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NORTHEAST OHIO BIRDING
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  • Some birds forgot to migrate for winter

    by Jim McCarty/Plain Dealer Reporter
    Monday January 05, 2009, 5:01 PM

    Hermit thrush are the only member of their genus to stick around during winter -- but only rarely.
    Birds that in the spring or fall wouldn't make us look twice are causing excitement right now in Northeast Ohio.

    My son Bret and I joined 18-year-old Ethan Kistler on the Burton Christmas Bird Count on New Year's Day. We canvassed Headwaters Park and the surrounding region in Geauga County, and were rewarded with a picturesque scene of new-fallen snow, a diverse habitat and a nice mix of species.

    The highlight of the day was a serendipitous encounter with four stunning male white-winged crossbills in a stand of spruce. The sharp-eared young birders heard the finches' distinctive chip call before we saw them in perfect sunlight, glowing rose red atop a cluster of cones.

    Earlier, we surveyed a group of red osier dogwoods in a marsh that appeared barren of birds until Ethan delivered a "pish" call. In response, a yellow-rumped warbler popped up to see what all the commotion was about.

    A distinctive, thin, high-pitched trill was what attracted our attention to two brown creepers methodically working their way up trees, gleaning the bark in search of hidden spiders and mites.

    "Birds of the Cleveland Region" features seasonal calendars that show historically what species we should be seeing in the winter months -- and which ones should have left for more temperate climes awhile ago.

    But as the book points out, such sightings of insect-eaters, while rare and unexpected, are hardly unprecedented outside of their normal ranges.

    These stray birds only foreshadowed the surprises that awaited us.

    Continue reading "Some birds forgot to migrate for winter" »


    Birds Abound for Christmas Counts

    by Jim McCarty
    Monday December 15, 2008, 6:11 PM

    Pine siskins have invaded Northeast Ohio from Canada, descending on backyard thistle feeders and picking seeds from sweet gum balls.
    A bevy of birds and waves of nasty weather kicked off the opening week of Christmas Bird Counts in Northeast Ohio.

    With so many birders in the field, good sightings could be expected, even with the predictable rainy, gray and frigid conditions of mid-December.

    Eight of us scoured the parks, ponds and fields around Kent on Sunday and found more than 50 species, including two cackling geese in a giant flock of Canadas, mallards and black ducks feeding in a pasture.

    At the Standing Rock Cemetery, several sweet gum trees were filled with at least 40 pine siskins pecking out seeds from the spiky gum balls.

    Other highlights of the day included a flock of eight tundra swans, several red-shouldered hawks, a flock of tree sparrows and a dozen golden-crowned kinglets.

    Elsewhere across the Akron area, birders in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park discovered scattered flocks of white-winged crossbills -- remnants of the invasion from the week before.

    Patrick Coy reported a group of five crossbills feeding in the trees along the Riding Run Trail near the intersection of Everett and Wheatley roads. Dwight Chasar and a group of nine hikers found about seven to 10 crossbills along the Boston Run Trail across from Happy Days Lodge on Ohio 303.

    The Thayer's gull is a rarity in the Great Lakes, a Canadian arctic nester that is easy to confuse with the similar Iceland gull.
    Continue reading "Birds Abound for Christmas Counts" »


    Think Crossbills for Christmas

    by Jim McCarty
    Monday December 08, 2008, 5:30 PM

    White-winged crossbills are descending on hemlocks and spruce in Northeast Ohio in unprecedented numbers. The beaks on the boreal birds are designed perfectly for prying open cones to reach the seeds hidden inside.
    Northeast Ohio birders will take to the fields, the woods and the lakefront beginning this weekend -- the kickoff of the annual Christmas Bird Counts.

    If the past week is any indication, white-winged crossbills could appear on the Cleveland count for the first time in 42 years.

    Cleveland Heights birders Dick and Jean Hoffman of the Kirtland Bird Club have documented every Cleveland Christmas count since 1940. Their records indicate that the irruptive crossbills have descended from the boreal forests into Ohio only twice during that time, in 1963 and 1966.

    Ron Pittaway, in his winter finch forecast, correctly predicted the crossbill invasion three months ago, based on a shortage of the white-winged finch's preferred diet of spruce and hemlock seeds.

    Reports of white-winged crossbill sightings arrived from across the state last week, with most of the flocks of winter wanderers concentrated in Northeast Ohio.

    Young birder Ethan Kistler had the foresight to target the huge stand of conifers at the Holden Arboretum in Kirtland on Saturday, and he invited my son Bret and I to join him. Before we arrived, Ethan found 15 crossbills picking through the bunches of cones at the tops of spruce trees. But they disbursed just before Bret's and my arrival.

    We didn't have to wait long, though, before fresh waves of crossbills arrived from the north, descending in noisy flocks on the cone-laden treetops.

    Continue reading "Think Crossbills for Christmas" »


    Wonderful Thanksgiving birding, but tragedy, too -- Aerial View

    by James F. McCarty Plain Dealer Reporter
    Monday December 01, 2008, 11:21 AM

    Northeast Ohio birders had much to be thankful for last week -- but also a regretful incident to mourn.

    The Thanksgiving holiday brought an alignment of bird-friendly weather and the opportunity for birders to spend an abundance of quality time in the field.


    Harlequin ducks nest in the high Arctic and winter along rocky ocean shorelines, but occasionally pass through the Great Lakes during migration. This young male thrilled Ohio birders for two days before it was shot on Saturday.

    It's a well-known birding adage: More sets of eyes usually means more sightings of rarities.

    Two snowy owls -- a bright white male and a black-barred juvenile -- delighted dozens of birders daily at Burke Lakefront Airport. Even when the ground-dwelling owls were hidden from view in a swale, a timely jet would take off or a kindly airport employee would drive by, flushing the birds for all to see.

    A trickling of white-winged crossbills raised our expectations for a few days before reaching full-blown invasion status. Hundreds of these fascinating cone-picking finches passed overhead at beaches from Headlands to Huntington, sweeping across northern Ohio in search of hemlock, pine and spruce seeds to feast on. Bill Osborne, Chris Pierce, Jen Brumfield, Gabe Leidy, Susan Ruth Marengo and Jerry Talkington all filed reports.

    Continue reading "Wonderful Thanksgiving birding, but tragedy, too -- Aerial View" »


    Winter winds don't blow away birding chances -- Aerial View

    by James F. McCarty/Plain Dealer Reporter
    Tuesday November 25, 2008, 11:28 AM

    Snowy owls are descending from the Arctic tundra and popping up in fields across Ohio, including one or two at Burke Lakefront Airport and another in Grafton. This handsome bird is being treated at Laura Jordan's raptor rehabilitation center near Spencer in Medina County.


    Pull on your long johns, bundle up and venture outside.

    The calendar may say it's fall, but our eyes tell us the winter birds have arrived in force in Northeast Ohio.

    Check out some of the sightings from the past week:

    • At least one snowy owl has taken residence at Burke Lakefront Airport in Cleveland and is being seen on the fields behind the former Aviation High School. A possible second owl also was reported there, plus rough-legged hawks. Another snowy was found in Lorain County, on Ohio 83 near the Grafton Correctional Institution.

    Continue reading "Winter winds don't blow away birding chances -- Aerial View" »


    Jaeger sightings reward frozen birders: Aerial View

    by James F. McCarty/Plain Dealer Reporter
    Tuesday November 18, 2008, 11:33 AM

    A birder has to be sharp to pick out a black-headed gull from a flock of Bonaparte's gulls, its slightly smaller look-alike. This Eurasian bird showed up in 2006 at Conneaut Harbor, far from its traditional wintering grounds in the North Atlantic.

    Bird walk: Want to search for late fall migrants and waterfall? Join members of the Black River Audubon Society at 9 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 22, at the Wellington Reservation and Reservoir Visitor Center, 535 Jones Road, Wellington.


    For birders who braved the icy winds, driving rain, stinging sleet, blinding snow and crashing waves over the weekend, the payoff was worth the pain.

    Inspired by the prospects of rarities, dozens of birders endured numb toes and wind-chapped faces at some of Lake Erie's best vantage points from Huron Harbor to Headlands Beach.

    The reward was the most jaegers seen in Northeast Ohio in years.

    Continue reading "Jaeger sightings reward frozen birders: Aerial View" »


    Surprise! Seven cave swallows roosting in Rocky River: Aerial View

    by James F. McCarty/Plain Dealer Reporter
    Monday November 10, 2008, 1:48 PM

    Cave swallows huddled against the cold winds on the pier at Bradstreet Landing, Rocky River, on Sunday.

    A fall trip to Cape May, N.J., is guaranteed to bring birding excitement.

    If only I had known the best birds seen over the past weekend would show up on Lake Erie about a 10-minute drive from my house.

    Before leaving for the East Coast early Friday, I scanned the latest Rare Bird Alerts for the Cape May area. Cave swallows were the best recent sightings, with other notables including Western tanager, common eider, purple sandpiper and an impressive array of raptors, warblers, waterfowl and shorebirds.

    Continue reading "Surprise! Seven cave swallows roosting in Rocky River: Aerial View" »


    Effort to save rusty blackbird takes wing: Aerial View

    by James F. McCarty/Plain Dealer Reporter
    Tuesday November 04, 2008, 8:54 AM

    It's easy to rally the environmental troops behind crusades to save sexy birds such as the bald eagle, peregrine falcon, whooping crane and Kirtland's warbler.

    But try to launch rescue efforts for anonymous ugly ducklings like the rusty blackbird and you can expect a lot of shrugs and blank faces.


    Rusty blackbirds don't mind getting their feet wet, making them unique among the dozen blackbird species in North America. Rusty populations have plummeted in recent years, and efforts are under way to improve their prospects.

    That's about to change.

    Rusty blackbirds visit Northeast Ohio's marshes and wet fields in the fall. They're easy to overlook: spots of rust and ebony in a sea of gold, scarlet and burgundy leaves, fuzzy goldenrod and briars coated in sparkling frost.

    The rusty's eye is a pale yellow. Its call is distinctive, and often is compared with the squeaky sound of a rusty hinge. The male's head and shoulders are rust-colored in the fall and winter, gradually wearing away to pure black in the spring and summer.

    Continue reading "Effort to save rusty blackbird takes wing: Aerial View" »