gmr044@leah.Albany.Edu (Gregg Recer) (12/12/89)
Hi all, I thought I'd relate a day trip we made to the wilds of central, upstate NY this past weekend. There's a lot of open, rolling farm country to the south and west of the Albany area and these spots can be pretty interesting in the winter. About 1.5 hr west of Albany lies rural Montgomery County. We set off there in the desperate hope of seeing some short-eared owls which we had heard report of earlier in the week. Of course, due to practical considerations we arrived in the designated area at about 1:00 in the afternoon so owls were pretty unlikely. Nevertheless, it was a pleasant day, almost a heat wave at about 25F, so we stopped at various places along the farm roads to see what we could see. Fate must have decided to repay us for the impossibility of finding the owls because the first birds we saw were a flock of pine siskins sitting in the middle of the road. We rolled the car up within only a few feet of them and watched as they sat there ignoring us. These happen to have been life-birds for both me and my wife so the day was already a success. Pine siskin sightings seem to be pretty common around our area so far this season; maybe a sign of a good winter-finch year. We found plenty of non-owl raptors in the open fields we searched. Rough-legged hawks were the predominant species. We saw about six light morph birds and two dark morphs. Surprisingly we only saw one red-tailed hawk and no harriers. We also saw one Am. kestrel. On the "little dickey bird" front we found horned larks, snow buntings and dark-eyed juncos. The other intersting thing was a red-bellied woodpecker. By the Peterson range map this species doesn't typically occur this far north; however they seem to be expanding their range northward. Our total species count was less than 20 but for this time of year we were pretty happy. Gregg ******************************************************************************* "In future you should delete the words crunchy frog and replace them with the legend crunchy raw unboned real dead frog!!" -- Inspector Bradshaw, The Hygiene Division *******************************************************************************
grp@unify.uucp (Greg Pasquariello) (12/13/89)
In article <2273@leah.Albany.Edu> gmr044@leah.Albany.Edu (Gregg Recer) writes: > >Hi all, > I thought I'd relate a day trip we made to the wilds of central, >upstate NY this past weekend. There's a lot of open, rolling farm >country to the south and west of the Albany area and these spots can >be pretty interesting in the winter. About 1.5 hr west of Albany lies >rural Montgomery County. We set off there in the desperate hope of >seeing some short-eared owls which we had heard report of earlier in If you want to see short-eared owls, Galeville airport and the surrounding farmland is a good bet in your area. It is on the Wallkill River in (um...) Ulster county, near Wallkill. It should also be pretty good for other species like larks and stuff. If you want to go a little further south, try the onion and sod farms in Orange county. Warren Sod Farm in Pine Island is great for winter birds, and almost always has a few Lapland Longspurs in with the snow buntings and larks. Hawks abound >On the "little dickey bird" front we found horned larks, snow buntings >and dark-eyed juncos. The other intersting thing was a red-bellied >woodpecker. By the Peterson range map this species doesn't typically >occur this far north; however they seem to be expanding their range >northward. Indeed they are. We find them regularly now (in the summer anyway) at Blue Chip Farm, just down the road from the above-mentioned Galeville airport. By the way, that is also a great place to find red-headed woodpecker. I have only missed it there once! > >Our total species count was less than 20 but for this time of year we >were pretty happy. > >Gregg > If you want some directions of really great places to go to in NY State, get in touch with either John Tramontono of SUNY (New Paltz I think), or Ed Treacy. Drop me a note, and I can put you in touch with them. - Greg -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Greg Pasquariello (916) 920-9092 grp@unify.UUCP Unify Corporation ...!{csusac, pyramid}!unify!grp