via va-bird
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2017 10:31 AM
To: morann@xxxxxxx ; va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Hi Ann,
Yes, it is normal. Even some species of small birds eat roadkill,
from Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Happy New Year!
Sincerely,
Marlene
-----Original Message-----
From: morann--- via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, Dec 28, 2017 10:15 am
Subject: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped
eating and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he
obviously got unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just
flew and landed a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon
thereafter so as not to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish
in Oregon but I'd never seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
to unsubscribe, or modify your preferences please visit
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
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------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 12:01:42 -0500
From: david.boltz4@xxxxxxxxx
To: Phillip Arsenault <pandbarsenault@xxxxxxx>
Cc: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID: <61A16C9B-AC06-4277-A9C1-CA4E0B2A4676@xxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Ben Franklin wanted the Wild Turkey to be the national bird because the
?Bald Eagle eats carrion?.
Dave Boltz
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 28, 2017, at 11:37 AM, Phillip Arsenault via va-bird <
va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Yes they do feed on carcasses and that is how they get lead poisoning if
the eat a deer that has been shot and consume the lead.
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 28, 2017, at 11:24 AM, Nancy Young via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
a field in Ohio across the road from my aunt's farmhouse. I called my aunt
Some years ago (25 or more) I saw Golden Eagles feasting on a carcass in
to come see and she said "Oh they're just vultures." But we went closer to
get a better look and she agreed they were eagles. We were so surprised.
But the birds were huge and brown colored and they were not vultures.
especially when it's so terribly cold.
Nancy Young
Botetourt County
-----Original Message----- From: Marlene A Condon via va-bird
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2017 10:31 AM
To: morann@xxxxxxx ; va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Hi Ann,
Yes, it is normal. Even some species of small birds eat roadkill,
from Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Happy New Year!
Sincerely,
Marlene
-----Original Message-----
From: morann--- via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, Dec 28, 2017 10:15 am
Subject: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped
eating and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he
obviously got unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just
flew and landed a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon
thereafter so as not to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish
in Oregon but I'd never seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
to unsubscribe, or modify your preferences please visit
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
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------------------------------
Message: 7
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 18:26:20 +0000
From: P 3 <runningquick444@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Otis Sowell, Jr. via va-bird" <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Otis
Sowell, Jr." <otissowell@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Hermit Thrush
Message-ID:
<BL2PR16MB1041233DBA0EAD6632E33F73F9040@BL2PR16MB1041.
namprd16.prod.outlook.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Love those!
________________________________
From: va-bird <va-bird-bounces+runningquick444=hotmail.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
on behalf of Otis Sowell, Jr. via va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: December 28, 2017 9:39 AM
To: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Va-bird] Hermit Thrush
Hello to all!
A beautiful Hermit Thrush visited my yard yesterday afternoon. It was the
second opportunity i have had to get a few acceptable photos of it.
Photos can be seen here: http://www.otissowellphotography.com/
Wild-Birds-Ducks-and-Geese/i-twNGSRB/A
Otis Sowell, Jr.
Fluvanna County, Virginia.
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------------------------------
Message: 8
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 13:33:51 -0500
From: Leslie Sturges <toobysturges@xxxxxxxxx>
To: morann@xxxxxxx
Cc: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID:
<CALN+=jS1WdGCFLCiRwRdVYudeY3XQaZWTq6iWh=
fCBtooeh-gg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Eagles are notorious scavengers and most raptors won't turn down an easy
meal. I watched a red shoulder gorge on a roadkill deer for days. In fact
one of the reasons eagles and hawks are so often found with lead toxicity
is because of their tendency to feed on gut piles left by hunters. It only
takes a single lead pellet to kill an eagle.
I saw a red bellied woodpecker feeding on a road killed squirrel last
week--winter drives a lot of animals to seek fat and protein to get through
the tough times.
Leslie
On Dec 28, 2017 10:15 AM, "morann--- via va-bird" <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday from
Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped
eating and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he
obviously got unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just
flew and landed a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon
thereafter so as not to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish
in Oregon but I'd never seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
*** You are subscribed to va-bird as toobysturges@xxxxxxxxx. If you wish
to
unsubscribe, or modify your preferences please visit
https://mailman.listserve.com/listmanager/listinfo/va-bird ***
------------------------------
Message: 9
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 23:33:00 +0000 (UTC)
From: Gabriel Mapel <birdmangabriel@xxxxxxxxx>
To: Shenvalbirds <shenvalbirds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Reports--- via
Va-bird <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Va-bird] Rough-legged Hawk & more (Augusta/Staunton today)
Message-ID: <1764730236.6236170.1514503980356@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Hi all, Vic Laubach and I had a good day of birding around Augusta County
and Staunton today finding 62 species.? Our highlight bird was a
light-morph Rough-legged Hawk at Bell's Lane at around 4:15pm.? It was seen
flying in aerial combat with a Bald Eagle over the hill with the red barn
on it if looking NW from the top of the hill (Short-eared Owl observation
site.? There were 9 Short-eared Owls again tonight).? We then saw it again
about 20 minutes later, viewing from the entrance to the Days Inn.? It was
flying north and crossed Hwy 262 and perched in a tree briefly NW of the
Bell's Lane/262 intersection.? It's anyone's guess how long it will stay
around but it's definitely worth keeping an eye on this area.
For anyone interested, here's a detailed account of our day birding around
Augusta County:
We started in Swoope just after sunrise.? Highlights in Swoope included: 1
N. Pintail (female with Mallard flock along Hewitt Rd), 5 Wild Turkeys, 4
GB Herons, 2 Harriers, pair of adult Bald Eagles, 4 Red-tailed Hawks, 2
Wilson's Snipe, 1 Hairy Woodpecker, 1 E. Phoebe, 10 Ravens, and 400 Horned
Larks.? We then went down to Willow Lake in Rockbridge County where a small
patch of open water held surprisingly few waterfowl (60 Canada Geese, 1
Hooded Merganser, 2 Ring-billed Gulls).?
Along Guthrie Road our highlight was a Merlin.? The Fishersville Quarry
had open water and some waterfowl: 7 Gadwall, 15 Mallard, 3 Black Ducks, 3
GW Teal, 1 Redhead, 1 Bufflehead, 1 Ruddy Duck, 4 Coots, as well as a large
flock of 450+ Canada Geese containing 1 Cackling Goose and an odd domestic
Goose that looked surprisingly Greater White-fronted like at first sight.?
However, at a closer look, it was definitely a domestic bird (larger and
chunkier than Canadas).?
Along Chapel Hill Ln in the Weyers Cave Area we had 90 Pipits and a
Savannah Sparrow.? Westview School Rd near Mount Sidney had 300 Horned
Larks and 2 more Northern Harriers (including some misc. sightings while
driving around the county we had a total of 6 Harriers today).?
Good Birding,Gabriel MapelNew Hope
------------------------------
Message: 10
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 18:35:59 -0500
From: akb <arun1bose@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "<va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>" <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Richmond
Audubon Society mailing list <va-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Va-bird] Western Tanager, City Point, Hopewell - 12-28-17
Message-ID:
<CA+VgMy5qQQ8CUsdk5Wy=0LhKUwokP3zY+XWx4n9M3A6OP3Ofzw@mail.
gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hello Birders,
City Point in Hopewell was quite birdy today despite the 24?F temperature.
The highlight was a female Western Tanager. Also seen were continuing
Yellow-throated Warbler, Common Yellowthroat (both no shows on the CBC),
Baltimore Orioles and Orange-crowned Warblers.
Checklist
http://ebird.org/ebird/va/view/checklist/S41376299
Arun Bose
Richmond
------------------------------
Message: 11
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2017 19:16:39 -0500
From: <nanjyoung@xxxxxxxx>
To: "Leslie Sturges" <toobysturges@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Message-ID: <B25BC2E7CE414D73A042D7050BE14176@NancyPC>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
reply-type=original
My biggest surprise was seeing them on farm land in the middle of Ohio!
Nancy Young
Botetourt Co.
-----Original Message-----
From: Leslie Sturges via va-bird
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2017 1:33 PM
To: morann@xxxxxxx
Cc: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Is This Unusual?
Eagles are notorious scavengers and most raptors won't turn down an easy
meal. I watched a red shoulder gorge on a roadkill deer for days. In fact
one of the reasons eagles and hawks are so often found with lead toxicity
is because of their tendency to feed on gut piles left by hunters. It only
takes a single lead pellet to kill an eagle.
I saw a red bellied woodpecker feeding on a road killed squirrel last
week--winter drives a lot of animals to seek fat and protein to get through
the tough times.
Leslie
On Dec 28, 2017 10:15 AM, "morann--- via va-bird" <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
I saw something I'd never seen before as i was driving last Saturday from
Virginia to Annapolis for Christmas. Not far on the other side of
Fredericksburg, on Route 3, I passed a dead deer on the side of the road. A
vulture (couldn't see his head) and an eagle were at opposite ends of it,
eating. I was surprised to see an eagle eating road kill. I turned around
and went back. As I was driving back I saw a vulture in the air and sure
enough, when I got back to the place where the dead deer was, only the
eagle was still there. I stopped just short of this and the eagle stopped
eating and was just watching me watch him. In a couple of minutes he
obviously got unnerved and flew away, but only about 6 feet or so, he just
flew and landed a short distance and continued watching me. I left soon
thereafter so as not to further disturb him. I've seen eagles eating fish
in Oregon but I'd never seen an eagle eating road kill. Is this normal?
Ann Donaldson
Barboursville
*** You are subscribed to va-bird as toobysturges@xxxxxxxxx. If you wish
to
unsubscribe, or modify your preferences please visit
https://mailman.listserve.com/listmanager/listinfo/va-bird ***
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------------------------------
Subject: Digest Footer
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------------------------------
End of va-bird Digest, Vol 128, Issue 28
****************************************