From [[email protected]] Sun Jul 01 06:12:11 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Sunday, 1 Jul 01, I found a female OSPREY at the Parkway Lakes chain. She was foraging most of the late morning and early afternoon across the entire chain of lakes. I searched extensively around this area and could find no evidence of nesting by these birds. Also, another OSPREY was at Ogier Ponds. This one looked like a male (only a very few marks across the lower throat). Other birds in the Parkway Lakes area included a CASPIAN TERN, GREEN HERON, and female WOOD DUCK. I found a number of WILD TURKEY feathers around the lake, and the operators of the fishing concession said that there are quite a few of these birds around there. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 02 16:28:03 2001 Subject: [SBB] Sunday Santa Clara birding adventure -------- Three of us (Bob Hole ([[email protected]]), Ginger Langdon-Lassagne and Barry Langdon-Lassagne ([[email protected]]) spent Sunday 7/1 on a modified Big Day around Santa Clara County. Ginger joined us from 11:00am to 3:30pm. Our goal was to get 100 birds in one day in Santa Clara County; we came close at 90. None of us had ever attempted a Big Day before, so this was an experiment to see what we could accomplish and how much we would enjoy it compared with less strenuous birding. We also thought it would be interesting to attempt a "Big Day" during the quiet time of year. All of us are admittedly bad at sparrows, so we probably could have gotten two more species if we had been able to identify every sparrow we saw. Neither are we great at gull identification; otherwise we probably could have gotten a California Gull. And if I could flash-identify hummingbirds as they flew past I might have gotten an Allen's. Unofficial rules for our Big Day: - Bird for approximately 12 hours - If the birds are interesting we can stay as long as we like (not just "check and run") - Heard birds count - Only one person needs to see or hear a bird, and we don't have to be together at the time (but there are only two species that at least two of us did not see) - Have fun! List Key: (the Lists include only first sightings. The narrative includes significant sightings and some further information.) v = vocalized - usually heard first and seen later h = heard only ! = new for the Langdon-Lassagnes for Santa Clara county this year (! after the bird just means we love that bird) (Bob lives in Contra Costa and doesn't keep a SC list though he's regularly in the area, so many more of them were new for him for the county - those are not noted here) BIRD NAMES are capitalized, since the focus of the "event" was birds. We started the day before dawn by listening out the open windows while we were getting ready, then moved out "into the bush". List for at home (5:00am): v AMERICAN ROBIN v NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRD v MOURNING DOVE v HOUSE FINCH v LESSER GOLDFINCH Driving to Stevens Creek canyon (5:30am): ROCK DOVE AMERICAN CROW WESTERN SCRUB-JAY In the area around Stevens Creek Reservoir parking lot near the quarry, saw a covey of about 30 CALIFORINIA QUAIL (with about five adults), a CASPIAN TERN foraging over the lake, several BEWICK'S WRENs and WRENTITs calling from both sides of the road, and occasionally popping into view. Stevens Creek Reservoir (5:45am): CALIFORNIA TOWHEE DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANT MALLARD v WRENTIT CALIFORNIA QUAIL BUSHTIT (Deer on hillside by quarry) (Brush Rabbit in the parking lot) BEWICK'S WREN (possibly attending a nest) BREWER'S BLACKBIRD CASPIAN TERN ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER Driving to Stevens Canyon Road (6:00am): ACORN WOODPECKER (on a telephone pole) STELLAR'S JAY Heading up the hill, we found an AMERICAN DIPPER foraging in the upper creek near a known nest site. "She" gave us great looks and seemed to ignore us for several minutes. Up Stevens Canyon Road (6:10am): AMERICAN DIPPER! Back down to intersection of Mt. Eden and Steven's Canyon Road (6:30am?): WESTERN TANAGER! (found by song in treetop over road) CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEE (Tree Squirrel) Parking at bridge at south end of Stevens Creek Reservoir (6:45am?): KILLDEER VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOW Unidentified ACCIPITER (startled the Killdeer, and us!) RED-SHOULDERED HAWK (in serious molt, the tail was mostly missing) (a sparrow flying down to the creek and back in to the branches by the creekside) We then walked the "backside trail" on the east side of the creek and among other things found a very cooperative WESTERN WOOD-PEWEE, SPOTTED TOWHEE and CALIFORNIA TOWHEE. We also saw five BELTED KINGFISHERs sitting on wires over the creek just above the fire station. There were three females and two males. They were joined periodically by NORTHERN ROUGH-WINGED SWALLOWs. We also saw and recorded a PURPLE FINCH we were unsure of, but were later able to positively identify. Hiking up Stevens Creek Trail, backside of reservoir (7:15am): SPOTTED TOWHEE CALIFORNIA THRASHER (more quail and BEWICK'S WREN at the "garbage spot" off the trail - there were also some sparrows we didn't identify) h PURPLE FINCH (recorded song with digital camera; later compared to song at home) WESTERN WOOD-PEWEE (watched for a long time as it hunted) DOWNY WOODPECKER BELTED KINGFISHER (Western Pond Turtle on the shore below the Kingfishers!) DARK-EYED JUNCO GREEN HERON NORTHERN ROUGH-WINGED SWALLOW NORTHERN (Red-shafted) FLICKER HUTTON'S VIREO (by the bridge over a dry creek - there was also a large, beautiful spider web over the bridge) h ANNA'S HUMMINGBIRD (Chipmunk) TURKEY VULTURE (the first "soarer" of the day) OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER (in Eucalyptus by the parking area) At and around Picchetti Ranch/Winery we found BAND-TAILED PIGEONs, WESTERN TANAGER, BLACK PHOEBE, and huge numbers of our apparent trip mascot WESTERN SCRUB-JAY. An apparent adult and young ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER by the restrooms - and we saw still more later. The Oak at the first bridge on the Zinfandel trail was alive with CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEES. Picchetti Ranch (9:00am?): (Peafowl and h Chickens) BLACK PHOEBE EUROPEAN STARLING NUTTALL'S WOODPECKER (Oak at the first bridge on Zinfandel trail) SONG SPARROW (The pond was only a puddle 3 feet in diameter; two weeks ago it was about 1/4 full) BAND-TAILED PIGEON (roosting in the Douglas-fir southwest from the pond) BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK (female feeding male young, also saw more in the orchard) We stopped briefly at McClellan Ranch (10:30am)and saw our only BULLOCK'S ORIOLE at the feeder, and a WESTERN BLUEBIRD, among others. Stopping for gas at the gas station at Stevens Creek Road and Foothill Road (hey, who forgot to fill the tank?): HOUSE SPARROW (bird #50 for the day, our hopeful "halfway mark") Arriving at Charleston Slough, we were greeted by about 40 AMERICAN WHITE PELICANs catching a thermal. It was a magnificent sight. We then found all the "usual suspects" at the slough, spending some extra effort on a juvenile egret to make sure it was "only" a SNOWY EGRET. There were several COMMON MOORHEN, NORTHERN PINTAIL, CINNAMON TEAL, a couple GREEN-WINGED TEAL, and at least two NORTHERN HARRIERs. We also saw a COMMON RAVEN carrying what looked to be an egg. We did not spend over-much time looking for the common tern, so did not pick it out of the crowd of FORSTER'S TERNs. We saw a WESTERN GULL steal an AMERICAN AVOCET chick from the small island adjacent to the pump house. Charleston Slough (11:00am, here Ginger joined us): AMERICAN WHITE PELICAN (in addition to the beautiful flock of 40 or more catching a thermal that greeted us, we saw a large flock of immatures in the slough left of the trail just past the pump house) CLIFF SWALLOW SNOWY EGRET v MARSH WREN v SALTMARSH COMMON YELLOWTHROAT (our only warbler for the day) BARN SWALLOW NORTHERN SHOVELER CINNAMON TEAL NORTHERN PINTAIL CANADA GOOSE GREAT EGRET AMERICAN AVOCET (nesting on the tern island) GREAT BLUE HERON FORSTER'S TERN (also nesting) WESTERN GULL BLACK-NECKED STILT ! GREEN-WINGED TEAL COMMON MOORHEN (we saw almost as many moorhen today as Coots!) AMERICAN COOT RING-BILLED GULL HERRING GULL ! WILLET! ! MARBLED GODWITMarbled Godwit NORTHERN HARRIER COMMON RAVEN BLUE-WINGED TEAL(female) RUDDY DUCK(in Shoreline lake) After a lunch stop we moved to Alviso. Being SFBBO volunteers (there's a plug for you), we stopped at the office of the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory for BARN OWL and then heading to their banding station and the waterbird pond to see the several hundred WILSON'S PHALAROPES. Driving to SFBBO headquarters: BURROWING OWL (took off from perch at Sunnyvale Baylands) RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD (Alviso/Lafayette St.exit, at the pond before the railroad tracks) At SFBBO offices: ! BARN OWL! At Coyote Creek: WHITE-TAILED KITE! WESTERN MEADOWLARK ! WILSON'S PHALAROPE! "peeps" - WESTERN (probably) or LEAST SANDPIPERs BROWN-HEADED COWBIRD (single male) SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHER (in bright plumage) We then went to the EEC to see a single BLACK SKIMMER on the first island, and were told by a fellow birder they were absent from the third island where they have been regularly seen of late. We also picked up SAVANNAH SPARROW there. Our final stop for the day was at Sunnyvale Recycling plant entrance to the Bay Trail, where we found our first PIED-BILLED GREBE of the day, and saw a mother COMMON MOORHEN with six young, and a great number of AMERICAN COOT young. It was a great opportunity to see and compare the two. Our day ended back in Sunnyvale, where we found species #90, a small number of CEDAR WAXWING still hanging out on our block , near the corner of Myrtle and Tamarack. Has anyone noted whether they are breeding here? The Santa Clara County bird checklist says they're absent in July. We had a thought, and would be interested in knowing of any other county in the state (or anywhere else) where you can see both American Dipper and Black Skimmer in the same day, with neither being accidental. In all, it was a great day for us all. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 03 13:57:31 2001 Subject: [SBB] Indigo Bunting -------- All: Lisa Pavey and I saw an adult male Indigo Bunting this morning at Arastradero Preserve in Palo Alto. It was perched in the grass above the Corte Madera trail, about 1/2 mile from the road. It was near the high point of the trail before it drops down to the lake. More precisely, it was just before a Corte Madera trail sign which is at the junction of the trail and an unnamed track coming in from the right. The bird flew off over the hill after a minute, but before doing so was interacting with what we thought was a female or young bunting. Yours, John Meyer PS On another matter, Maria and I had a male Rufous Hummingbird at our feeder yesterday. The first one in perhaps five years of feeding (years ago we had one bird we took to be an Allen's). And the first one we've ever seen on the west side of the valley. * * * * * * * * John Meyer, Dept of Soc, Stanford U, Stanford, CA 94305, 650-7231868 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 04 06:06:21 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Sunday afternoon, 1 Jul 01, I checked out the Los Gatos Perc Ponds, finding a GREEN HERON near the footbridge that crosses the creek. The heavy willow growth here looks like fine breeding habitat for this heron. Overhead, a single VAUX'S SWIFT was probably from a local breeding population. On the fourth of July I checked out the Palo Alto area. Adobe Creek had a male BLUE-WINGED TEAL and a male GREEN-WINGED TEAL. A lot of shorebirds are back - including many WILLETS, GREATER YELLOWLEGS, MARBLED GODWITS, LONG-BILLED CURLEWS, etc. The Palo Alto estuary had 12 WHIMBRELS. The duck pond had a pair of LESSER SCAUP. At Matadero riparian I had a GREEN HERON and a scraggly-looking male YELLOW WARBLER. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 04 15:56:27 2001 Subject: [SBB] Oversummering Shorebirds -------- I've been watching Shoreline and Palo Alto, and suspect that we have a small population of Whimbrels, Godwits, Willets, and Long-billed Curlews that never left. Either that or the returnees returned before their friends left. -- Richard C. Carlson Full-time Birder, Biker, Skier, Hiker Palo Alto, California Part-time Economist [[email protected]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 05 03:51:26 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Oversummering Shorebirds -------- ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Carlson" <[[email protected]]> > I've been watching Shoreline and Palo Alto, and suspect that we have a > small population of Whimbrels, Godwits, Willets, and Long-billed Curlews > that never left. Either that or the returnees returned before their > friends left. Fall shorebird migration generally begins around the end of June, with the first migrants typically being those that breed the closest to our area - Wilson's Phalaropes, Willets, etc. The timing of this migration is fairly consistent from year to year, without regard to the presence of oversumming individuals, and can be seen quantitatively by a surge in numbers and/or species. By the way, I forgot to mention that yesterday I had about a dozen GREATER YELLOWLEGS in the Palo Alto flood control basin. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 05 10:23:39 2001 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 7/5/2001, an adult GREEN HERON was in the weeping willows on the north shore of Shoreline Lake, and at least three juveniles were nearby in the willows, either nearly fledged, or just fledged. The herons nested in this willow this year, the first breeding record for Block 8040. Three adult LEAST SANDPIPERS at Charleston Slough are in the vanguard of fall migrants (or wintering birds). A single VAUX'S SWIFT was with the Cliff Swallows at the Renzel Wetlands in Palo Alto, which seems early for a dispersing bird. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 05 21:45:21 2001 Subject: [SBB] Nesting Nutmeg Mannikins -------- Hi All, This morning I was birding the Almaden Lake / Los Alamitos creek trail with a visiting friend and spotted a pair of Nutmeg Mannikins caring long pieces of green grass into a small Oak tree along the trail. After watching the birds activity we were able to spot the nest location, which appeared to be a round woven complety covered dome construction. It did not seem to be finished since the birds were still adding to the insides. It would appear that eggs and chicks will soon follow. For those of you who keep records on breeding birds this may be of interest, though I understand this has occurred in prior years and of course the birds are an introduced species. Anyway, for all who might wish to see these birds, the location is on the Los Alamitos creek trail, about 100 yards south after the trail goes under the Mazzone Street bridge over crossing. The small Oak tree is by a blue plastic PVC pipe sticking out of the ground on the left side of the trail and a large white sign on a pole on the right. Directly across the fence and on the far side of the street is a blue house with a gray tile roof. The street address is 6024 Crossview CT. Enjoy and Happy Birding, Jerry Towner -------- Attachment 1.3 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 06 08:18:35 2001 Subject: [SBB] Nutmeg Mannikin Nesting -------- Folks: On 7/6/2001, Jerry Towner reported Nutmeg Mannikins building a nest along Alamitos Creek Trail. He said: >For those of you who keep records on breeding birds this may be of interest, >though I understand this has occurred in prior years and of course the birds >are an introduced species. I have records of nest building from previous years (which are always of interest), but no evidence of successful nesting, such as adults carrying food to the nest, young birds being fed, or dependent fledglings. I'm interested in whether this nest is successful as well. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 06 11:39:53 2001 Subject: [SBB] Nesting Nutmeg Mannikins -------- At 12:45 AM 7/6/01 EDT, [[email protected]] wrote: >>>> arialHi All, This morning I was birding the Almaden Lake / Los Alamitos creek trail with a visiting friend and spotted a pair of Nutmeg Mannikins caring long pieces of green grass into a small Oak tree along the trail. After watching the birds activity we were able to spot the nest location, which appeared to be a round woven complety covered dome construction. It did not seem to be finished since the birds were still adding to the insides. It would appear that eggs and chicks will soon follow. For those of you who keep records on breeding birds this may be of interest, though I understand this has occurred in prior years and of course the birds are an introduced species. Anyway, for all who might wish to see these birds, the location is on the Los Alamitos creek trail, about 100 yards south after the trail goes under the Mazzone Street bridge over crossing. The small Oak tree is by a blue plastic PVC pipe sticking out of the ground on the left side of the trail and a large white sign on a pole on the right. Directly across the fence and on the far side of the street is a blue house with a gray tile roof. The street address is 6024 Crossview CT. Enjoy and Happy Birding, Jerry Towner arial<<<<<<<< I went and saw the nest this morning and was shown another mannikin nest, at approximately the same stage of completion. The second nest is about halfway (~100 yds.) between the gate at the north (Almaden Lake Park) end of the trail and a set of exercise bars. It is in the smaller of two adjacent double-trunked sycamores on the west side of the trail, at the left rear (as you face west) underside of the canopy. It is a fairly clear view, although shaded. A bad omen for this nest is that a jay was checking it out, much to the consternation of the mannikins. For those who have never seen a mannikin nest, they are big! --Peter ------------------------------------------------------ Peter LaTourrette North American Bird Photo Gallery: http://www.birdphotography.com/ Jasper Ridge, Hawai'i, New Zealand: http://www.stanford.edu/~petelat1/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 07 09:44:10 2001 Subject: [SBB] Orange Bishop -------- Has anyone seen the Orange in the past few days? I have gone to see him at various time without luck. Carol -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sun Jul 08 18:00:36 2001 Subject: [SBB] pelicans -------- This morning in the Emily Renzel Wetlands, there were 10 American White Pelicans feeding and a single juvenile Brown Pelican roosting on the island closest to Matadero Creek. Jan Hintermeister Santa Clara, CA -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sun Jul 08 20:03:13 2001 Subject: [SBB] Palo Alto & Shoreline -------- Last night there was a young, all charcoal black, clapper rail with it's parent, in the channel near the entrance to the Palo Alto dump. There were also large numbers of Willet, Long-billed Curlew, and Whimbrel. Small numbers of Western sandpipers and Dowitcher have returned. Mtn. View Forebay had a young Moorhen This morning there were about 200 White Pelicans, mostly first year birds, at Shoreline. Moorhens are nesting in a pile of sticks in the middle of the channel directly across from the Skimmer/tern island. -- Richard C. Carlson Full-time Birder, Biker, Skier, Hiker Palo Alto, California Part-time Economist [[email protected]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sun Jul 08 20:22:35 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Nesting Nutmeg Mannikins -------- Hi, I went out today (Sunday) to have a look at the nest. It was very easy to find, given the excellent directions. When I first got there, there was no activity. But after a few minutes, a bird (or birds) flew out of the nest and across the creek to collect more nest material. I saw quite a few trips from 4:25pm to 5:10pm. If anyone has information on Nutmeg Mannikins beyond what is in the Sibley and National Geographic guides, I'd love to see it - especially an online source. I'd also be interested in hearing future observations of this particular nest. Thanks to Jerry for posting this. Don Ganton [[email protected]] *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** On 7/6/01 at 12:45 AM [[email protected]] wrote: Hi All, This morning I was birding the Almaden Lake / Los Alamitos creek trail with a visiting friend and spotted a pair of Nutmeg Mannikins caring long pieces of green grass into a small Oak tree along the trail. After watching the birds activity we were able to spot the nest location, which appeared to be a round woven complety covered dome construction. It did not seem to be finished since the birds were still adding to the insides. It would appear that eggs and chicks will soon follow. For those of you who keep records on breeding birds this may be of interest, though I understand this has occurred in prior years and of course the birds are an introduced species. Anyway, for all who might wish to see these birds, the location is on the Los Alamitos creek trail, about 100 yards south after the trail goes under the Mazzone Street bridge over crossing. The small Oak tree is by a blue plastic PVC pipe sticking out of the ground on the left side of the trail and a large white sign on a pole on the right. Directly across the fence and on the far side of the street is a blue house with a gray tile roof. The street address is 6024 Crossview CT. Enjoy and Happy Birding, Jerry Towner -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sun Jul 08 20:32:09 2001 -------- This morning, 7/8/01, I saw a pair of newly hatched COmmon MOorhen at the entrance to Almaden Lake. The parents were kept busy chasing off GReat EGrets, SNowy EGrets, Great Blue HErons and GReen HErons. The parent sure have a brilliant beak this time of year. The 'nest's in a dead tree near the island at the entrance to the lake. The island's occupants this morning at 7:00 AM included; BLack PHoebe (2), KILLdeer (3), FOrster's TErns (>12), CAspian TErn (1), COMO(2), Ring-Billed GUll, (1), SNEG, and an unidentified GUll (?). The gull, possibly a RBGU or CAGU?, was the most colorless gull I have ever seen. The legs were grey with a hing of green, the bill had a black ring near the tip and had no yellow coloring, just a dull grey bill (both upper and lower madibles). The Head and neck was mostly white with grey flecks scatter throughout. The back was a light grey color and the wings were black. Other birds of interest to me were a family of Ash- Throated FLycathers, parents were feeding a fledged youngsters along creek. HOoded ORioles and Black-Headed GRosbeaks were also observed. A total of 52 species were identified at the lake and along Alamitos Creek leading into the lake. All in all a most enjoyable Sunday morning. Cheers, Karl Fowler -- American Kestrel - Falcon Sparverius - The tiny but mighty falcon. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sun Jul 08 21:26:12 2001 Subject: [SBB] Hayward Shoreline -------- Today at the Hayward Shoreline while doing a Tern and Skimmer count for SFBBO 12 Black Skimmer's were seen. This included 2 young birds but the rest were adults. This included only 1 confirmed nest (another was abandoned) and several possible nests. Good Birding Bob -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 09 03:35:24 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Saturday, 7 Jul 01, I went down to Uvas Creek Preserve in Gilroy, hoping to confirm the chat's breeding effort. I didn't see or hear these birds, but I did have others of interest. PURPLE FINCHES were singing, just as they were on previous visits. I saw what might have been a family group, with a male and 3 female types. I suspect local breeding, which is interesting for this lowlying riparian corridor. Both CALIFORNIA THRASHER and WRENTIT were present. It's interesting how these "chaparral" species adopt to riparian corridors and other densely-vegetated areas, seemingly far from their typical habitat. A covey of CALIFORNIA QUAIL included a number of half-grown young birds. VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOWS were feeding young on the wing and circling around a mature sycamore that may have been a nest site. I couldn't find any Yellow Warblers, which I had seen on my previous visit, and was hoping to confirm breeding here in this ideal habitat. Perhaps they get quiet later in the season, and in the middle of the day. Other birds of interest were a RED-SHOULDERED HAWK, a GREEN HERON, a BAND-TAILED PIGEON, and a family group of AMERICAN KESTRELS. On Sunday, 8 Jul 01, I visited the Stevens Creek Tidal Marsh at Shoreline, hoping to scope through some peeps. However, the mudflats had only a scattering of LONG-BILLED CURLEWS. I did find a VIRGINIA RAIL in the cordgrass, though. It seems a little early for a migrant, so I wonder if this bird oversummered or bred here. A stop at the CCFS waterbird pond produced hundreds each of WILSON'S PHALAROPE and WESTERN SANDPIPERS, but nothing unusual in with them. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 09 08:32:28 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] pelicans -------- I also saw the juvenile Brown in the Emily Renzel Wetlands, around 4:30pm Sunday. It was feeding in the water closest to Matadero Creek, then eventually flew to roost on that same island. Barry ----- > This morning in the Emily Renzel Wetlands, there were 10 American White > Pelicans feeding and a single juvenile Brown Pelican roosting on the island > closest to Matadero Creek. > > Jan Hintermeister > Santa Clara, CA -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 09 09:38:51 2001 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 7/9/2001, I saw only a single imm. GREEN HERON at Shoreline Lake. In the Mountain View Forebay were two adult LESSER YELLOWLEGS in with about six GREATERs. An alt. LONG-BILLED DOWITCHER was also in the forebay with the yellowlegs. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 09 10:45:00 2001 Subject: [SBB] Bob Lutman Orange Bishop photos -------- All, For those like me who unsuccessfully tried to look at Bob Lutman's Orange Bishop photos after reading his post, I just got an email from Bob (who is in Turkey now) indicating that they will be posted later this week... Mike Rogers -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 09 13:57:49 2001 Subject: [SBB] Orange Bishops -------- Folks: The most recent issue of _Western Birds_, Vol. 32, has a short note on Orange Bishops: Gatz, T. A. 2001. Orange Bishops breeding in Phoenix, Arizona, pp. 81-82. Although this is not for our area, the breeding phenology and habitat use may be similar. He found bishops in both a "grassy tree-lined partially channelized desert wash" and a "small cattail marsh." He noted males displaying to females from June to September, nest construction in early July, and an unoccupied but completed nest on 6 Aug (photo). Keep your eyes open. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 10 00:52:50 2001 Subject: [SBB] Orange Bishop Photos Now Available -------- Hi All, To my distress, I still cannot do seven things at once. Our Turkey trip is ancient history, so I have put up the promised orange bishop photos (see below for access instructions). Thanks for your patience, and Great Birding. Thanks to Mike Rogers for forwarding my oops-I-can't-get-to-it-right-now message. "Gule Gule" [one of the several Turkish forms of goodbye]. Bob Here's a repeat of my earlier email ---------------- I read John Meyer's June 4 SBB report of the Orange Bishop along Adobe Creek in Palo Alto. After confirming the location with John, Sharon and I drove up from San Jose about June 7, 2001, and Sharon watched the bird conveniently fly in and perch, between the building with the swallow nests and the creek. I have been experimenting with taking digital photos through my spotting scope, and got two shots. The first shows the bird associating with a female blackbird (I think). The second is more of a closeup, and shows the molting process well under way. See the birds at http://www.24birds.net, click on Birding:Trip Reports, scroll down to Our Bird Photos (In the Wild), then click on Orange Bishop I don't know how long it will be before I stop thinking, "How fantastic is the SBB?" Thanks, John. I presume this is an escapee. Does anybody know? And is the bird molting TO or FROM breeding colors, being a southern hemisphere bird but in North America? Of course, I could drive up there periodically and see the trend... ----------------------------------- -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 10 01:03:05 2001 Subject: [SBB] Owling trip to Almaden Quicksilver Co. Park, 7-9-01, SCVAS trip to Rancho del Oso, 7-7-01 -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, Monday evening (7-9-01) I led an owl walk for a group from my birding class into the Senator Mines Area of Almaden Quicksilver Park. Frank Vanslager was also with us looking for Common Poorwills. It was a beautiful warm evening, with Mars shining bright and crickets chirping. We waited near the mine ruins until after dark for COMMON POORWILL, and finally saw one flying around after 9:15 pm. Following it with our flashlight beams we were able to see the white tips to its outer tail feathers and red eyeshine. While waiting for poorwills to become active we saw a few bats and had a trio of Coyotes walk right past us, one of which appeared to have an injured leg. We hiked farther up the trail, stopping to look at a Western Toad, and in hillside oak woodland we quickly called up a pair of WESTERN SCREECH-OWLS. We had a brief look at one, and later got a longer view of one on our walk back to the trailhead. But I thought the most exciting find was made by my friend Troy Navarro, who spotted some bio-luminescence in the grass and went off trail to pick up a pink glowworm. It had a flat pinkish body with a bright green glow coming from the rear end of its abdomen. When the flashlights were turned off its tail glowed continously like emerald fire (not pulsing on and off like a firefly). Is this a common insect? I've never seen one before. Also saw a Black-tailed Deer on the walk back. What a perfectly magical evening! Saturday (7-7-01) I led a SCVAS field trip to Rancho del Oso (coastal entrance to Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Santa Cruz Co.). We saw a lot of birds (50+ species) during our hike from the beach inland to Camp Herbert, with some nice mixed species flocks and numbers clearly augmented by many recently fledged young. Highlights included excellent views of ALLEN'S HUMMINGBIRDS, HAIRY WOODPECKER, WESTERN WOOD-PEWEE, OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHERS (with long close looks at a juvenile bird), PACIFIC-SLOPE FLYCATCHER, SWAINSON'S THRUSHES, CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEE, BROWN CREEPER, PYGMY NUTHATCHES, WINTER WREN, WILSON'S WARBLER, and BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK. At Camp Herbert a GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET was heard singing up high in the canopy. The only shorebirds seen at the mouth of Waddell Creek were a WHIMBREL and a lone adult WESTERN SANDPIPER. John Mariani [[email protected]] www.birdswest.com -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 10 16:03:20 2001 Subject: [SBB] Arastradero Preserve -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I birded Arastradero Preserve in hopes of finding a county Indigo Bunting (One was seen last week by John Meyer and Lisa Pavey). Unfortunately we saw no buntings. Best birding was along the "new" Acorn Trail between Corte Madera Trail and Meadowlark Trail. We had lots of House Finches, Mourning Doves, both towhees, Lesser Goldfinches and Oak Titmice, several Blue-gray Gnatcatchers (seems like a good year for them), several Ash-throated Flycatchers, Acorn & Nuttal's Woodpeckers, Band-tailed Pigeons, some Dark-eyed Juncos, White-breasted Nuthatches, Bushtits, White-tailed Kites, Bewick's Wrens, Turkey Vultures, a "pair" of Warbling Vireos, two high pitched rapidly calling young Red-tailed Hawks (one chasing the parent), one adult with a fairly large snake in it's talons, a couple fly over Great Blue Herons, Violet-green and Cliff Swallows, Black Phoebe, an adult male Bullock's Oriole, a House Wren, a male Wilson's Warbler , an accipiter (probably a Sharp-shinned Hawk), and a nicely calling Cassin's Vireo, with only two American Coots, one young Mallard and one adult male Ruddy Duck in the pond (any self respecting bird has left the pond to avoid construction activity involoving the downstream edge of the pond and it's spillway). Take care, Bob Reiling, 3:38 PM, 7/10/01 -------- Attachment 1.6 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 11 11:02:32 2001 Subject: [SBB] Various Sightings -------- Good morning all; On Saturday we did our usual weekly Bluebird trail monitoring and canvass of Ed R. Levin county park. Our species count was a disappointing 45. The summer doldrums seem to be firmly here. The most notable find? A Great Horned Owl and 3 fledglings east of the Elm picnic area! The fuzzy young were quite a contrast to the well patterned adult. We usually manage to scare up 2 or 3 Barn Owls, but they were conspicuously absent this past weekend (may be due to the proximity of the GHOW's). In addition, it's been more than a month since we've seen any of the LEOW's (Long-eared Owl). Anybody know any different? On Sunday, as we were leaving the area for some birding further away, we happened to spot what looked like a Bald Eagle over Oka Ponds as we were getting on 17 S. The white head against the dark body was VERY distinctive, even at the distance we were viewing. But the tail color wasn't. It seemed too dark. I was hoping that perhaps someone else had seen that bird and could confirm or dispel my quick "snap-sighting" as we were leaving. Anybody? Best regards, Dusty Bleher Campbell -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 11 11:23:19 2001 Subject: [SBB] Shoreline & Baylands -------- This morning Shoreline park had a Shrike, the first I've seen there for months. There have been no Burrowing Owls lately. Are they all napping early? I was there by 7:45 The Flood Basin had a nice Blue Wing Teal male in the main pond. Migration clearly under way as Dowitcher, Western and Least Sandpiper numbers build. Richard C. Carlson Full Time Birder, Biker, Skier, Hiker Part-time Economist Palo Alto & Lake Tahoe, CA [[email protected]] 650-949-9590 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 12 11:29:14 2001 Subject: [SBB] Golden-crowned Kinglet nesting confirmed -------- Hi SBB, Back on May 23 I posted about singing Golden-crowned Kinglets in the southern Santa Cruz Mountains of SCL at private forest lands along Bodfish Creek and at Mount Madonna County Park. I was back at the Bodfish Creek property this morning (7/12) and was able to confirm nesting there. I saw one family group of both adults feeding 9 or 10 (!) begging juveniles. Elsewhere I heard one singing adult and heard calls from three other birds. All were in second growth redwood forest. This is now the southernmost known breeding station in the Santa Cruz Mountains, but barely. Other sites (some also newly colonized) are almost as far south at U.C. Santa Cruz, and in the watersheds of Aptos Creek and Browns Creek, Santa Cruz County. But taking the Santa Cruz Mountains as a whole, the Bodfish birds are at the southeast edge of the species' present regional distribution. David Suddjian, Capitola Santa Cruz Bird Club Bird Records Keeper [[email protected]] -------- Attachment 1.1 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 12 14:22:14 2001 Subject: [SBB] another Cooper's Hawk nest -------- All, I spent an hour over lunch today 7/12/01 looking for the "small number" of Cedar Waxwings reported by Barry Langdon-Lassagne in eastern Sunnyvale on the 1st of July. I had no luck refinding any waxwings, but did locate 2 juvenile COOPER'S HAWKS near a used nest (lots of down and whitewash) at the junction of Lily and Tamarack. These birds were being harassed by NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRDS, WESTERN SCRUB-JAYS, HOODED ORIOLES, ANNA'S HUMMINGBIRDS, and AMERICAN ROBINS, making them easy to locate. Also of interest were a NUTTALL'S WOODPECKER and 3 to 4 VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOWS, unrecorded in block 8535 for the breeding bird atlas. Mike Rogers -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 12 14:49:44 2001 Subject: [SBB] Brown Pelican at Oka Ponds -------- Hi, Yesterday evening, while driving South on Hwy 17 past Oka ponds, I saw a Brown Pelican fishing in the largest pond (the one North of the gazebo pond). Traffic was moving slowly enough that I got a good look and I'm confident of the ID. Strange place to see one, though. Don -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 13 08:36:58 2001 Subject: [SBB] Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher in dowtown SJ -------- Little after 6:30 am this morning, on my way to work, I found a male Blue-gray Gnatcatcher in with a flock of Bushtits at Giffard and West San Fernando Streets in downtown San Jose. The "flock" was just past Hwy 87 toward the Cal-train Station along the creek (name ?) that splits off from the Guadalupe. Up-stream from the Guadalupe Creek Environmental Education center on Santa Clara street where at the split occurs. This individual was making a lot of racket and was easy to find, but did not stay around long. Not a typical bird I see on the way to work everyday. Eric Feuss ABTS Application Developer, Administrator Product Process Management Technologies (PPMT Team) Adobe Systems Incorporated Mailstop: W06, 345 Park Ave., San Jose, CA 95110 Phone: (408) 536-3050 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 13 09:40:54 2001 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 7/13/2001, there was an eclipse or female GREEN-WINGED TEAL in the Mountain View Forebay. Also there was an adult LESSER YELLOWLEGS in with six GREATER YELLOWLEGS. SEMIPALMATED PLOVERS are back in force with 50-100 in the Stevens Creek Tidal Marsh. I estimated 8-10 WHIMBREL there as well. There BURROWING OWLS were at Shoreline Park, including two in a ground squirrel burrow away from the mounds. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 13 11:27:36 2001 Subject: [SBB] Peregrine Falcons in dowtown SJ -------- We'll he or she is back, hanging out on the Heritage sign on the Heritage building along Almaden Blvd. Unlike last year, where I quite frequently saw one individual and, from time-to-time, two individuals between early May to November, this year they have been typically absent around the Park Ave. / Almaden Blvd. / San Fernando Street / Guadalupe River area. I suspect, with the amount of construction going in downtown San Jose this year, that the Peregrine(s) hangs out around the construction sites where the Rock Doves are more numerous and where they (both the Rock Doves and Peregrines) know there are good "pickens". The pigeons have been somewhat absent from around this area, too, probably for this very reason. Eric Eric Feuss ABTS Application Developer, Administrator Product Process Management Technologies (PPMT Team) Adobe Systems Incorporated Mailstop: W06, 345 Park Ave., San Jose, CA 95110 Phone: (408) 536-3050 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 13 14:21:39 2001 Subject: [SBB] RFI Peregrine Falcon nest at Oracle -------- I have been watching the web cam of the Peregrine nest at Oracle pretty regularly. While I haven't seen the adults in over a week, the young had continued to grow and get more and more dark feathers. Yesterday afternoon he wasn't there and cannot be seen on the roof cam either. Does anyone know what happpened? -Chris -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 13 15:32:14 2001 Subject: [SBB] Upper Los Gatos Creek birds -------- Hi SBB, I visited the upper watershed of Los Gatos Creek for a little while today (7/13). I found more GOLDEN-CRWONED KINGLETS, including another observation of a family group with adults feeding at least 4 begging young. The confirmation was on the south side of Los Gatos Creek about 0.3 mi WNW of the crossing of Wright's Station Road. One singing and one calling GCKI were heard at two other spots along Wright's Station Road, south of Los Gatos Creek. A PILEATED WOODPECKER gave "kuk kuk kuk" calls for a while about 0.5 mi NW of the Wrights Station crossing of Los Gatos Creek. An adult male PEREGRINE FALCON was soaring over high over the watershed in the vicinity of the dam at Lake Elsmen. David Suddjian, Capitola Santa Cruz Bird Club Bird Records Keeper [[email protected]] -------- Attachment 962 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 14 01:28:24 2001 Subject: [SBB] Almaden Lake Park, SCVAS field class in Yosemite National Park -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, Late Friday afternoon Jolene and I visited Almaden Lake Park in south San Jose. The vegetated island in the middle of the lake was crowded with GREAT & SNOWY EGRETS. Also on or around the island were BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERONS, 1 GREEN HERON, and CASPIAN & FORSTER'S TERNS. Just upstream from the lake I saw a RED-SHOULDERED HAWK, a BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK and several HOODED ORIOLES. An adult COMMON MERGANSER near the Mazzone Street bridge was accompanied by several juvenile birds, and a streaky juvenile SPOTTED TOWHEE was in brush a bit farther up the creek. Didn't see any Nutmeg Mannikins around the reported nest sites. Earlier in the day two pairs of adult CALIFORNIA QUAIL with about 15 chicks were seen dust bathing and foraging in dry grass behind my parent's house at the foot of the Santa Teresa Hills. There are still spaces available in the SCVAS field class in Yosemite National Park (meets at McClellan Ranch on the evening of August 20th, and in Yosemite National Park on the weekend of 24-26 August). If anyone is interested in getting more information about the class and weekend field trip, go to: http://home.att.net/~redknot/yosemite_classes.htm John Mariani [[email protected]] www.birdswest.com -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 14 04:58:28 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Saturday, 14 Jul 01, I visited the waterbird pond at CCFS to look for shorebirds. A few hundred WESTERN SANDPIPERS were in and out, and the number of WILSON'S PHALAROPES had fallen to about 15. A handful of dowitchers looked to be LONG-BILLED. At the EEC there were still 4 adult BLACK SKIMMERS and 2 half-grown young on the islands of salt pond A16. A CASPIAN TERN flyby was an addition to the many FORSTER'S. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 14 14:02:41 2001 Subject: [SBB] LETEs Staging at Crittenden Marsh -------- All: On Saturday, July 14, at 10 AM I saw that the Least Terns are again staging in the Cargil pond just north of Crittenden Marsh. Mostly it is a distant scope view to the east, to the birds perched on the north-running wooden walkway; the size difference to the occasional perched Forster's Tern is readily apparent (in my scope). A quick scan of the walkway revealed 42 LETEs sitting there quietly, with only an occasional bird flying to reveal their quicker and more fluttery wing action. Then the sun broke through, spoiling the seeing. Frank Vanslager -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 16 10:00:47 2001 Subject: [SBB] shorebirds -------- All, Yesterday morning 7/15/01, I spent a couple of hours looking for shorebirds. I started out at the CCFS waterbird pond, which initially had a flock of about 150 peeps. In among the WESTERN SANDPIPERS was as single adult SEMIPALMATED SANDPIPER. This flock was fairly skittish, flying around even when something as small as a swallow came too close, and soon headed back over the fence to the sewage ponds. Other shorebirds here included a group of 60 LONG-BILLED DOWITCHERS, 1 to 2 SHORT-BILLED DOWITCHERS, 11 adult GREATER YELLOWLEGS, and a single male WILSON'S PHALAROPE. The peep numbers had rebuilt to 60 when I left, but the SESA was not among them. One WESTERN SANDPIPER was banded with an orange band above the "knee" on the right leg (and silver band below the "knee" on the left). At least 5 GREAT EGRET nests still have young in them. The pond at State and Spreckles was devoid of shorebirds, except for a single precocial young BLACK-NECKED STILT. The northernmost of the Calabazas Ponds had 4 LESSER YELLOWLEGS in among 29 GREATER YELLOWLEGS. Seven more DOWITCHERS appeared to be (mostly?) LONG-BILLED. Other birds in the area included 1 adult male HOODED ORIOLE, 2 GREEN HERONS (1 adult, 1 immature), and a small flock of molting post-breeding VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOWS. Walking back along the bike path along Highway 237 I had an agitated BURROWING OWL in the shadow of the blue "Litter Removal" sign along the highway, halfway along the southern edge of the south pond. Mike Rogers -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 17 08:16:00 2001 Subject: [SBB] Peregrine Falcon in dowtown SJ -------- Well, the Peregrine Falcon I have been seeing on and off for the last few days has been and is back this morning on the Heritage sign on the Heritage building along Almaden Boulevard in downtown San Jose. The Heritage building is located at 150 Almaden Boulevard. The building's sides are at 45 degree angles to the street. The sign I am referring to faces north toward the P.G. & E. administrative building which is located on the corner of West San Fernando and Almaden Boulevard and across Almaden Blvd. from the Heritage building. The bird is definitely and adult. From recently obtained information, but an untrained eye in this regards, I will hazzard to say this bird is a male. Given the last few days, this "male" appears to like either the top of the "T" or "G" of the sign. This year, I have occasionally seen the peregrine flying around the Fairmont Hotel and new construction whenever I walk over to the Fairmont fountains. Form postings I sent to SBB last year, I will mention that ... The sidewalk along San Fernando Street, under the PG & E building (not the administrative one to which I referred earlier, but the windowless one located catty corner) was littered with the bones, wings, legs of its (their) prey (there were two Peregrine Falcons present last year in the late Summer/Fall, one through most of the Summer). The Peregrine(s) also spent quite a bite of time on the Adobe towers. Neither are true this year. Eric Eric Feuss ABTS Application Developer, Administrator Product Process Management Technologies (PPMT Team) Adobe Systems Incorporated Mailstop: W06, 345 Park Ave., San Jose, CA 95110 Phone: (408) 536-3050 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 17 10:30:47 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Saturday afternoon, 14 Jul 01, I went to Crittenden Marsh after reading Frank Vanslager's post and counted 48 LEAST TERNS on the salt pond north of there. On Monday, 16 Jul 01, the grassy area around the waterbird pond at CCFS had a female RING-NECKED PHEASANT with 2 downy chicks that couldn't have been more than a couple days old. The KILLDEER nest that is coned-off on the levee has been abandoned. Today, 17 Jul 01, the Mountain View Forebay had a GREEN HERON and a calling VIRGINIA RAIL. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 17 17:56:57 2001 Subject: [SBB] One Tree! -------- Hello, I sat under one tree in Rancho San Antonio Park (not the OSP) from 1:00 to 2:30 this July afternoon and saw these birds land in the tree. ACORN WOODPECKER (2) NUTTALL'S WOODPECKER (2) BLACK PHOEBE ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER STELLER'S JAY (2) OAK TITMOUSE (2) CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEE BUSHTIT WRENTIT BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK (4) DARK-EYED JUNCO HOUSE FINCH LESSER GOLDFINCH It seemed like a lot to me. The tree is in a small, diamond shaped lot next to the 4 tennis courts. It has walking paths on all four sides. The tree is so small and open it barely casts shade. No optics needed, of course. Gordon Barrett [[email protected]] __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 17 19:07:19 2001 Subject: [SBB] Alviso juvenile brown pelican -------- This bird was seen around 2:00 at the small pond northwest of where Gold St goes underneath 237 at the base of the old landfill. It was roosting on the landfill side of the pond. Jan Hintermeister Santa Clara, CA -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 06:52:39 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Strange -------- ----- Original Message ----- From: <[[email protected]]> > On the way up I was surprised to see a seal or sea-lion > (I can't tell the difference) in Stevens Creek. I didn't > even know that they came into the bay (whichever they > are). Sea lions have external ear flaps, whereas seals just have an ear opening in the side of the head (there may be other differences as well). Harbor Seals are not uncommon in the south bay sloughs. These guys have the mottled, blotchy grayish patches on their heads. > And on a day of strangeness, this morning I found a > Pied-billed Grebe in the car park at work. We must be > several hundred yards from the nearest suitable habitat > and this bird could not fly. It also could not walk well but > I have never seen any grebe on land, so that may be > natural. Diving birds, such as grebes and loons, are very clumsy on land because they have their feet set so far back on the body. Also, they can not take off from land because they need a running start to get airborne (which they usually get by paddling along the surface of the water). Sometimes these birds will land in an asphalt parking lot at night when it is wet, and it therefore looks like a body of water. They can not then take off again. I'm not sure what would have grounded this grebe, though, since it's not been wet for some time. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 09:58:02 2001 Subject: [SBB] Charleston Slough Water Level -------- Charleston Slough had the lowest water level I've ever seen this morning, 7/18. It was mostly mud flat with a few channels of water. It was so low I'm wondering if Mountain View did some dredging outside the slough or changed the water pumping somehow. Anyone happen to know? I didn't look much at the birds, but noted a large group of peeps out in the middle of the slough. Nancy Teater -- Nancy R. Teater Hamilton Communications phone: +1 650 321 0252 [[email protected]] http://web.hamilton.com fax: +1 650 327 4660 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 11:35:46 2001 Subject: [SBB] Charleston Slough -------- Folks: Nancy Teater asked about the water level in Charleston Slough. The simple answer is that Charleston Slough is a muted tidal impoundment since it was first diked, probably about 1923. For the first half century there was substantial tidal flow through a pipe in the levee. The slough in that era has been described as being largely cord grass and pickleweed, that is a classic S. F. Bay slough. Leslie Salt replaced the pipe sometime in the 1970s, I believe, with a smaller pipe, higher in the levee, and the regime changed entirely. Instead of tidal flows of a few feet, it dropped to a few inches. At this point BCDC stepped in and issued a cease and desist order. Leslie got out of this by selling the slough to Mountain View for a buck. Mountain View put in a new set of pipes and valves in 1980 and this had no effect, partly because the design was poor and partly because the lack of scouring outside the slough had allowed the build up of mud that blocked tidal flow. The first Mountain View pipes and gates were redesigned and an improved design was put in about two years ago. I don't know if dredging outside the new gates was required or not, but as Nancy noticed, there is a great deal of tidal variation in the slough now and perhaps it will revert to a classic salt marsh in the next few years (decades?). That all of this has happened is a consequence of new laws written in the 1960s that created BCDC and the passion and persistence of Florence and Phil LaRiviere who never let Mountain View or BCDC forget Leslie's error or the requirements of the orginal cease and desist order to restore a ruined salt marsh. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 15:31:19 2001 Subject: [SBB] Harbor Seals -------- Folks: Andy Gibb mentioned a pinniped in Stevens Creek. It is likely that this was a Harbor Seal. They have a number of calving grounds in the South Bay as well as along the coast. Another good reason for a wildlife refuge here. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 15:36:29 2001 Subject: RE: [SBB] Charleston Slough Water Level -------- Birders: >Charleston Slough had the lowest water level I've ever seen this morning, >7/18. It was mostly mud flat with a few channels of water. It was so low >I'm wondering if Mountain View did some dredging outside the slough or >changed the water pumping somehow. Anyone happen to know? > To augment Bill Bouseman's reply, No, there was no dredging. It took about two years for the improved flow into the slough through the new gate to scour out the channel outside the slough. It is now working as designed. Charles Coston ------------------------------------------------------------ WWW.COM - Where the Web Begins! http://www.www.com -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 19:56:07 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Strange -------- These birds will also land on a mirage that looks like water -- thus stranding them. Richard C. Carlson Full Time Birder, Biker, Skier, Hiker Part-time Economist Palo Alto & Lake Tahoe, CA [[email protected]] 650-949-9590 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 18 22:29:12 2001 Subject: [SBB] Strange -------- I had some distant views of the Least Terns north of Crittenden Marsh this lunchtime – no field marks possible but their general size and behaviour made them obvious. They were definitely fishing in a different way to the Forster’s. On the way up I was surprised to see a seal or sea-lion (I can’t tell the difference) in Stevens Creek. I didn’t even know that they came into the bay (whichever they are). And on a day of strangeness, this morning I found a Pied-billed Grebe in the car park at work. We must be several hundred yards from the nearest suitable habitat and this bird could not fly. It also could not walk well but I have never seen any grebe on land, so that may be natural. I took it in to the good folks at Palo Alto Wildlife Rescue where it is presently being rehydrated. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Jul 19 16:43:08 2001 Subject: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- All, Sorry about posting out of the county but thought that some would like to know that a first year STFL is being seen at the Long Marine Labs located at the end of Delaware Av (just past the rear entrance to Natural Bridges State Park) in Santa Cruz. The bird is being seen in the ocean side field about 100 yds past the entrance to the labs. Take care, Bob Reiling, 4:46 PM, 7/19/01 -------- Attachment 506 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 05:02:43 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On the way home from work last night, 19 Jul 01, I saw a BROWN PELICAN fly overhead at hwy 101 and Hellyer. I know that White Pelicans can be found in south San Jose, but it seemed out of place for a Brown. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 08:21:21 2001 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: Yesterday, 7/19/2001, there was a single LESSER YELLOWLEGS in the Mountain View Forebay, along with two GREATERS. A female CINNAMON TEAL there had eight newly-hatched ducklings. There were at least two BURROWING OWLS at Shoreline Park, one on the eastern mound and another using a ground squirrel burrow in the grasslands. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 11:16:09 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- There is a clickable map of California that takes you to the various e-mail list options for each county at: If you like to know about rarities in other nearby counties or areas, it's best to subscribe to those lists and to not depend on hearing about them on SBB. It also keeps the traffic on SBB limited to area reports and discussions. Les -- Les Chibana List Bureaucrat South-Bay-Birds List [[email protected]] On Friday, July 20, 2001 10:27 AM, [[email protected]] wrote: >Don’t apologise, Bob. Personally I would like to hear >much more about sightings on the San Mateo and >Santa Cruz coasts. For me they are much easier to get >to than Mines Road, say. What do other people think? >Or is there already a newsgroup for the coast? > >And while I’m on the subject does anyone know if >Cassin’s Auklet would be possible off Pescadero? I >swear that only that would fit the description of the blob >I saw in the ocean there on Sunday but my field guide >suggests that they are generally more offshore. The >only other possibility I could find was Marbled Murrelet >but I swore I was getting intermittent flashes of white >from the rump (if that doesn’t sound too rude!). >> >>----- Original Message ----- >>From: [[email protected]] >>To: [[email protected]] >>Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2001 4:43 PM >>Subject: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed >Flycatcher >> >> >>All, >> >>Sorry about posting out of the county but thought that >some would like >to >>know that a first year STFL is being seen at the Long >Marine Labs >located at >>the end of Delaware Av (just past the rear entrance to >Natural Bridges >State >>Park) in Santa Cruz. The bird is being seen in the >ocean side field >about >>100 yds past the entrance to the labs. >> >>Take care, >>Bob Reiling, 4:46 PM, 7/19/01 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 14:45:33 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- Andy, The page does exist. It looks like the URL ended up with a line break in it and that's why the link is broken. The html doc name is "emailmap.htm". It looks like the URL broke between "emai" and "lmap.htm". Try it again. The Monterey list is similar to SBB, you have to send a request to the list owner. Information is at the above site. San Mateo (peninsula-birding) and San Francisco (SFBirds) are on YahooGroups. Every county in Calif. is covered. Les On Friday, July 20, 2001 3:24 PM, [[email protected]] wrote: >>There is a clickable map of California that takes you to >the >>various e-mail list options for each county at: >> >>lmap.htm> >> >Thanks for the link, Les. Unfortunately the page doesn’t >exist. I have already found the transcriptions of the >Monterey Bay list but have never found a way to >subscribe to it. There is also a North Bay list but poor >old San Mateo and San Francisco counties seem to be >orphans. > >I guess I should have reread the charter first anyway. > >Back on this side of the hills a Peregrine Falcon was >harassing the shorebirds in the Palo Alto FCB this >lunchtime. Oddly this is the first Peregrine I have seen >in the Bay outside Alviso. And it’s not as though they >skulk when they are about. >-++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== >This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list >server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the >message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to >[[email protected]] > -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 15:31:00 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- Linda Terrill here: The problem is a missing underline in Steve's name. Use -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 16:14:01 2001 Subject: [SBB] Aggressive immature Brown Pelican -------- There is an immature Brown Pelican outside the TiVo building right now that is acting very aggressive towards any people in the area. I just went to investigate and as soon it saw me in the parking lot area it flew directly towards me and then came "at me" with bill agape! Anyone know what would cause this type of unprovoked aggression? After we left the area, it sat down on the asphalt. Perhaps it's sick? -- Paul Stevens [[email protected]] Tivo, Inc. http://www.tivo.com P.O. Box 649101 408-519-9194 Alviso, CA 95164-9101 Fax: 408-519-5339 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 16:43:52 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- Les and South Bay Birders: The map you mention does not include the following three lists: 1) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CALBIRDS 2) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PasadenaAudubon 3) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kerncobirding See also http://www.kernriverpreserve.org and http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kerncobirding/message/64 Les Chibana wrote: > There is a clickable map of California that takes you to the > various e-mail list options for each county at: > > > > If you like to know about rarities in other nearby counties or > areas, it's best to subscribe to those lists and to not depend > on hearing about them on SBB. It also keeps the traffic on SBB > limited to area reports and discussions. > > Les > > -- > > Les Chibana > List Bureaucrat > South-Bay-Birds List > [[email protected]] > -- Mike Feighner, Livermore, CA, Alameda County -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 17:27:40 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- Don’t apologise, Bob. Personally I would like to hear much more about sightings on the San Mateo and Santa Cruz coasts. For me they are much easier to get to than Mines Road, say. What do other people think? Or is there already a newsgroup for the coast? And while I’m on the subject does anyone know if Cassin’s Auklet would be possible off Pescadero? I swear that only that would fit the description of the blob I saw in the ocean there on Sunday but my field guide suggests that they are generally more offshore. The only other possibility I could find was Marbled Murrelet but I swore I was getting intermittent flashes of white from the rump (if that doesn’t sound too rude!). > >----- Original Message ----- >From: [[email protected]] >To: [[email protected]] >Sent: Thursday, July 19, 2001 4:43 PM >Subject: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher > > >All, > >Sorry about posting out of the county but thought that some would like >to >know that a first year STFL is being seen at the Long Marine Labs >located at >the end of Delaware Av (just past the rear entrance to Natural Bridges >State >Park) in Santa Cruz. The bird is being seen in the ocean side field >about >100 yds past the entrance to the labs. > >Take care, >Bob Reiling, 4:46 PM, 7/19/01 > > > -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Fri Jul 20 22:24:47 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- >There is a clickable map of California that takes you to the >various e-mail list options for each county at: > > > Thanks for the link, Les. Unfortunately the page doesn’t exist. I have already found the transcriptions of the Monterey Bay list but have never found a way to subscribe to it. There is also a North Bay list but poor old San Mateo and San Francisco counties seem to be orphans. I guess I should have reread the charter first anyway. Back on this side of the hills a Peregrine Falcon was harassing the shorebirds in the Palo Alto FCB this lunchtime. Oddly this is the first Peregrine I have seen in the Bay outside Alviso. And it’s not as though they skulk when they are about. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 21 00:10:47 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] Santa Cruz County Scissor-tailed Flycatcher -------- I promise this is my last word on the subject! If anyone else has a dim browser like mine (IE5, so this could be quite a few of you), you will have to remove the trailing > (greater than) sign before the browser recognises the URL. Now I can see California. Thank you. >Linda Terrill here: > >The problem is a missing underline in Steve's name. Use > >-++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==-- ++**==--++**==--++**== >This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list >server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the >message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] > -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 21 13:50:08 2001 Subject: [SBB] Black-chinned Sparrow -------- All, On a scouting trip for my class I visited Montebello OSP along Pagemill Road. Most of the expected species were found, including scores of VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOWS, BARN SWALLOWS and CLIFF SWALLOWS. One lone NORTHERN ROUGH-WINGED appeared also. Many LESSER GOLDFINCHES were present in the open areas. A juvenile ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER was seen being fed by an adult close to the parking area. COOPER'S HAWK, RED-TAILED HAWK and RED-SHOULDERED HAWK were the only raptors encountered. HAIRY WOODPECKER, ACORN WOODPECKER, BROWN CREEPER, WILSON'S WARBLER, HUTTON'S VIREO were among the birds seen in the forested areas. Most interesting however, was an adult BLACK-CHINNED SPARROW seen foraging along the hillside trail just after the main parking lot. The Frances Brenner memorial stone bench is a good marker. The bird appeared first in a lone coyote bush just below the sign that says "Vista Point" and then flew up to the trail and remained there for a few moments allowing close observation. The bird appeared to have no black on the face, but an entirely blank gray head, with the slightest hint of a head pattern. I assume this suggests a female. The bill was pinkish, the breast and belly were flat gray fading to a pale gray near the tail, and a brown and black streaked "saddle" was clearly seen on the back. Overall the bird appeared slender and "longish" with a fairly narrow tail. A very peculiar looking sparrow... Matthew Dodder http://www.birdguy.net P.S. The 8-week beginning birdwatching class begins in early September and fills up fast, so please call the Palo Alto Adult School for details: 650.329.3752 or visit their website: www.paadultschool.org/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 07:57:20 2001 Subject: [SBB] Some Weekend Birds -------- Hello All, Here are a few bird sightings from my wanderings around local areas this past weekend. Crittenden Marsh, July 21: 15+ LEAST TERNS were foraging in the northwest corner of the large pond. Although it was hard to get a good scope view on these quickly fluttering terns, several of them flew in quite close for good binocular views. It looked like there were more perched on the wooden catwalk farther east in the pond. Alviso EEC, July 21: An adult BLACK SKIMMER was roosting on the first island. Also present on the same island was a very young gull chick - fluffy gray down with dark speckling about the head. Santa Teresa CP, July 21: A juvenile GRASSHOPPER SPARROW seen in the north side of the park. The bird was perched on a fence post along Bernal Road just west of the last pullout before entering the IBM property (about a mile and a half from the entrance at Bernal & Heaton Moor Dr). Almaden Reservoir, July 22: Two WOOD DUCKS were seen among the willows at the upper end of the reservoir - an adult eclipse-plumaged male and a juvenile. A female was seen the week before in the secluded woodland pond 3/10 mile from the dam (the White-throated Sparrow spot). That's it for now - Ann -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 10:35:06 2001 Subject: [SBB] BANK SWALLOW (7/21/01) -------- Sorry for not being able to post earlier. Saturday, around 1PM there was a BANK SWALLOW at the pumphouse at the Mtn. View Forebay. It was first noticed by two visiting birders from Israel (as in "Sand Martin !") whom I was showing around the area. I was able to get a look to confirm the id. The bird was flying about and had come in close to the pumphouse a couple of times before we left. Vivek [[email protected]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 12:48:22 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] BANK SWALLOW (7/21/01) -------- i believe nearest known colony is at south end of Oc ean Beach, San Francisco ------------ Previous Message from "Tiwari, Vivek" <[[email protected]]> on 07/23/2001 10:35:06 AM ---------- To: "'[[email protected]]'" <[[email protected]]> cc: Subject: [SBB] BANK SWALLOW (7/21/01) Sorry for not being able to post earlier. Saturday, around 1PM there was a BANK SWALLOW at the pumphouse at the Mtn. View Forebay. It was first noticed by two visiting birders from Israel (as in "Sand Martin !") whom I was showing around the area. I was able to get a look to confirm the id. The bird was flying about and had come in close to the pumphouse a couple of times before we left. Vivek [[email protected]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 14:22:56 2001 Subject: RE: [SBB] Aggressive immature Brown Pelican -------- I know this is not helpful as an explanation, but I had a similar but "opposite" experience a couple of weekends ago, when I was walking around the shore of Lake Cunningham. I passed within 3 feet of a Brown Pelican (adult) standing by the shore who stared at me, not moving, as I walked by. I had a similar thought go through my mind - is it sick or dying? - although I saw no obvious injuries. Jonathan Hays -----Original Message----- From: [[email protected]] [mailto:[[email protected]]]On Behalf Of Paul Stevens Sent: Friday, July 20, 2001 4:14 PM To: [[email protected]] Subject: [SBB] Aggressive immature Brown Pelican There is an immature Brown Pelican outside the TiVo building right now that is acting very aggressive towards any people in the area. I just went to investigate and as soon it saw me in the parking lot area it flew directly towards me and then came "at me" with bill agape! Anyone know what would cause this type of unprovoked aggression? After we left the area, it sat down on the asphalt. Perhaps it's sick? -- Paul Stevens [[email protected]] Tivo, Inc. http://www.tivo.com P.O. Box 649101 408-519-9194 Alviso, CA 95164-9101 Fax: 408-519-5339 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 16:34:42 2001 Subject: Re: [SBB] BANK SWALLOW (7/21/01) -------- Isn't there a colony at Ano (Anyo) Nuevo, too? I saw many up in Anchorage, AK, in June. This bird could have come from any one of the many other western colonies. Les Chibana On Monday, July 23, 2001 12:48 PM, [[email protected]] wrote: >I believe nearest known colony is at south end of Oc ean Beach, >San Francisco > >------------ Previous Message from "Tiwari, Vivek" <[[email protected]]> on >07/23/2001 10:35:06 AM ---------- > > >To: "'[[email protected]]'" > <[[email protected]]> >cc: >Subject: [SBB] BANK SWALLOW (7/21/01) > > > >Sorry for not being able to post earlier. > >Saturday, around 1PM there was a BANK SWALLOW at the pumphouse at the Mtn. >View Forebay. >It was first noticed by two visiting birders from Israel (as in "Sand Martin >!") whom I was showing around >the area. I was able to get a look to confirm the id. The bird was flying >about and had come in close >to the pumphouse a couple of times before we left. > >Vivek >[[email protected]] > -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 17:40:45 2001 Subject: [SBB] County Birding -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I birded Monte Bello (only the grassy hillsides alongside Page Mill Road and the parking lot) in hopes of finding a Black-chinned Sparrow. No Black-chinned Sparrow but we did find lots of Grasshopper Sparrows (about every 2 out of 3 being juveniles), three to four juvenile Chipping Sparrows (in a mixed flock also containing a Grasshopper Sparrow and a Bewick's Wren), several Blue-gray Gnatcatchers, several Western Bluebirds (including a heavily striped & spotted juvenile), several Ash-throated Flycatchers, many Dark-eyed Juncos, Purple Finches, both goldfinches, Bushtits, a male Hairy Woodpecker, White-tailed Kites, Red-tailed Hawks, a Red-shouldered Hawk, a female Northern Harrier, an accipiter (possible Cooper's Hawk), a single Vaux's Swift, Violet-green, Tree , Northern Rough-winged and Barn Swallows. An anomalous sighting was of a fairly dark-bellied swallow that repeatedly visited a hole in the bottom of a broke branch of one of the conifers on the north side of Page Mill Road (about eight feet off the ground). I assume that it could not have been a Northern Rough-winged Swallow but then it would seem that it would have to be either a juvenile Violet-green Swallow or possibly a juvenile Tree Swallow (we never got a good look at it in flight but it generally looked very grayish-brown overall). We would have called the bird a NRWS but as far as I know they don't nest in holes in trees. Would an early year juvenile VGSW be feeding later year hatchlings? Take care, Bob Reiling, 5:39 PM, 7/23/01 -------- Attachment 1.9 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 19:51:16 2001 Subject: [SBB] Re: Bank Swallows -------- All, I recently sent out the following e-mail on pen-bird (the San Mateo County list). "On Sunday (7/8, at Ano Nuevo) I had several Bank Swallows between the pond and the entrance to the permit area.  I also saw six Brandt on Bight Beach near the Elephant Seals." Bank Swallows will be at or near Ano Nuevo, on and off, for the next five to six weeks. SC County Bank Swallows are rare and reportable. Take care, Bob Reiling, 7:44 PM, 7/23/01 -------- Attachment 641 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 23 23:35:17 2001 Subject: [SBB] Night hike in Almaden Quicksilver Park -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, This evening Ann Verdi and I did a short hike into Almaden Quicksilver Park from the McAbee Road entrance. At dusk we saw and heard 2-4 COMMON POORWILLS near the mine ruins. Ann spotted one on the road in front of us, and after that we repeatedly glimpsed them flying over the hillsides, and saw a pair together at one point. Farther up the trail we found a family of WESTERN SCREECH-OWLS in the same place where a pair was found on our owling trip earlier this month. There were at least 5 chirping and trilling around us, but we could only see 2, a juvenile and an adult. On the way back, at a trail intersection where there is a picnic table, we saw another adult WESTERN SCREECH-OWL. All along the trail I watched for glowworms in the grass but didn't see any-- John Mariani [[email protected]] www.birdswest.com -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 24 02:46:47 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Sunday, 22 Jul 01, I stopped by CCFS, where I had a HOUSE WREN just outside the trailer. This may have been the same bird that was banded that day (I didn't look for a band). This would be the third House Wren banded there since the 15th, and probably reflects dispersal from local sites. Also banded on Sunday was the first WILLOW FLYCATCHER of the season. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 24 09:03:42 2001 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 7/24/2001, there was a single LESSER YELLOWLEGS in the Mountain View Forebay. Bill -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 24 10:28:58 2001 Subject: [SBB] Re: County Birding -------- On Monday, July 23, 2001 5:40 PM, [[email protected]] wrote: >All, > >This morning Frank Vanslager and I birded Monte Bello (only the grassy >hillsides alongside Page Mill Road and the parking lot) in hopes of finding a >Black-chinned Sparrow.  No Black-chinned Sparrow but we did find lots of >Grasshopper Sparrows (about every 2 out of 3 being juveniles), three to four >juvenile Chipping Sparrows (in a mixed flock also containing a Grasshopper I led a class trip around Skyline Ridge Open Space on Sunday, 7/22, and we also checked Monte Bello for Matthew Dodder's reported Black-chinned Sparrow in the early afternoon heat. We also came up empty. We heard but did not see Grasshopper Sparrows along the trail 50 yds. or so beyond the bench where Matthew reported the Black-chinned. >Sparrow and a Bewick's Wren), several Blue-gray Gnatcatchers, several Western >Bluebirds (including a heavily striped & spotted juvenile), several >Ash-throated Flycatchers, many Dark-eyed Juncos, Purple Finches, both >goldfinches, Bushtits, a male Hairy Woodpecker, White-tailed Kites, >Red-tailed Hawks, a Red-shouldered Hawk, a female Northern Harrier, an >accipiter (possible Cooper's Hawk), a single Vaux's Swift, Violet-green, Tree We also had a single VAUX'S SWIFT at Skyline Ridge near the north parking lot flying with a single WHITE-THROATED SWIFT. We also had one LAZULI BUNTING and a pair of BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK feeding at a fruit-laden blue elderberry in the same area. A flock of PYGMY NUTHATCH vocally worked the firs south of the Alpine Pond ranger station next to the tennis court/ nursery. A silent OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER perched at the west side of Alpine Pond. >, Northern Rough-winged and Barn Swallows.  An anomalous sighting was of a >fairly dark-bellied swallow that repeatedly visited a hole in the bottom of a >broke branch of one of the conifers on the north side of Page Mill Road >(about eight feet off the ground).  I assume that it could not have been a >Northern Rough-winged Swallow but then it would seem that it would have to be >either a juvenile Violet-green Swallow or possibly a juvenile Tree Swallow >(we never got a good look at it in flight but it generally looked very >grayish-brown overall).  We would have called the bird a NRWS but as far as I >know they don't nest in holes in trees.  Would an early year juvenile VGSW be >feeding later year hatchlings? Could the "early year juvenile VGSW" have been an adult female? They are a bit more drab than the ad. males. > >Take care, >Bob Reiling, 5:39 PM, 7/23/01   Les Chibana, Palo Alto -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 25 12:23:29 2001 Subject: [SBB] Today's Birds -------- Good Afternoon All... Have a great morning of birding right here at my house. Bewick's Wren, Black-headed Grosbeaks (4), Lesser Finch, House Finch, CA Towhee, Belted Kingfisher, Nuttall's (3), White-breasted Nuthatches (2), Anna's Hummingbirds (4), Snowy Egret, lots of Mourning Doves, Oak Titmouse (3), Chestnut backed Chickadees, Dark-eyed Juncos (5), Northern-rough Winged Swallows (4), Stellar's Jays (4), Scrub Jays (4), Band-tailed Pigeons (10) and the Red-shouldered Hawk is still visiting the creekside. Hope you all have good birding. My best regards, Linda -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Wed Jul 25 17:13:37 2001 Subject: [SBB] Shoreline --Peregrine & Sora -------- The Mtn. View Forebay had a wonderfully cooperative young (dingy beak and buffy undertail) Sora this morning, walking out in the open and then swimming near the cattails. The Steven's Creek mitigation ponds had a young? (buffy breasted) Peregrine sitting on the power tower and hungrily eyeing the large shorebird locks -- L-B Curlew, Willet, Whimbrel, Dowitcher, Semipalmated Plover and Least and Western Sandpipers. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Sat Jul 28 13:09:17 2001 Subject: [SBB] Black Swift: Monte Bello -------- All: This morning, I was surprised to see a Black Swift from the trail near the Monte Bello Preserve parking lot. It was foraging with a few Violet-Green Swallows, rather low. The identification was pretty clear: it was bigger than the swallows, black, and languid in flight. It was very warm, and the birds were not active. Two juvenile Grasshopper Sparrows were perched on the bushes at the very top of the hill by the parking lot. No Chipping or Black-Chinned Sparrows. Yours, John Meyer -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 30 02:10:46 2001 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On both Saturday and Sunday, 28 - 29 Jul 01, an adult COMMON TERN in basic plumage was at the Sunnyvale sewage ponds. I first noticed it foraging over the eastern pond, my attention being drawn by the dark carpal bars. Later, it landed on the levee that separates the two ponds and I was able to compare it directly with an adult FORSTER'S TERN. It was just slightly smaller than the Forster's, with slightly shorter legs and bill. The legs looked dark, but were in shadow (the same view of the Forster's showed reddish or orangish legs). The bill was black. The dark area around the eyes extended back around the nape and up onto the rear crown. The forehead and forecrown were white. The dark carpal bar could be seen below the scapulars on the folded wing. When the bird began to preen, I could also see the black edge to the outer tail feather. In flight the bird looked a little shorter-tailed than Forster's. The upperwing pattern showed a distinct dark carpal bar, darkish outer primaries (but not showing a really distinct dark wedge), and dusky secondaries that contrasted slightly with the greater wing coverts (in Arctic Tern the secondaries should be the whitest part of the wing). The underwing showed a black trailing edge to the primaries that was thicker than that shown by Forster's or Arctic (and typical of Common). A LESSER YELLOWLEGS was also along the channel separating the two ponds on Saturday, as were about a thousand BLACK-NECKED STILTS. On Sunday the CCFS waterbird pond had good numbers of shorebirds, but nothing unusual. Mike Mammoser -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Mon Jul 30 07:34:05 2001 Subject: [SBB] Calero Reservoir -------- Hello All, On Sunday, July 29, a CLARK'S GREBE was seen at the upper end of Calero Reservoir. Possibly this is the same grebe seen earlier in the summer. Also at the upper end were 12 Black-necked Stilts, 16 Forster's Terns (including juveniles), and 2 Caspian Terns. Only ducks seen were Mallards. On Saturday, July 28, at Uvas Reservoir an adult CASPIAN TERN was seen feeding a juvenile. Also a GREEN HERON was seen along the marshy banks. Ann -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== This message was posted through the Stanford campus mailing list server. If you wish to unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message body of "unsubscribe south-bay-birds" to [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Tue Jul 31 14:49:33 2001 Subject: [SBB] County Common Tern -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I decided to try for the easy Common Tern seen by Mike Mammoser on Saturday and Sunday at the Sunnyvale Water Treatment Facility. Unfortunately the bird was not easy to find and we had essentially given up hope when we found a first fall juvenile perched in the far southeastern corner of salt pond A3W (near the Moffet Field Golf Course). The bird was perched on a post, in good light about 100 yds from the nearest dike. The upper parts of the bird (mantle, scapular, and wings) were essentially all gray (primaries were a blackish-gray) with the lower parts (lower face, throat, chest, belly, flanks, etc.) all white. The bird had a white forehead with black extending back from the eye up and over the back of the head to a point fairly low on the nape of the neck. The wing had an obvious black carpal bar, the bill was black and the legs were blackish-red. We also noted that the tertials were a darker gray than the secondaries, scapulars or mantle. The primaries projected well beyond the tail. As we slowly moved north in an attempt to get a better viewing angle (especially of the tail, looking for a dark edge) when the bird which had earlier been preening suddenly took off, flew a couple circuits and then headed north until out of sight. The black carpal bar was easily seen in flight. Earlier we had noted massive groups of peeps flying over West Pond and the pond to the north (A5) which looked very much like large swarms of insects. Unfortunately the viewing distances for peeps feeding in West Pond was to great to positively ID what looked to be a basic plumaged Semipalmated Sandpiper. There were perhaps a hundred Semipalmated Plovers with the peeps. Take care, Bob Reiling, 2:53 PM, 7/31/01 -------- Attachment 2.0 KBytes --------