From [[email protected]] Wed Nov 01 11:52:10 2000 Subject: [SBB] List admin stuff - host was inactive -------- All, The Stanford list host, where SBB lives, was undergoing some configuration changes since yesterday and was out of action until just a few minutes ago. Some of you may have tried to post, unsuccessfully. SBB should be operable again. Those of you who had an issue with your ISP using a spam listing service that rejected SBB posts should know that this was the nature of the config change. If you would like to change your SBB subscription back to your previous address, let me know. Les -- Les Chibana List Bureaucrat South-Bay-Birds List [[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]] Wed Nov 01 12:33:11 2000 Subject: [SBB] November 11th long distance pelagic -------- Forwarding for Mike Feighner for Todd Easterla -------------------------------------- Date: Tuesday, October 31, 2000 From: Mike Feighner <[[email protected]]> San Francisco Birders - I have promised Todd Easterla I would send this out to East Bay Birders who may not get CALBIRD. Sorry to those getting this more than once. ********** Pterodroma Tours still has a few spaces left to fill the boat for the November 11th trip out of the Berkeley Marina. This trip will most likely be headed to the southwest toward the Pioneer and Gumdrop seamounts and beyond to the continental shelf. Previous November trips here have yielded Stejneger's, Mottled, and Cook's Petrels and Parakeet Auklets as well. The boat that we will be using is very fast and stable compared to other boats used for long distance trips. We proved On October 14th that this boat was made to take on rougher weather and still make decent time. I will be introducing a couple of new leaders on this trip. Hopefully we will hit good weather and find target birds. You may e-mail me ([[email protected]]) or call me to reserve your spot on the boat (address and phone # below) http://www.jps.net/~todtringa/Tours.htm Todd Easterla (county twitcher) [[email protected]] Rancho Cordova, Ca. (916) 638-7007 -- Mike Feighner, Livermore, 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 Nov 01 15:03:47 2000 Subject: [SBB] County birding -------- All, Third attempt, this apparently did not go thru yesterday or this morning due to Stanford equipment problems. Bob Reiling, 3:00 PM, 11/1/00 All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I had a basic plumaged Stilt Sandpiper with a good sized flock of dowitchers in the pond across from the Coyote Creek Field Station banding trailer. A Sharp-shinned Hawk was also nearby. Best bird in the Waterbird Pond was a Dunlin that was in with a small flock of dowitchers. At 12:20 PM in Lake Cunningham we saw the adult Lesser Black-backed Gull near the small island on the north side of the lake. The bird was easy to find but we had been searching for perhaps 10 minutes before it suddenly appeared near the island. At one point all of the gulls on the lake (including the LBBG) suddenly took to the air and flew toward the west. After a quick search we found an immature Bald Eagle flying (alternately flapping and soaring) high across the lake and to the south. Lighting was bad but a divided white tail (dark down the center) with a narrow dark edge was well seen. The trailing edge of the wing looked ragged (with widely spaced light areas that I initially took to be missing feathers but that were most likely whitish feathers). Because of the poor lighting the wing had an overall dark appearance (that is we could not see any expected "lighter" areas). Kaufman's new field guide has a photo of a soaring immature Bald Eagle with the tail that I saw, the wing also looks good (especially the trailing edge) but it's a bit better lit than the bird we saw. The bird later spent some time soaring near a Turkey Vulture and although the wingspan of the eagle was longer it was not a great deal longer. This small difference, by itself, suggests that the bird was a Bald Eagle since the smallest Golden Eagle would have a 16 percent longer wingspan than a Turkey Vulture (the smallest Bald Eagle has a one inch longer wingspan than the average Turkey Vulture). Earlier we had a flock of about 22 Dunlin (with a mixed flock of "peeps") in the gull roosting area east of the Alviso Marina parking lot, a Lesser Yellowlegs in the pond at State and Spreckles, an adult Peregrine Falcon on a power tower alongside the EEC entrance road and a 2 - 3 Dunlin on the first small island in Salt Pond A16 (EEC). Belated CCFS sightings: last Friday we had a Pectoral Sandpiper in the first pond south of the banding trailer, an adult Golden Eagle overhead and a female Merlin was perched in a bare tree southeast of the trailer. Take care, Bob Reiling, 3:17 PM, 10/31/00 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 01 15:27:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] Sierra Road summit -------- All, At mid-day today 11/1/00, I checked the Sierra Road summit for longspurs. No luck, although there were 36 HORNED LARKS and 30 AMERICAN PIPITS in the area. Also of interest were 2 ROCK WRENS, 1 adult GOLDEN EAGLE, and at least 4 WHITE-THROATED SWIFTS. On the way up I had an adult FERRUGINOUS HAWK perched on a telephone pole along Felter Road (near a milemarker with 0334 on it) and on the way down there were about a dozen LARK SPARROWS in with a big HOUSE FINCH/WESTERN BLUEBIRD/AMERICAN GOLDFINCH flock below the stock pond west of the summit. Also 2 more WHITE-THROATED SWIFTS over the railroad tracks in Milpitas. 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]] Wed Nov 01 21:50:11 2000 Subject: [SBB] Osprey -------- All, Day 30 for the Vasona Reservoir OSPREY. After some research I have concluded, because of a band of light brown markings across the breast, that it is probably a female. Tell me, if I'm wrong. Jean -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 02 05:43:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- At lunch time today, 2 Nov 00, I went to Alviso and checked the pond at State and Spreckles. I found a basic-plumaged STILT SANDPIPER, perhaps the same one that has been here on and off for a couple months. Also present were a LESSER YELLOWLEGS and 17 LONG-BILLED CURLEWS. An adult PEREGRINE FALCON was perched on a power tower along the EEC entrance road. 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 Nov 02 10:52:46 2000 Subject: [SBB] Backyard Birds -------- JeanDubois certainly has the cat-bird's seat when viewing "his" Osprey....I've been fortunate enough to share his view with him of this beautiful bird. I'm now 3 for 3 for days of seeing "my" tan morph White-throated Sparrow. Hopefully it has settled in to spend the winter with me. Last year I had a black morph, so obviously a different bird. Maybe a black one will appear Yesterday I had a White-breasted Nuthatch drinking out of my fountain...I only have one other recorded backyard visit of this species...in 1997. The American Goldfinches are back in force, frequently 20 or so of them are here. The Lesser Goldfinch are still here, but they are year round. Gloria LeBlanc Los Gatos off Quito -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 02 11:20:33 2000 Subject: [SBB] Pre-SCVAS Era -------- Do any of you more historical minded birders have any knowledge of the Cooper Ornithological Club? I have a turn of the century envelope postmarked in Santa Clara on January 4, 1901 which contains the club's coat of arms style emblem topped with a Cal. Quail. The return address portion lists G. Barlow as Editor in Chief of "The Condor". It is addressed to Benj. T. Gault Esq. of Glen Ellyn, IL. If anyone has any knowledge of this birding club, please feel free to email me. Thx, Gina Sheridan 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]] Thu Nov 02 11:27:32 2000 Subject: [SBB] Stevens Ck at L'Avenida -------- All, This morning 11/2/00 before work, I again spent some time along Stevens Creek between Highway 101 and Crittenden Lane. The highlight of the trip was finding two female-plumaged COMMON MERGANSERS in the creek between L'Avenida and Highway 101, the first I have seen in this here. All three HOUSE WRENS were still present at their favored spots (the end of L'Avenida, north of the lone eucalyptus, and at the Crittenden Road bridge). Two ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLERS were both of the "lutescens" type. Also of interest were 3+ DARK-EYED JUNCOS, 2 COMMON SNIPE, and a female BELTED KINGFISHER. 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 Nov 02 11:58:21 2000 Subject: [SBB] Cooper Ornithological Club -------- Folks: Gina Sheridan asked about the Cooper Ornithological Club: >Do any of you more historical minded birders have any knowledge of the Cooper >Ornithological Club? I have a turn of the century envelope postmarked in >Santa Clara on January 4, 1901 which contains the club's coat of arms style >emblem topped with a Cal. Quail. The return address portion lists G. Barlow >as Editor in Chief of "The Condor". It is addressed to Benj. T. Gault Esq. of >Glen Ellyn, IL. I will answer to SBB rather than Gina, as this is of general interest. The Cooper Ornithologicl Club (COC) was formed in 1893 in San Jose by four active birders and oologists who felt that there must be more to bird study than individuals collecting eggs for their "cabinets." Chester Barlow was one of the four, but offhand I've forgotten the other three. They generally met monthly at members' homes and read papers on various aspects of birds. These papers, although perhaps amateurish by present scientific standards, had a vast amount of useful first hand knowledge, particularly concerning breeding birds (since all of these guys were egg collectors). About this same time, H. R. Taylor, of Alameda, started publishing a monthly bird journal which he called the Nidiologist (and later renamed the Nidologist based on a comment from Elliott Coues). He was a member of the COC and eventually became its president. He offered to summarize their meetings and use their papers in his journal. He published the Nidiologist/Nidologist from 1893 to 1897 and it contains a wealth of information about the early activities of the COC. However, he went out of business in 1897 and the COC was left without a place to write up their field work. At this time they had about 80 members and this included a Southern California Division. With a great deal of guts and financial risk they decided to publish their own periodical and the first issue was published in 1899 as the "Bulletin of the Cooper Ornithological Club." In 1900 they re-named their journal "The Condor"; this was volume 2. Volume 99 of The Condor sits on my desk at home and is now a major archival publication of ornithological science, sponsored by the re-named Cooper Ornithological Union or COU. The California Quail Gina mentions was painted by W. Otto Emerson of Haywards and was the seal used by the Club. Haywards was, of course, later renamed Hayward. Later publication of The Condor contain a lot of material on the earlier years of the Club and some of the conservation battles they were involved in. A full collection in on the mezzanine at Stanford's Falconer Library and a nearly full collection is included in the legacy of Dick Mewaldt's library that is at SFBBO (I think). 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 Nov 02 12:14:08 2000 Subject: [SBB] A few Palo Alto birds -------- This morning I heard a Winter Wren from Matadero Creek (east of highway 101). Yesterday the area past the end of Embarcadero Way had 2 Orange-Crowned Warblers (one quite bright, one duller but not "gray-headed") and a continuing Nuttall's Woodpecker (this location seems a bit odd for one). A flock of about 50 Bonaparte's Gulls briefly emerged from the Wastewater plant (appar- ently to chase a Red-Tailed Hawk) before disappearing again. Al -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 02 12:25:02 2000 Subject: [SBB] Skyline birds -------- This morning, 11/2/00, I saw my first "for the season in my yard" FOX SPARROW (Sooty type) and VARIED THRUSH (female plumage). I have been hearing truncated versions of the characteristic vocalization of Varied Thrush for about two weeks in the area. But, with so many vocally versatile Steller's Jays in my area, I can't be certain who produced those sounds. On the other hand, I haven't heard those sounds until recently. Over the last week, a very vocal RED-SHOULDERED HAWK has been in the neighborhood, too. For those who don't know, I live along Skyline Blvd. between Page Mill Rd. and Saratoga Gap, on the east (Santa Clara Co.) side. Les Chibana, Palo Alto, 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]] Thu Nov 02 14:02:45 2000 Subject: [SBB] Sum. Tanager in Menlo -------- For those of you who don't check or get the transcript of the Northern Calif. Birdbox: On November 1st a SUMMER TANAGER was seen in Menlo Park. Take the bike bridge that connects Willow Road in Menlo Park to Palo Alto Drive near Bryant Street in Palo Alto. The bridge is accessible at the cul-de-sac at the end of Willow Place (Christy Nelson) Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 02 15:09:20 2000 Subject: [SBB] County birding -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I birded Ed Levin Park, Calaveras Road (north from it's junction with Felter Road), Felter Road south and Sierra Road. Best birds were a near adult Golden Eagle over the north part of Ed Levin, a large flock of Lark Sparrows in a shallow valley on Calaveras Road about 3/4 mile north of it's junction with Felter Road, the cattle pond north of Felter Road (seen from the small group of Eucalyptus trees) had two dowitchers and a Greater Yellowlegs along with nice variety of ducks and on Sierra Road we had 2-3 Golden Eagles and 2-3 first fall Rufous-crowned Sparrows (the stripe on the lower edge of the malar, AKA malar stripe, was very light and the rufous crown had a narrow, but distinct, light colored stripe down the center). Take care, Bob Reiling, 3:03 PM, 11/2/00 -------- Attachment 922 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Fri Nov 03 10:27:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] Two new Yard birds in Los Altos -------- I had two new yard birds at my feeder and watering station in urban Los Altos, near Foothill and Grant Rd. A Red-breasted Nuthatch was at the feeder and a Pine Siskin was seen drinking from the clay pottery watering saucer. Lou -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 03 11:21:52 2000 Subject: [SBB] verdict on the Virginia's Warbler -------- Dear south-bay-birders, Below is the opinion of warbler-expert Kimball Garrett on our "Virginia's Warbler". It sure would be nice to see those original plates he mentions! Mike Rogers Mike: I'm always hesitant to draw conclusions from electronic photo files, but I can say with some confidence that this isn't a pure Virginia's Warbler. No Virginia's specimen I've seen shows yellow-olive in the wings or tail. Our book's text accurately notes this, but the color reproduction of the plates was so crappy that everything got washed with too much yellow on some plates. I wish people could see the original plates, the way they were meant to look! Not only does your bird show obvious green on the wings and the rectrices, but there seems to be some yellow on the sides, which would be odd for a Virginia's. I certainly see dull fall imm. Nashville's that show almost completely gray backs -- the green tinges on the wings and tail are often more obvious than those on the back. Your bird looks exceptionally gray on the back -- perhaps the one thing that would lead me to consider a Virginia's X Nashville hybrid. The tail length is hard to gauge, but looks typical of Nashville to me (not long like Virginia's, though the differences are not major). Phillips did "lump" Nashville and Virginia's, but he also threw Colima into his combined "Gray-headed Warbler", which is pretty ridiculous! Oberholser, on the other hand, actually put Nashville and Virginia's in different genera (!!!) based on primary shape. Ned Johnson published a paper debunking the idea of an overlap in the ranges of Nashville and Virginia's (though more northerly Virginia's breeding sites have been found since his paper); but there is marginal overlap in parts of California, and hybridization wouldn't be terribly unlikely. I'd consider your bird a Nashville, but can't completely rule out a hybrid. -- Kimball ********************************************************** Kimball L. Garrett Ornithology Collections Manager Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90007 USA 213/763-3368 phone; 213/746-2999 FAX [[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 Nov 03 13:27:48 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Cooper Ornithological Club -------- Thank you Bill. I appreciate your time in helping us to connect with our ornothological roots. Gina At 11:58 AM 11/2/2000 -0800, [[email protected]] wrote: >Folks: > >Gina Sheridan asked about the Cooper Ornithological Club: > >>Do any of you more historical minded birders have any knowledge of the Cooper >>Ornithological Club? I have a turn of the century envelope postmarked in >>Santa Clara on January 4, 1901 which contains the club's coat of arms style >>emblem topped with a Cal. Quail. The return address portion lists G. Barlow >>as Editor in Chief of "The Condor". It is addressed to Benj. T. Gault Esq. of >>Glen Ellyn, IL. > >I will answer to SBB rather than Gina, as this is of general interest. The >Cooper Ornithologicl Club (COC) was formed in 1893 in San Jose by four active >birders and oologists who felt that there must be more to bird study than >individuals collecting eggs for their "cabinets." Chester Barlow was one of >the four, but offhand I've forgotten the other three. They generally met >monthly at members' homes and read papers on various aspects of birds. These >papers, although perhaps amateurish by present scientific standards, had a vast >amount of useful first hand knowledge, particularly concerning breeding birds >(since all of these guys were egg collectors). > >About this same time, H. R. Taylor, of Alameda, started publishing a monthly >bird journal which he called the Nidiologist (and later renamed the Nidologist >based on a comment from Elliott Coues). He was a member of the COC and >eventually became its president. He offered to summarize their meetings and >use their papers in his journal. He published the Nidiologist/Nidologist from >1893 to 1897 and it contains a wealth of information about the early >activities of the COC. However, he went out of business in 1897 and the COC >was left without a place to write up their field work. > >At this time they had about 80 members and this included a Southern California >Division. With a great deal of guts and financial risk they decided to >publish their own periodical and the first issue was published in 1899 as the >"Bulletin of the Cooper Ornithological Club." In 1900 they re-named their >journal "The Condor"; this was volume 2. Volume 99 of The Condor sits on my >desk at home and is now a major archival publication of ornithological >science, sponsored by the re-named Cooper Ornithological Union or COU. > >The California Quail Gina mentions was painted by W. Otto Emerson of Haywards >and was the seal used by the Club. Haywards was, of course, later renamed >Hayward. Later publication of The Condor contain a lot of material on the >earlier years of the Club and some of the conservation battles they were >involved in. A full collection in on the mezzanine at Stanford's Falconer >Library and a nearly full collection is included in the legacy of Dick >Mewaldt's library that is at SFBBO (I think). > > 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]] -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 03 17:52:15 2000 Subject: [SBB] white-headed Ruddy Duck -------- Dear All: I noticed mention and discussion of an apparent Ruddy Duck with a white head a while back in the Santa Clara County Baylands. This is not without precedent. Back in my college days at Chico State in the 1970s there was a Ruddy Duck with an all-white head that wintered for several years on the Chico sewage ponds. It was nicknamed "Commander Whitehead" by the local birders. Another Ruddy Duck with an all-white head was present on Felt Lake in Santa Clara County during the early 1970s. It was found by birders going to look for the Tufted Duck that was there. Initially, some thought it might have been a White-headed Duck that followed the Tufted Duck over from the Old World. But no, it was just a Ruddy Duck with a white head. Ruddy Ducks can also come in other colors. A few years back at the Sunnyvale sewage ponds I saw one that was pure black and resembled a miniature scoter. Rich Stallcup also has heard of pure black Ruddy Ducks he tells me. Best regards, Peter J. Metropulos -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 04 11:29:42 2000 Subject: [SBB] Oka Ponds -------- This morning we enjoyed a great look at the OSPREY fishing in one of the perc ponds. He was being mobbed by some crows but wasn't the least bit distracted. We also spotted four or five LESSER SCAUP. The BUFFLEHEADS and HOODED MERGANSERS were plentiful. We also saw two or three CANVASBACKS. It was a great day! Pat Curtis -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 04 14:29:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] White-throated Sparrow -------- This bounced owing to a bureacratic error... The report is for Los Altos. -------------------------------------- Date: Saturday, November 4, 2000 From: [[email protected]] Just this morning we enjoyed good looks at a brown and tan striped White-throated Sparrow enjoying SCVAS birdseed in our backyard. Rita and Rob Colwell -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 04 14:55:51 2000 Subject: [SBB] CCFS Sat. 11/4/00 -------- All, Banding efforts today yielded 38 birds: 25 banded, 13 recaptures. B R 0 1 Chestnut-backed Chickadee 3 2 Ruby-crowned Kinglet (1 leucistic, see below) 4 3 Hermit Thrush 0 1 Orange-crowned Warbler (gray-headed, celata) 8 0 "Audubon's" Yellow-rumped Warbler 2 0 "Myrtle's" Yellow-rumped Warbler 1 0 Fox Sparrow (Sooty) 1 0 Lincoln's Sparrow 0 3 Song Sparrow 1 0 "Gambell's" White-crowned Sparrow 2 2 "Puget Sound" White-crowned Sparrow 3 1 Golden-crowned Sparrow The leucistic kinglet was pale yellow with a yellowish bill. There was no olive color on it at all! I've never seen one like this before. As I approached the bird in the net, I thought it was a Yellow Warbler, but it seemed too petite. The greater covert wingbar was noticeable as well as the slightly darker (less pale?) outer web of the primaries that creates the illusion of a black wing bar on a normal-plumaged Ruby- crowned Kinglet. I took some photos and will let you know when I post them to the Web. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 04 16:53:20 2000 Subject: [SBB] Eurasian Wigeon & Rough-legged Hawk at Calero Reservoir -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, This morning I led a class field trip to Calero County Park. Birds were plentiful, with most, as usual, concentrated at the east end of the reservoir. There we refound the male EURASIAN WIGEON (only had distant scope views). Other waterfowl there included MALLARD, GADWALL, NORTHERN SHOVELER, NORTHERN PINTAIL, AMERICAN WIGEON, GREEN-WINGED TEAL, RUDDY DUCK, 1 GREATER SCAUP, RING-NECKED DUCKS, and 50+ BUFFLEHEAD. Shorebirds included 40+ BLACK-NECKED STILTS, 50+ LONG-BILLED DOWITCHERS, 50+ LEAST SANDPIPERS, several GREATER YELLOWLEGS, and bunches and bunches of KILLDEER. While scanning the sky for raptors I was surprised to spot a distant ROUGH-LEGGED HAWK flying over the Santa Teresa Hills. Got decent scope views of it before it soared off to the north and disappeared. Although it was at quite a distance I could clearly see the white tail with broad black terminal band, pale head, and large black patches on the underwing coverts. Didn't see much of a dark belly on this one. The only other local record of this species that I am aware of was one seen by David Suddjian on 1-12-89. Other raptors there included 1-2 OSPREY, one of which flew right over us, and several RED-TAILED HAWKS, one of which was a dark-morph adult. A lone swallow flying southward was probably Violet-green, but I didn't get a good enough look at it. Walking back along the road that parallels the creek upstream from the reservoir we had nice looks at a TOWNSEND'S WARBLER, somewhat unusual for this location. We also had a chance to compare HUTTON'S VIREO and RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET, with both simultaneously in view. Wild Boar were seen several times. After birding Calero a few of us (Tom Cochrane, Bidut Sen, and April Dutta) hiked the Fortini/Stile Ranch Trail loop. Highlights there included a pair of adult GOLDEN EAGLES, male and female NORTHERN HARRIERS, an adult dark-morph RED-TAILED HAWK (same one we saw at the reservoir?), a SAY'S PHOEBE, and a ROCK WREN that cooperatively perched atop one of the old stone fences. Tom Cochrane pointed out to us some of the rare serpentine-adapted plants that grow there, and it was nice to see some of their flowers still in bloom-- 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 Nov 04 17:56:26 2000 Subject: [SBB] Osprey Behavior -------- This morning we observed an osprey fishing over at Oka Ponds. This bird was not hovering and diving in "feet first" like all the books say they do. He was definitely diving head first into the water. any thoughts? Pat Curtis -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 04 19:14:38 2000 Subject: [SBB] Bird Chart -------- Hi, I finally got the new bird chart up just inside the front door of the Environmental Education Center. Only birds east of the railroad (east of State Street) count as being in the refuge. One lone white pelican sat on the salt pond island. Lee Lovelady, Vounteer Naturalist. ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 05 17:14:49 2000 Subject: [SBB] Oka Ponds -------- All, A birdy hour beginning at Noon at Oka Ponds produced the following: Four Green Heron Chipping Sparrow White-crowned Sparrow Eleven male and Nine female Hooded Merganser Ruddy Duck Gadwall Eight male Ring-necked Duck One female Common Goldeneye One male Downy Woodpecker Bufflehead Yellow-rumped Warbler Was told there was an Osprey around, but this was not seen. Good birding. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 05 17:44:02 2000 Subject: [SBB] Golden Eagles -------- On Saturday, Penny & I did quick circuit through the Ogier Ponds area around 1300 or so. It was very disappointing. Too late. Too many users. Too windy. The most interesting thing we saw was a "gas hawk" shaped and painted like a "Stop" sign--doing Immelmann's and such... Upon leaving, we decided to take an always interesting run up Metcalf road. Saw a lot of the usual suspects. But the highlight of our day was two fully adult Golden Eagles feeding on a steer carcass. We had great views and got to see a lot of mantling and other interesting interactive activity. If you're interested, the carcass is just over the top, about 1/4 mile or so past the motorcycle park--on the opposite side of the road. It's about halfway up the hill on the side facing the road and should be easily spotted. I suspect that a number of carrion feeders can be found there for some time to come... Dusty (& Penny) Bleher Campbell, 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 Nov 05 20:00:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] Bald Eagle -------- All, Saturday morning, on my way to Point Reyes, I saw an adult BALD EAGLE on the power lines south of the San Francisco Airport (north of Coyote Point) along Hwy 101. I believe this is Burlingame and is the same area I saw BAEA in October of 1999. As well, the GOLDEN EAGLES are still easily observed along Hwy 280 in the vicinity of the Stanford Dish. Today one was visible chasing a Red-tailed Hawk away from the area. Matthew Dodder http://www.birdguy.net/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 05 23:14:23 2000 Subject: [SBB] White-throated Sparrow -------- All, Although I haven't seen it yet, I heard a WHITE-THROATED SPARROW in my yard here in Los Gatos. Jean -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 06 08:44:52 2000 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 11/6/2000, I saw two BROWN PELICANS on Salt Pond A2W. An adult GOLDEN EAGLE was plucking prey at Shoreline west of the Stevens Creek Tidal Marsh. By the time I got over there the eagle had finished and moved off to a light pole. The prey was an AMERICAN COOT. The bird appeared to have been completely plucked, with meat taken neatly off the skeleton, leaving the bill, head, backbone, and tail intact. At least one leg as well as some viscera were not eaten. The Shoreline golfers will be pleased if this becomes a habit. I did not see the capture, but assume it was a surprise, as I doubt a Golden Eagle can outmaneuver a coot in flight, but . . . Along Stevens Creek above Crittenden I saw a male _columbarius_ MERLIN. There were 12 BLACK SKIMMERS on Charleston Slough. 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 Nov 06 09:19:00 2000 Subject: [SBB] PAHGCC -------- I spentk about an hour and a half at the Palo Alto Hills Golf and Country Club this morning (a visit I had planned a week ago was rained out). In recent years (but typically 1-2 weeks earlier) I've found increasing numbers of Lawrence's Goldfinches there, but I didn't find any today -- just some scat- tered Lesser Goldfinches and Pine Siskins. Other birds of interest: a Hairy Woodpecker (a species I usually don't find there), about 5 White-Breasted Nuthatches (I had hoped for another color!), and a Brown Creeper. Also notably absent compared to last year were Western Bluebirds. Al -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 06 11:05:15 2000 Subject: [SBB] SUN Nov 5 SCVAS trip to Elkhorn/Harkins -------- A dozen SCVAS'ers joined a quartet of SCBC'ers on a gray morning to work Jetty Rd, Moon Glow Dairy, and the Reserve HQ, and then headed for Harkins Slough to chase the TROKIN there. Best morning bird was a RED-NECKED GREBE just beyond the jetties, as well as 9 species of gulls along the road. Both Jetty Rd and MGD offered superb views of MERLINS. MGD had both YELLOWLEGS and, after careful scrutiny, both DOWITCHERS (mainly by call-in-flight and tail). The group's species count kept mounting steadily, to over 100 by lunchtime. A few more spp at the now-sunny HQ, and we decided to forgo Elkhorn Rd and head to Harkins Slough. There, at the very last, the TROPICAL KINGBIRD may have put in a distant appearance, unless the glimpsed yellow-bellied kingbird was a WESKIN, but not one that bore celebrating. But who cared? -- we had just witnessed the day's astounding Audubon Moment. Two PEREGRINES turned the space over Harkins Slough Rd into an aerial arena, dashing and swooping after each other, yelling as few of us had ever heard. At one point they locked talons and plummeted together a hundred feet in a tumbling free fall to (for one of them, actually onto) the very surface of the roadside pond. As the spectacle went on and on around us and right above us, we "stood amaz'd." For the day, a group tally of 111 species. But it is those Peregrines that all of us will cherish about "that time at Harkins Slough." Todd Newberry Santa Cruz CA [[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]] Tue Nov 07 10:46:06 2000 Subject: [SBB] short-eared owl -------- All, I went to the PA flood control basin yesterday (11/6/00) between 5:00-5:30 pm to look for owls. A single short-eared owl was up flying at about 5:10. Lots of activity--about 10 kites, a harrier, and 4-6 redtails were active until almost dark. --Richard Richard M. Clark 279 Campus Drive Beckman Building B301 Stanford, CA 94305 Phone no.: 650-725-7599 email: [[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]] Tue Nov 07 14:02:15 2000 Subject: [SBB] Swans in Palo Alto -------- Today about 12:30 I saw 5 swans fly over Palo Alto Baylands. I was on the boardwalk out at the end. They flew over the LEBNIC building and landed along the shore about 1/4 mi. north of the boardwalk. They were not Mute Swans nor were they Snow Geese. One of them vocalized. They are the same kind of swans that I see out near Chico/Oroville area in the wintertime. I believe these are Trumpeter Swans but always get the names confused (because they changed it once?). This is the first time I have ever seen them in the bay area. Is this unusual? There were a couple of birders at the duck pond and I mentioned it to them. Don't know if they were able to see the swans later. Hope so. -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]] Tue Nov 07 14:29:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] Charleston Slough area -------- Seen at the base of Charleston Slough today at noon were 3 BROWN PELICANS preening next to at least 11 BLACK SKIMMERS on the island. The skimmers were splayed-out in the midday sun, wings cocked upward to the back, bills laid out on the ground. [On Sunday at dusk, the group I was with saw 12 skimmers.] In Adobe Creek, a male BLUE-WINGED TEAL that we saw at dusk on Sunday was still present on a small island in mid-channel. Go out on the Charleston Slough levee to the 2nd bare tree on the left beyond the pumphouse and look into the channel on the left. The teal was sleeping on the leafy green island on the right side of this view. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 07 17:33:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] Palo Alto Baylands -------- All, Hoping that the Baylands Tundra Swans (2 adults and 3 immatures according to Deborah Bartens) would hang around, I arrived to look for them at 3:50pm. Apparently they had just left unseen minutes before my arrival. However, straight out from the observation platform was a basic-plumaged COMMON LOON (far enough out so as to be in San Mateo County) and an adult PEREGRINE FALCON was perched on a log in the San Francisquito Creek Delta (also in San Mateo County) eating a large bird. An adult male BLUE-WINGED TEAL was in the lagoon directly opposite the interpretive center on my way out. I quickly checked the outer Palo Alto Flood Control Basin from Byxbee Park, hoping that maybe the swans had moved there - no such luck. A foraging (and later perching on a pole) SHORT-EARED OWL was nice though. Mike Rogers 11/7/00 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 08 13:50:41 2000 Subject: [SBB] Summer Tanager at Grant Ranch -------- Harriet Gerson identified a SUMMER TANAGER this morning, 11/08/00, at Grant Ranch on Allan Thomas' SCVAS fieldtrip. It was in the trees behind the house. She noted a light bill, no facial marks, no wingbars; it was mostly yellow and very red in vent area and breast. Her impression was that it appeared more elongated than a Western Tanager. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 08 17:22:51 2000 Subject: [SBB] Re: Summer Tanager at Grant Ranch -------- I should make a slight correction on the color description that I used. Also, here's further elaboration by Lou Beaudet, who was also present for the sighting. "it was mostly yellow" should have been described as "yellow-orange". Here's Lou's comments: "From underneath the bird, the vent area, undertail area looked more orange than yellow or red. It was an intense color, but not exactly bright. I guess a rich orange, with a tint of umber, or rufus. If that makes sense. The overall bird color was a yellowish orange, a little darker tone than the female summer tanager yellow shown in the Kaufman book. It was in the open shadow so that may have made it look a little darker than it was. We should have had pantone color chips in order to compare the colors." [I know that Lou mentioned Pantone color chips in jest, but as a side note, Munsell color system is probably more accepted by biologists, but Pantone may be more accessible. Both are probably too expensive and overkill for even the avid birder. In either case, they may work for evaluating skins, but aren't that appropriate in the field.] Les Chibana On Wednesday, November 8, 2000, Les Chibana <[[email protected]]> wrote: >Harriet Gerson identified a SUMMER TANAGER this morning, 11/08/00, at >Grant Ranch on Allan Thomas' SCVAS fieldtrip. It was in the trees >behind the house. > >She noted a light bill, no facial marks, no wingbars; it was mostly >yellow and very red in vent area and breast. Her impression was that it >appeared more elongated than a Western Tanager. > >Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 08 19:05:04 2000 Subject: [SBB] EUWI, BWTE, REDH in Alviso -------- All, This afternoon 11/8/00 I helped Cheryl out on the SFBBO survey of Salt Pond A9 in Alviso, which took place during the low tide (3:35pm-5:15pm). On the drive out we had an adult PEREGRINE FALCON on a telephone pole along pond A14 and some two hundred BONAPARTE'S GULLS were foraging in the northern part of the same pond. As usual, pond A9 was teeming with ducks, including nearly 14,000 NORTHERN SHOVELERS, 1176 AMERICAN WIGEONS, and 1011 CANVASBACKS. Among these more numerous species were a few rarer birds, including 4 EURASIAN WIGEONS (2 adult males, 2 females), a pair of BLUE-WINGED TEAL, and 3 REDHEADS. At least 8 more REDHEADS were in nearby pond A10. Three lingering immature BROWN PELICANS were on the A9/A10 dike, a big female MERLIN cruised the northern edge of A9, and a vocal adult PEREGRINE FALCON (likely the same bird as before) made a pass overhead there as well. Three RED-BREASTED MERGANSERS in pond A9 added to the 5 seen on the drive out. At least 16 COMMON GOLDENEYES and 291 BUFFLEHEAD in pond A9 were significantly higher numbers than I've had yet this Fall for these species. Earlier today, on a 10K run through Shoreline Park over lunch, I saw another immature BROWN PELICAN along the southern edge of Salt Pond A2W. 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]] Wed Nov 08 19:17:46 2000 Subject: [SBB] Palo Alto High Tides -------- Deborah Bartens, City of Palo Alto Naturalist, has again provided data for the coming High Tides at the Palo Alto Yacht Harbor. If you lose this e-mail, the data will be posted on: South Bay Birders Unlimited (SBBU) http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/birds/ Kendric --------------------------------------- High Tides - Palo Alto Yacht Harbor 11/13/00 12:54 pm 9.0 ft 11/14/00 01:36 pm 9.0 ft 12/09/00 10:29 am 9.0 ft 12/10/00 11:07 Am 9.3 ft 12/11/00 11:48 am 9.4 ft 12/12/00 12:32 pm 9.5 ft *** 12/13/00 01:20 pm 9.4 ft 12/14/00 02:11 pm 9.0 ft 01/06/01 09:10 am 9.0 ft 01/07/01 09:55 am 9.3 ft 01/08/01 10:41 am 9.6 ft 01/09/01 11:29 am 9.7 ft *** 01/10/01 12:18 pm 9.7 ft *** 01/11/01 01:09 pm 9.5 ft 01/12/01 02:02 pm 9.1 ft 02/05/01 09:34 am 9.2 ft 02/06/01 10:27 am 9.5 ft 02/07/01 11:20 am 9.6 ft *** 02/08/01 12:12 pm 9.5 ft (see below) 02/09/01 01:03 pm 9.2 ft 03/07/01 10:19 am 9.0 ft 03/08/01 11:14 am 9.0 ft ----------------------------------------- NOTE: From an article in the "Calypso Log" (Aug 2000), on February 8, 2001 there should be an unusually high tide because the Moon will be closest to the Earth (perigee), and there will be a "spring tide" (when the Sun, Earth, and Moon are positioned in nearly a straight line). The "spring tide" has nothing to do with the season "Spring", rather it refers to the water that appears to "spring up". ----------------------------------------- Kendric C. Smith, Ph.D. 927 Mears Court Stanford, CA 94305-1041 (650) 493-7210 (voice or fax) [[email protected]] http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/ ------------------------------------------ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 08 20:05:23 2000 Subject: [SBB] Palm Warbler at CCFS -------- Today, 10/29/00, at Coyote Creek Field Station (CCFS), Vicki Silvas-Young and I found a western PALM WARBLER about 200 yds. north of the tall eucalyptus that's just north of the Mewaldt Memorial Live Oak. This oak is the large one near the trailer. The warbler flushed from small shrubs on the eastern side of the top of the levee. It foraged in the vegetation within a foot of the ground. Later, I refound the bird just past the first turn of the levee (a left) north of the trailer. It foraged on the ground and in the shrubs just beyond the fence in San Jose Water Treatment land. On first sighting in flight, the bird flashed limited white tail spots on the outer corners of the spread tail. When only the face was visible to me, the supercillium led me to think that this was a Myrtle's Yellow-rumped Warbler. Vicki pointed out that the supercillium was too prominent for Myrtle's and felt it was something else. As the bird moved into a more visible position, the yellow undertail coverts and pumping tail action were noticeable. The lack of yellow on the rest of the underparts and the off-white supercillium pointed us to the western race of the Palm Warbler, Dendroica palmarum palmarum. We encountered at least three singing FOX SPARROWs among the six to eight that we saw. We also saw many LINCOLN'S SPARROWs and HERMIT THRUSHes. All of these sightings were in the overflow channel (the area between the trailer and the creek). The settling ponds are collecting rain water. In the ones opposite the trailer, there were many BONAPARTE'S GULLs. At the old Alviso marina, the mudflats east of the parking lot by the train tracks were hosting many more BONAPARTE'S GULLs. Access to CCFS is limited. To gain access, it is requested that you become a member of the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory (SFBBO) of which CCFS is a field station. You will need to read and sign the access policy. Call SFBBO in Alviso for more information. Sorry, I don't have the phone number handy. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 09 06:03:27 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- A walk along San Tomas Aquino Creek today, 9 Nov 00, produced a flock of 65-70 CEDAR WAXWINGS at the eucs near Mission College Blvd. Also, an adult GOLDEN EAGLE was overhead, heading towards the west. I also watched a GREAT EGRET in the creek down a large-sized rat (thought he was going to choke on it). Last Saturday, 4 Nov 00, I watched the LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL at Lake Cunningham. A single CLARK'S GREBE was the only aechmophorus representative here. 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 Nov 09 09:28:40 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Palm Warbler at CCFS -------- Sorry, this message was "trapped" in my computer at home and inadvertently got sent. It's the same message that I had already sent before. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 09 09:36:48 2000 Subject: [SBB] Grant Park Birds -------- Reference Harriet's summer tanager, we looked at it through Frank Vanslager's Questar from twenty feet away, and during the discussion, several different types of field guides came out. To me, the most exciting bird was the Red-breasted Sapsucker on the Hall's Valley Trail. At this higher altitude, you see birds you rarely see in the valley, two jays, woodpeckers, pine siskin, and, I can't remember how long it has been since I saw my last Yellow-billed Magpie. Cheers, Lee Lovelady. ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 09 15:39:43 2000 Subject: [SBB] Summer Tanager continues at Grant Ranch -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager, Roland Kenner and I were able to watch the Summer Tanager for an extended period of time. The bird spent most of the observation period(s) in several small trees (including two of three apple trees) located along the east side of the farm house. It had spent some time earlier in a grove of trees located 150 feet east of the farm house. During our observations the SUTA caught several fairly large insects following which, it would fly to a good sized branch to prepare the insect (kill it, remove wings, etc.), it would then eat the insect (small bites, chew well) and rest for a short period before resuming the hunt. The bird had reddish-orange undertail and uppertail coverts (with some red extending back onto the tail when viewed from above), several of the greater coverts were reddish and reddish areas were seen on the forward part of the folded wing (wrist) when the bird stretched forward while eating, on the nape of the neck, on he side of the neck below the auriculars, the front of the head and crown (most apparent when the bird raised it's crest) and in a line running down the center portion of the chest and belly. The rest of the bird is essentially as previously described with a fairly large, light colored bill (some darkness noted at the upper base of the upper mandible), a dark eye with a fairly obvious whitish eyering, the lower part of the bird was an overall yellowish-orange, the upper part of the bird was an overall brownish-green with some (lighter) olive-green noted above the reddish uppertail coverts (the rump). I have limited experience with SUTA but based on these observations and researching available field guides I was wondering if this bird might well be a red morph female rather than an immature male? The bird seems to have to much red for a normal female and I feel that an immature male with reddish uppertail and undertail coverts would have some larger patches of red elsewhere on it's body (head, chest or back). Take care, Bob Reiling, 3:33 PM, 11/9/00 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 09 18:20:59 2000 Subject: [SBB] merlin in santa clara!? -------- I hardly believe it myself, but I'm pretty sure we had a male merlin at our apt. complex just after 5pm today. Some weeks ago we had a hawk (probably Sharpshinned) visiting the balcony opposite ours, so I've been keeping my eyes out. Came home today to see a small hawk perched on the antiquated tv antenna atop the building opposite ours. Alas, all of the good binoculars were in the truck with my husband, somewhere in traffic. I had my little 8x24 cheap roofs and I grabbed a decent look from our balcony, only about 30 feet away. Compact bird, *relatively* short tail (esp. compared to the Sharpie I was expecting!), yellow-orange feet, dark eyes, streaky underside, dark slate-blue-grey back and wings (light was poor so colors were dulled), and a faint but unmistakable mustache. I had pretty poor views of the tail and couldn't say whether there was any banding. Looks like a dark-ish Taiga merlin. Of course he didn't like me watching him and flew off, dipping over the other side of the roof almost immediately. Location: an older apt. complex very near El Camino and Lawrence, not particularly wooded nor any significant grassy open spaces. Natasha -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 09 20:13:12 2000 Subject: [SBB] RE: wintering summer tanager -------- With regard to the SUMMER TANAGER recently reported from the vicinity of San Francisquito Creek, on the border between Santa Clara County and San Mateo County, it should be noted that a summer tanager was found at the same location during each of the winters of 94-95, 95-96, and 96-97. I am not aware of any reports of SUTA from this location since 1997 until the recent one, but it is a bird that could easily spend the winter there and not be discovered. If the current bird is, in fact, the same returnee, (and, given the scarcity of summer tanager reports, that seems likely) it would be in at least its seventh winter. - Dick >Date: Thu, 02 Nov 2000 10:59:36 -0800 >Subject: N. Calif. BirdBox 10/31 - 11/1 .. >San Mateo County: >On November 1st a SUMMER TANAGER was seen in Menlo >Park. Take the bike bridge that connects Willow Road >in Menlo Park to Palo Alto Drive near Bryant Street in >Palo Alto. The bridge is accessible at the cul-de-sac >at the end of Willow Place (CN) >- Observers >CN Christy Nelson Richard Stovel [[email protected]] -------- With regard to the SUMMER TANAGER recently reported from the vicinity of San Francisquito Creek, on the border between Santa Clara County and San Mateo County, it should be noted that a summer tanager was found at the same location during each of the winters of 94-95, 95-96, and 96-97. I am not aware of any reports of SUTA from this location since 1997 until the recent one, but it is a bird that could easily spend the winter there and not be discovered. If the current bird is, in fact, the same returnee, (and, given the scarcity of summer tanager reports, that seems likely) it would be in at least its seventh winter. - Dick >Date: Thu, 02 Nov 2000 10:59:36 -0800 >Subject: N. Calif. BirdBox 10/31 - 11/1 .. >San Mateo County: >On November 1st a SUMMER TANAGER was seen in Menlo >Park. Take the bike bridge that connects Willow Road >in Menlo Park to Palo Alto Drive near Bryant Street in >Palo Alto. The bridge is accessible at the cul-de-sac >at the end of Willow Place (CN) >- Observers >CN Christy Nelson Richard Stovel [[email protected]] From [[email protected]] Thu Nov 09 20:38:02 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] merlin in santa clara!? -------- At 6:20 PM -0800 11/9/00, amphibian wrote: >I hardly believe it myself, but I'm pretty sure we had a male merlin >at our apt. complex just after 5pm today. It's possible -- we are in Santa Clara, and had a Merlin take a pigeon off our feeder about two years ago. Definitely a Merlin, since he was nice enough to haul lunch off to the fence and give us a good opportunity to look while he ate. I don't think they're common, but they do wander through. -- Chuq Von Rospach - Plaidworks Consulting (mailto:[[email protected]]) Apple Mail List Gnome (mailto:[[email protected]]) Be just, and fear not. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 09 22:58:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] White-throated Sparrow -------- All, My ears didn't deceive me Sunday morning, a WHITE-THROATED SPARROW visited my ground feeders here in Los Gatos late yesterday. I believe this is the eighth year that I have had one. Meanwhile, the OSPREY stays the night here. Jean -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 10 09:38:55 2000 Subject: [SBB] Santa Clara Bird List Update -------- Bill Bousman sends the following: Only one species in October, the Lapland Longspur that Mike Rogers and Mike Mammoser found on 10/7/2000. That brings us to 283 for the year, 17 shy of the magic 300 species. There are two "4s" left: Tundra Swan and White-winged Scoter and, as I am writing this on 11/9/2000, the Tundra Swan has already been recorded for November. Also, in early November, birders have picked off a "5" and a "6". So the County List for November is already at 286. The complete list can be found at: South Bay Birders Unlimited (SBBU) http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/birds/ Kendric ----------------------------------------- Kendric C. Smith, Ph.D. 927 Mears Court Stanford, CA 94305-1041 (650) 493-7210 (voice or fax) [[email protected]] http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/ ------------------------------------------ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 10 09:45:28 2000 Subject: [SBB] N. Calif. Birds Not in the East -------- When we have birding friends from the East Coast who have never birded in Northern California, they appreciate having a list of target birds for the area. By looking at all the maps in the NGS Bird Book, I came up with a list of 92 birds that are not generally seen on the East Coast. This list is reproduced on the SBBU Web Site either in Taxonomic Order or Alphabetical Order. Print them out and impress your next visitor from the East Coast. Last weekend, a friend from the East Coast got 38 life birds in our area (with my help). South Bay Birders Unlimited (SBBU) http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/birds/ Kendric ----------------------------------------- Kendric C. Smith, Ph.D. 927 Mears Court Stanford, CA 94305-1041 (650) 493-7210 (voice or fax) [[email protected]] http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/ ------------------------------------------ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 11 18:06:47 2000 Subject: [SBB] Pileated Woodpecker - Skyline Blvd. -------- My wife, Mary, informed me that she heard, then saw, a male PILEATED WOODPECKER at our house this afternoon. I had a feeling they'd show up sometime. We live on the Santa Clara County side of Skyline Blvd. between Page Mill Rd. and Saratoga Gap. (Hwy 9). My guess is that this bird is one of the Table Mtn. group. But who really knows how many other family groups may be in this area? Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 11 20:50:08 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Pileated Woodpecker - Skyline Blvd. -------- In a message dated 11/11/00 6:25:55 PM Pacific Standard Time, [[email protected]] writes: > My wife, Mary, informed me that she heard, then saw, a male PILEATED > WOODPECKER at our house this afternoon. I had a feeling they'd show > up sometime. We live on the Santa Clara County side of Skyline Blvd. > between Page Mill Rd. and Saratoga Gap. (Hwy 9). My guess is that > this bird is one of the Table Mtn. group. But who really knows how > many other family groups may be in this area? > > On the coastward side of the mountains they have shown a tendancy to wander some in the fall, sometimes moving to watersheds not occupied in the breeding season and spots well removed from breeding territories. Thus, it is certainly possible that "your" PIWO was not from the nearest breeding locality. David Suddjian Capitola [[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 Nov 12 13:19:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] Immature Bald Eagle and Eurasian Wigeon -------- Sorry for the late report, but near sundown on Friday, 10 November, there were a pair of Eurasion Wigeon in pond A4 in the northeast section of the pond with many American Wigeon, Northern Shovelers, Gadwall and American Coots. Just after sunrise on Saturday, 11 November, there was an immature Bald Eagle on the perimeter levee by the A9/A10 cross-levee. It flew across Alviso Slough to perch on a white barrier fence that read "Leslie Salt Company" on a levee on that side. The bird was not seen when I returned there at sundown. Finally, this morning while doing a boat survey of Mallard/Artesian Slough, Debbie Wong Ottman, Tadd Ottman, Liwen Mah and I saw a Peregrine Falcon on a power tower by the entrance road to the Alviso Environmental Education Center. Cheryl Millett Biologist San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory PO Box 247 1290 Hope Street Alviso, CA 95002 phone 408/946-6548 fax 408/946-9279 -------- Attachment 1.5 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Mon Nov 13 02:19:21 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Saturday, 11 Nov 00, I did some birding at CCFS. The only notable birds I had here were: a WINTER WREN in the riparian corridor and a HOUSE WREN in the overflow channel. Later, an adult PEREGRINE FALCON was along the entrance road to the EEC. When I arrived back home, an adult GOLDEN EAGLE was soaring overhead near the Santa Teresa Hills. 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 Nov 13 10:44:35 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Pileated Woodpecker - Skyline Blvd. -------- Les - I also heard but didn't see a Pileated at our house around 7 AM Saturday morning. We are about 10 miles north of you, I think, north of 84 and just west of Skyline. Janet Tashjian Hanson Executive Director San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory P.O. Box 247 Alviso, CA 95002 [[email protected]] 408/946-6548 -----Original Message----- From: Les Chibana <[[email protected]]> To: South Bay Birders <[[email protected]]> Date: Saturday, November 11, 2000 6:39 PM Subject: [SBB] Pileated Woodpecker - Skyline Blvd. >My wife, Mary, informed me that she heard, then saw, a male PILEATED >WOODPECKER at our house this afternoon. I had a feeling they'd show >up sometime. We live on the Santa Clara County side of Skyline Blvd. >between Page Mill Rd. and Saratoga Gap. (Hwy 9). My guess is that >this bird is one of the Table Mtn. group. But who really knows how >many other family groups may be in this area? > >Les Chibana > > >-++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== >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 Nov 13 11:18:03 2000 Subject: [SBB] Loma Prieta, Grant Ranch -------- All, Early on Saturday 11/11/00, I watched for migrants from the saddle where the pavement formerly ended below Loma Prieta. I had none of the hoped for "montane" species (nutcrackers, solitaires, Cassin's Finches etc.), but there was some movement here, with 264 BAND-TAILED PIGEONS in 10 groups all heading southeast and 155 CEDAR WAXWINGS in 6 groups mostly heading northwest. Only small numbers of THRUSHES (46 AMERICAN ROBINS, a few VARIED and HERMIT THRUSHES), PURPLE FINCHES (up to 19), and PINE SISKIN (5) were in the area. I also had the usual chaparral and coniferous forest birds, including a TOWNSEND'S WARBLER and heard-only GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLETS. Later in the morning, a two-hour check around the ranch house at Grant Ranch County Park failed to turn up the Summer Tanager, which likely departed in response to our record-cold nights. I did find a "white" morph WHITE-THROATED SPARROW in with a big ZONOTRICHIA flock west of the ranch house though. Also 2 RED-BREASTED SAPSUCKERS, 1 TOWNSEND'S WARBLER, 3 LARK SPARROWS, and small numbers of PINE SISKINS in the area. While driving to Morgan Hill for my son's football game on Sunday 11/12/00 I saw an OSPREY flying north along highway 101 near Coyote Creek Drive by the golf course. 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 Nov 13 15:08:56 2000 Subject: [SBB] Leucistic RCKI -------- [Apologies for the duplicates because of my cross-posting!] Curious? In "normal-speak" this means a pale Ruby-crowned Kinglet. On 4 Nov 2000, one was banded and photographed at the Coyote Creek Field Station of the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory. I've posted some images and some notes at the following URL: By the way, "leucistic" is an odd word. You probably won't find it in a standard dictionary; I'm not sure if it will be in a dictionary of biological terms. A few months ago, I did a Web search and got a lot of reptile Web sites discussing the Leucistic Leopard Gecko, a popular captive reptile. I'm happy to see that the birding community has been busy lately and there are now many bird references and leucism. Some examples, http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/feb99/919442794.Zo.r.html http://www.umd.umich.edu/dept/rouge_river/mywa.html http://www.komkon.org/~cassino/public/ http://www.hummingbirds.net/albino.html http://www.best.com/~petrel/Angus.Leucistic.GBBGU.html http://www.astro.utu.fi/~hlehto/photo/owl100.shtml Les -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 13 17:05:53 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Leucistic RCKI -------- At 03:08 PM 11/13/00 -0800, Les Chibana wrote: >[Apologies for the duplicates because of my cross-posting!] > >Curious? In "normal-speak" this means a pale Ruby-crowned Kinglet. >On 4 Nov 2000, one was banded and photographed at the Coyote Creek >Field Station of the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory. I've posted >some images and some notes at the following URL: > > > >By the way, "leucistic" is an odd word. You probably won't find it in >a standard dictionary; I'm not sure if it will be in a dictionary of >biological terms. A few months ago, I did a Web search and got a lot >of reptile Web sites discussing the Leucistic Leopard Gecko, a popular >captive reptile. I'm happy to see that the birding community has been >busy lately and there are now many bird references and leucism. Some >examples, Les et al. My understanding of the use of the word is that it refers to any form of albinism which is not total. So an albino has to be a "total albino", no pigment including in the eyes. There is no such thing as a "partial albino" and these individuals should be termed leucistics. This includes birds with reduced melanins (washed out) and those with patches of white feathers. This was how it was explained to me by Gary Graves of the Smithsonian when discussing with him "partial albino" specimens of icterids I was checking out in their collections. Now I do know that this is not exactly how these words are used, even in the literature. I do wonder if there is an exact definition in an authorative text which we all need to agree on and begin using. cheers, Al Alvaro Jaramillo Senior Biologist San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory P.O. Box 247 Alviso, CA 95002 (408)-946-6548 http://www.sfbbo.org/ Home of the California Fall Challenge!! [[email protected]] Birds of Chile and New World Blackbirds at : http://www.sirius.com/~alvaro -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 13 17:05:53 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Leucistic RCKI -------- At 03:08 PM 11/13/00 -0800, Les Chibana wrote: >[Apologies for the duplicates because of my cross-posting!] > >Curious? In "normal-speak" this means a pale Ruby-crowned Kinglet. >On 4 Nov 2000, one was banded and photographed at the Coyote Creek >Field Station of the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory. I've posted >some images and some notes at the following URL: > > > >By the way, "leucistic" is an odd word. You probably won't find it in >a standard dictionary; I'm not sure if it will be in a dictionary of >biological terms. A few months ago, I did a Web search and got a lot >of reptile Web sites discussing the Leucistic Leopard Gecko, a popular >captive reptile. I'm happy to see that the birding community has been >busy lately and there are now many bird references and leucism. Some >examples, Les et al. My understanding of the use of the word is that it refers to any form of albinism which is not total. So an albino has to be a "total albino", no pigment including in the eyes. There is no such thing as a "partial albino" and these individuals should be termed leucistics. This includes birds with reduced melanins (washed out) and those with patches of white feathers. This was how it was explained to me by Gary Graves of the Smithsonian when discussing with him "partial albino" specimens of icterids I was checking out in their collections. Now I do know that this is not exactly how these words are used, even in the literature. I do wonder if there is an exact definition in an authorative text which we all need to agree on and begin using. cheers, Al Alvaro Jaramillo Senior Biologist San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory P.O. Box 247 Alviso, CA 95002 (408)-946-6548 http://www.sfbbo.org/ Home of the California Fall Challenge!! [[email protected]] Birds of Chile and New World Blackbirds at : http://www.sirius.com/~alvaro -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 13 18:37:44 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Leucistic RCKI -------- For what it's worth, the "Birder's Dictionary" (by Randall Cox) defines leucism as "a condition of paleness of plumage due to environmental factors instead of genetic abnormality." It defines albinism as "color variation caused by an absence or reduction of pigments in feathers, including four types: total albinism, in which all pigments are completely absent from feathers, skin and irises; incomplete albinism, in which pigment is absent from one or more of the feathers, skin or irises, but not all three; imperfect albinism, in which all pigments are reduced or at least one pigment is missing; and partial albinism, the most common form in birds, in which pigments are reduced or absent from parts of the feathers, skin or irises..." Incidentally, I just found an old copy of "Ornithology in Laboratory and Field", 4th edition by Olin Sewall Pettingill, Jr. in which the definition of albinism is nearly word for word the same as that of the "Birder's Dictionary" (it is listed in the bibliography of the "Birder's Dictionary"). Don Ganton *********** REPLY SEPARATOR *********** On 11/13/00 at 5:05 PM Alvaro Jaramillo wrote: >Les et al. > >My understanding of the use of the word is that it refers to any form of >albinism which is not total. So an albino has to be a "total albino", no >pigment including in the eyes. There is no such thing as a "partial albino" >and these individuals should be termed leucistics. This includes birds with >reduced melanins (washed out) and those with patches of white feathers. >This was how it was explained to me by Gary Graves of the Smithsonian when >discussing with him "partial albino" specimens of icterids I was checking >out in their collections. > >Now I do know that this is not exactly how these words are used, even in >the literature. I do wonder if there is an exact definition in an >authorative text which we all need to agree on and begin using. > >cheers, > >Al > > > >Alvaro Jaramillo >Senior Biologist >San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory >P.O. Box 247 >Alviso, CA 95002 >(408)-946-6548 > >http://www.sfbbo.org/ >Home of the California Fall Challenge!! > >[[email protected]] > >Birds of Chile and >New World Blackbirds at : http://www.sirius.com/~alvaro -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 13 20:00:13 2000 Subject: [SBB] Merlin and PACBC -------- All, First: one of my students informed me he had found a female MERLIN on the telephone pole by the Bayland Interpretive Center on Sunday afternoon. As well there was an AMERICAN BITTERN in the channel at the Palo Alto Flood Control Basin. I wish I'd been there... Second: Mark your calendars... It's that time of year again, and I'd like to get people thinking about the 2000 Palo Alto Christmas Bird Count! The count will be on Monday, December 18. I'll be coordinating Region 7, which is located along Skyline Blvd for the most part. As with all other Regional Coordinators, I'll be needing some volunteers to help survey the area. If any one would like to help with the count, let me know and I'll see if I can team you up with others already counting. Thanks in advance, Matthew Dodder http://www.birdguy.net/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 13 23:55:52 2000 Subject: [SBB] Some south county birds -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, >From Jim Danzenbaker I hear that the male EURASIAN WIGEON was again seen at Calero Reservoir this past Sunday. Also I received a second-hand report from him that his brother Mike saw a GLAUCOUS GULL at Almaden Lake Park on Sunday, Nov. 5th. This past Saturday I visited the Santa Clara Valley Water District Pond on the east side of Almaden Expressway. Most of the usual waterfowl were absent, no doubt because of the dogs swimming in the pond (there are always a lot of dogs running loose here--don't know if it is approved or just ignored by the water district). Did see an OSPREY, GREEN HERON, and GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULL. At Almaden Lake Park the gull numbers were low, but I did see 1 MEW GULL among them. As usual there was 1 COMMON MOORHEN with coots near the creek inflow, and COMMON MERGANSERS at the lake and farther upstream. Counted almost 20 LINCOLN'S SPARROWS in weeds along the creek just upstream from the lake. 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 Nov 14 08:30:22 2000 Subject: [SBB] Palo Alto CBC -------- Hi Folks, I am coordinating region 8, and will be needing counters, especially for Skyline Ridge Open Space Preserve, and Hidden Villa, both of which often yield some great birds. I could also use some experienced counters for Foothill Park, which is normally closed to non Palo Alto residents. So if you've been dying to bird there give me a shout. The count is Mon Dec 18. Leda Beth Gray Board Member and Conservation Chair Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society --------------------------------------------------------- JOIN US! Check out our web site at: http://www.scvas.org --------------------------------------------------------- Our mission is to maintain, protect and preserve native animal and plant habitat, and to foster a greater public awareness of our environment, with emphasis on birds and their ecosystems, particularly in Santa Clara County and in the San Francisco Bay Area. -------- Attachment 1.1 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Tue Nov 14 08:56:47 2000 Subject: [SBB] Mt. Hamilton CBC -------- Folks: The 24th Mt. Hamilton CBC will be held on Wednesday, December 20th. As always, the count is run by Don Schmoldt, who will be delighted to have anyone join this sometimes poor-weather count. The count circle extends from just west of Mt. Hamilton to cover a large portion of the Diablo Range including bits of Alameda and Stanislaus counties. Much of this land is private property, but Don has arranged for access to areas where mere mortals generally cannot go. Traditionally, the countdown dinner is held in Lotus and Keith Baker's house, which, for you trivia fans, is the highest house in Santa Clara County. Don and his wife Sally Walters are moving to Sacramento next week. The best contact is probably e-mail: <[[email protected]]>. Don's phone number is 916-739-8821 and, if this doesn't work, try Sally's: 916-739-6465. For the regulars, Don expected to send packets out this past weekend. 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 Nov 14 09:12:44 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Leucistic RCKI -------- Dear Les My Random House Dictionary has leucite a whitish or greyish mineral. and leuco, a combining form with the meanings white from the Greel meaning white, bright. Ruth Troetschler ---------------------------------- At 3:08 PM -0800 11/13/00, Les Chibana wrote: >[Apologies for the duplicates because of my cross-posting!] > >Curious? In "normal-speak" this means a pale Ruby-crowned Kinglet. >On 4 Nov 2000, one was banded and photographed at the Coyote Creek >Field Station of the San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory. I've posted >some images and some notes at the following URL: > > > >By the way, "leucistic" is an odd word. You probably won't find it in >a standard dictionary; I'm not sure if it will be in a dictionary of >biological terms. A few months ago, I did a Web search and got a lot >of reptile Web sites discussing the Leucistic Leopard Gecko, a popular >captive reptile. I'm happy to see that the birding community has been >busy lately and there are now many bird references and leucism. Some >examples, > >http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/feb99/919442794.Zo.r.html >http://www.umd.umich.edu/dept/rouge_river/mywa.html >http://www.komkon.org/~cassino/public/ >http://www.hummingbirds.net/albino.html >http://www.best.com/~petrel/Angus.Leucistic.GBBGU.html >http://www.astro.utu.fi/~hlehto/photo/owl100.shtml > >Les > > >-++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== >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]] -- Ruth Troetschler -------- Attachment 2.4 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Tue Nov 14 20:23:51 2000 Subject: [SBB] SBBU Web Site Revised -------- Greetings: I have totally revised the SBBU Web Site. It is now in "Frames" so that it will be easier to add new features in the future. You will find yourself using the "Back" key a lot, or else clicking on the Table of Contents that is always present. Since it is not intuitive how to print pages from a frame web site, I have added a listing in the Table of Contents on "How to Print These Pages". Formatting has been cleaned up somewhat, files have been rearranged, and some new pictures have been added. Your comments and suggestions are very welcome. What new features should I add? Are there things that could be eliminated or reorganized? Are any of the links now out of date? Do you have some favorite links that I could add? I haven't had time to check out everything on a PC, so let me know if anything doesn't line up correctly or whatever. South Bay Birders Unlimited (SBBU) http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/birds/ Regards, Kendric ----------------------------------------- Kendric C. Smith, Ph.D. 927 Mears Court Stanford, CA 94305-1041 (650) 493-7210 (voice or fax) [[email protected]] http://www.stanford.edu/~kendric/ ------------------------------------------ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 15 12:29:50 2000 Subject: [SBB] San Jose CBC -------- Hello All, This is to announce the San Jose Christmas Bird Count to be held on Sunday, Dec 17. As always we need counters in all areas - Alviso Salt Ponds and wetlands; the Diablo Hills, inc Calaveras Reservoir and SF Watershed Lands; riparian corridors; and urban parks. This year the countdown dinner will be held at Emma Prusch Park, 247 S. King Rd, San Jose (near the intersections of Hwys 101 & 280). Please contact me if you would like to participate and what type of habitat you would like to count in. Also you can contact me if you have any questions. Thanks, Ann, SJ CBC compiler [[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]] Wed Nov 15 13:45:17 2000 Subject: [SBB] Monterey Peninsula CBC -------- To all birders: (Apologies to all those who receive this message more than once, ie. Mike.) Friday, December 29th is the date for the Monterey Peninsula Christmas Bird Count. It always proves to be a splendid affair in one of the most beautiful areas in the state. I'd like to invite you all to participate in one form or another. Counters are always needed, especially on the pelagic portion of the count ($20 fee). A home-cooked dinner is provided FREE to all participants at the countdown. For more information or to RSVP, please call or e-mail me. Thanks! Steve Rovell, compiler 483 Ferris Ave. Marina, CA 93933 (831) 883-9288 [[email protected]] PS - Some people always wonder why this count always occurs on a weekday. The cost of the boat is about doubled on weekends, making it prohibitively expensive. In the past few years, I have attempted to schedule the count on a Friday or Monday (adjoins the weekend) to include as many people as possible. -------- Attachment 1.2 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Wed Nov 15 19:55:33 2000 Subject: [SBB] Great Blue Heron -------- A friend and I birded Guadaloupe Oak Grove Park in the early afternoon today. We were surprised to find a Great Blue Heron walking about in the grassy area at the foot of the hill near the restrooms. It seemed unusual to us to find this bird in this oak/grassland habitat. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 15 23:24:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] osprey -------- All, If you would like to photograph an OSPREY or view it at close hand, Gordon and Claudia Peterson have constructed a blind on my back deck. The view is unobstructed and within about 50 feet. Call me first at (408) 395-4264 to find out if it is here. I can't predict anything in advance. Yesterday it left at daylight, returned at 7:00 a.m. with a fish and stayed until around 9:30 a.m. Today, it stayed until around 2:30 p.m. It usually returns for the night between sundown and dark. Jean Los Gatos -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 15 23:59:19 2000 Subject: [SBB] Wednesday birds, Calero Reservoir -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, Just some of today's sightings-- At lunchtime today I saw an adult GOLDEN EAGLE flying over Santa Teresa Blvd. north of Bailey Avenue. Scoped Calero Reservoir from the boat launch late this afternoon. Shorebirds there included LONG-BILLED DOWITCHERS, GREATER YELLOWLEGS, LEAST SANDPIPERS, and BLACK-NECKED STILTS. On the west side of the reservoir there was a PEREGRINE FALCON perched in an oak (very distant even with the scope). About 10 COMMON MERGANSERS were also on the west side of the reservoir. Scanning the water it looks like EARED GREBES and COMMON GOLDENEYES have really increased here. At the east end there were still 5 AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS, along with the majority of the coots and ducks. 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]] Thu Nov 16 05:31:06 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- This morning, 16 Nov 00, I saw an OSPREY carrying a fish away from Coyote Creek at the end of Bernal in south San Jose. Last Monday I had a couple of TOWNSEND'S WARBLERS in the trees at Mission College and San Tomas Aquino Creek. 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 Nov 16 07:44:09 2000 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: Yesterday, 11/15/2000, I saw a female-plumaged HOODED MERGANSER in the Mountain View Forebay. However, she was not there this morning. Also, an adult PEREGRINE FALCON was on a tower at the Stevens Creek Tidal Marsh as has often been the case this winter. I saw four VIOLET-GREEN SWALLOWS over Charleston Slough. This morning, 11/16/2000, the BLACK SKIMMER count at Charleston Slough was 12. Noticeable this week has been an increase in BUFFLEHEAD at Charleston Slough and the Mountain View salt ponds, from four birds on Monday to 20+ today. Similarly, Shoreline Lake had four COMMON GOLDENEYES last Monday and 15+ today. I suspect the frost we've had in the last week has meant ice on northern lakes and ponds where these diving birds have lingered. 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 Nov 16 08:25:01 2000 Subject: [SBB] Re: Great Blue Heron -------- Herons and egrets both seem to be well adapted to suburbia here. Before Stanford started building condos along Sand Hill Road, my bicycling husband often saw as many as 4 GBH in the fields hunting for ground squirrels. There was even one that hunted right alongside the edge of the road, seemingly indifferent to the hundreds of cars passing by. Like Peregrines going after pigeons, they're apparently taking advantage of an easy meal. Nancy Teater From: "R. Strait" <[[email protected]]> To: "South-bay Bird List" <[[email protected]]> Subject: [SBB] Great Blue Heron Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2000 19:55:33 -0800 MIME-Version: 1.0 Sender: [[email protected]] A friend and I birded Guadaloupe Oak Grove Park in the early afternoon today. We were surprised to find a Great Blue Heron walking about in the grassy area at the foot of the hill near the restrooms. It seemed unusual to us to find this bird in this oak/grassland habitat. -- 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]] Thu Nov 16 11:39:55 2000 Subject: [SBB] My Farm -------- I've been out of town so decided to take a mid-morning stress-relief break and walk to "my farm" (La Rinconada Park). As I entered off Bicknell there was a large flock of WHITE-CROWNED SPARROWS. Couldn't find any other species in the flock. As I came to the "third" bridge I noticed a lot of bird activity. I sat on the picnic table in front of the largest Euc in the park and was intrigued. About 100 ROBIN's were flitting about. 20 CEDAR WAXWING'S. the normal 8 ACORN WOODPECKERS. Plus other assorted feathered friends. I've never seen this many Robins at "my farm" before. Gloria LeBlanc www.wallstreetgifts.com "largest selection of Wall Street inspired gifts" www.cowcowscows.com "site for the Chicago and NYC cows" -------- Attachment 1.3 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Thu Nov 16 19:18:51 2000 Subject: [SBB] Off topic: recommendations for W. Europe field guide wanted -------- I'm making a trip to Germany in December. Will spend most time in Munich but will probably be out in the Bavarian countryside on at least one occasion. In the past I've simply guessed at the birds I was seeing; this time I'd like to take a compact field guide. Suggestions? Thanks, Natasha -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 16 23:25:50 2000 Subject: [SBB] Calero-Morgan Hill CBC scheduled for Sat., December 30th -------- Howdy South-bay-birders, Yup, it's another Christmas Bird Count reminder -- the next Calero-Morgan Hill CBC is scheduled for Saturday, December 30th. We have a big area to cover and lots of birds to count, so we need all the eyes and ears we can get. We especially need experienced help in some of our best areas--Ogier Ponds and Calero Reservoir need party leaders! Of course birders of all experience levels are welcome to take part. Participants will be divided into parties, each with specific territories to cover. Areas within the circle include Almaden Quicksilver and Santa Teresa County Parks; Almaden, Calero, Chesbro, and Guadalupe Reservoirs; the northern half of Anderson Reservoir; Almaden Lake Park; the northern Coyote Valley, including the Ogier Ponds and Parkway Lakes; Coyote Ridge in the Hamilton Range; and the summit of Loma Prieta. So pick an area that sounds interesting and join us on count day--we could use help everywhere! Please contact me if you want to take part in the count or have questions about it. If you participated last time please let me know if you would like to cover the same area or a different one, and if you are new to the count let me know if you are interested in a particular area or habitat. To those who reply I will soon be sending out an email with more complete information, directions to the countdown location, etc. John Mariani (408)997-2066 [[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]] Fri Nov 17 08:20:27 2000 Subject: [SBB] Merganser at MV Forebay -------- The female-plumage HOODED MERGANSER was at the Mountain View Forebay at 4:30 PM yesterday. Charles Coston ______________________________________________________ Listen to your favorite music while you work! - http://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]] Sat Nov 18 04:28:49 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- Today, 18 Nov 00, I went to the Charleston Slough area. I heard at least one each SORA and VIRGINIA RAIL in the forebay. There was also about 30 BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERONS here, which is a higher number than I normally see at this location. Shoreline Lake had a female HOODED MERGANSER, a handful of COMMON GOLDENEYES, EARED, HORNED, and WESTERN GREBES. There were 12 BLACK SKIMMERS on Charleston Slough, along with a sizable flock of CANVASBACK. The north pond of the PAFCB had 5 male and 3 female BLUE-WINGED TEAL. 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 Nov 18 08:42:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] Oka birds -------- Yesterday afternoon there was a late YELLOW WARBLER in the Eucalyptus by the parking lot north of the Los Gatos percolation ponds. The Oka/Los Gatos ponds had the usual mix, including the OSPREY on the dead tree in the north pond, SNIPE on the creek islands, and an immature COOPERS HAWK along the creek. Along the creek upstream of the ponds there is a domestic/wild mix MALLARD with a growth on the head as big as the bird's head. It seems to be otherwise healthy. Charles Coston ______________________________________________________ Listen to your favorite music while you work! - http://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]] Sat Nov 18 14:33:36 2000 Subject: [SBB] Some County Birds -------- On Saturday morning, the 18th, at the eastern end of Shoreline Lake there were a couple of Horned Grebes and a male Barrow's Goldeneye. At the Crittenden Marsh walk-in/parking area, there were a flock of American Pipits. While I was observing them, an adult Golden Eagle flew in over my head and landed on the squirrel-infested hillside just outside the heavy wooden fence. It spent the next several minutes chasing squirrels around on foot! Then it flew off to a power tower. Later, on my way out, I found the eagle again on the ground near that slight northern excursion of the heavy wooden fence where a couple of Burrowing Owls were still to be seen. It soon flew off to the west, but then seemed to return in a few minutes with a friend of his. Altogether, I probably got views of 3 Golden Eagles and 3 Burrowing Owls. 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]] Sat Nov 18 17:43:47 2000 Subject: [SBB] Saturday Birds -------- All, Today before dusk at Sunnyvale WPCP, one male Green-winged Teal and six Bonaparte's Gulls were seen. The ponds are full of Canvasback, Northern Shoveler and lesser numbers of Gadwall and Ruddy Duck. 45 American White Pelicans flew overhead to the northwest. Earlier at Don Edwards, a flock of Short-billed Dowitchers, a dozen Eared Grebe, Belted Kingfisher and a Ruby-crowned Kinglet. State & Spreckles had Lesser Yellowlegs, American Avocet, and an adult male American Kestrel. Good birding. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 18 19:01:35 2000 Subject: [SBB] Ring-necked Pheasant -------- Hi, I can't remember how long it has been since I saw my last RING-NECKED PHEASANTat the Environmental Education Center. This morning I walked in from Alviso and, just as I was rounding the turn to the north, a cock flew over and landed near the pump house, calling all the way. One of our weekend persons, Jamie, said one hen raised six chicks last summer. A TURKEY VULTURE overhead, but nothing else of special interest on my noon walk. Lee Lovelady, Volunteer Naturalist. ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 18 19:44:38 2000 Subject: [SBB] hawks etc. -------- As a child, I thought of hawks as creatures of the wilderness, rare and distant. And in the era of DDT, perhaps they were. Now I look at our neighborhood, so far from that wilderness ideal, and think about how wonderfully inaccurate my old ideas are. Yesterday I watched a pair of Kestrels perched on the shrubby overpass embankment of Lawrence Expressway as it passes over El Camino. The day before I *may* have seen a Peregrine over the nearby Safeway parking lot. And within the previous week I had good sightings of a Red Tail circling Walgreens, the Merlin on my neighbor's antenna, and a Sharpie on the telephone pole in front of our apartment complex. Four or five species in one week in a perfectly boring plot of apts., little ranch houses with tiny yards, and strip malls. Wow. Seems they do pretty well out of the wilderness when we don't shoot or poison them... Friday was a good day for birds in other ways. Mark saw a Peregrine and a Red Shouldered Hawk along 237 near 880, and I saw and heard my first fall flock of Cedar Waxwings, as they made a quick Los Altos flyby. Saw "my" male Townsend's Warbler at Marymeade park too, as well as the pair of Downies. More waxwings today at Audubon's McClellan ranch, but still none close enough to really admire their beautiful plumage. Send some a little closer, OK? :) Finally, a quick note of thanks to everyone who offered recommendations for field guides to European birds. We stopped by the Audubon shop and picked up Lars Jonsson's _Birds of Europe_, which came highly recommended and seems to be a really nice book. I just hope I get to see some of these great birds! --Natasha -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 18 21:44:45 2000 Subject: [SBB] Red Fox & Oka Highlights -------- About 7:30 AM yesterday I came to the top of my street (Montclair) to head down the hill on my morning walk and was surprised to see two red fox at the corner of Hippelwhite & Montclair - a residential corner. The fox with the white tip on its tail headed back down the road and went into the 10 acres of open space. The other one ran into the cul de sac. I heard it howling, couldn't figure how to get through the fence that separates these homes from the open space. I've never seen foxes other than at "My farm" which is over a half a mile away...this was a block from me! I watched a California Towhee at "my farm" fly through the chain link fence. It would fly at normal speed, then tuck its wings in for a heartbeat, then fly again from the other side. I love bird behavior. It was like flying through the eye of a needle. At Oka Ponds today I saw 2 pairs of COMMON MERGANSERS, is there any bird more beautiful than the male one? There were 2 SNIPE on their island. Counted 58 DOUBLE-BREASTED COURMORANTS sitting on "their wire", another dozen swimming - is there somewhere else in the county that has this concentration of these birds? I don't think I've seen it. Lots of YELLOW-RUMPS. Both a GREEN HERON and a BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT HERON. In my backyard I haven't spotted the WHITE-THROATED SPARROW this week - but I've been busy. At dusk tonight there were 72 MODO's and a dozen QUAIL. My BAND-TAILED'S have dwindled from a peak of 72, to a more normal count of 20-30, down to less than a dozen. The GOLDFINCHES are eating lots of thistle from my feeder, emptying half of the feed in my 4" feeder daily. There are about a dozen AMERICAN and another dozen LESSER feeding several times throughout the day. Gloria LeBlanc www.wallstreetgifts.com "largest selection of Wall Street inspired gifts" www.cowcowscows.com "site for the Chicago and NYC cows" -------- Attachment 2.7 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Sun Nov 19 12:52:01 2000 Subject: [SBB] Fwd: Lesser Black Backed Gull and Snow Goose -------- This is a note from Calvin Lou. Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2000 20:28:37 -0800 LAKE CUNNINGHAM- SAN JOSE NOV 18, 2000 400-430PM. After shopping at the Gilroy Outlet Factories, we decided to head to Lake Cunningham. I saw the LESSER BLACK BACKED GULL on the small island with the white pelicans, a couple of snowy egrets, a great erget, d-c cormorants and several ring-billed gulls. As I got closer to the island, I saw the flock of domestic geese heading toward me. There a smaller bird in amongst them. It turned out to an immature SNOW GOOSE. Now, we heading to the Great Mall. Shopping and birding. Calvin Lou -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 19 13:10:27 2000 Subject: [SBB] BWTE -------- All, Yesterday late afternoon in the Palo Alto Flood Control Basin along Frontage Road there were between 35-40 BLUE-WINGED TEALS. Seems to be a dependable place for them each fall and a nice opportunity to compare all three female Teal species. Matthew Dodder -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 19 13:56:37 2000 Subject: [SBB] Palm Warbler -------- Today, an immature Western Palm Warbler was banded at CCFS. It was captured in one of the nets that are temporarily set up north of the regular ones at the trailer. (Same area where the Painted Bunting and Brown Thrasher were captured in September). Rita Colwell -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 19 16:32:36 2000 Subject: [SBB] Stevens Creek Shoreline -------- On our morning walk today we identified approximately 50 species. Highlights were: five Burrowing Owls, at two burrows, on the green hills northeast of the kite flying area, American Pipits in the field, a Sora, dashing across the mud north of the first wooden bridge east of the mitigation channel, Black-Bellied Plover, a Belted Kingfisher, Bonaparte's Gulls, Canvasbacks and adult and juvenile Black-Crowned Night Herons at the bay side. On Friday, we saw a Clapper Rail (also dashing, but I saw enough to tell it had a longer bill than the Sora that we'd also seen), a Dunlin, plus a Loggerhead Shrike at the northeast corner of the impoundment. Debbi Brusco ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 19 21:54:42 2000 Subject: [SBB] Ospreys, Cormorants & Egrets -------- All, This morning at 9:15 the female OSPREY was eating a fish. Another osprey appeared and began circling her. Although I couldn't hear her through the double-pane windows, she seemed to be vocalizing, either calling to her mate or protesting the intrusion of a stranger. At this time of year, I think it was the latter. In either case, she didn't fly off until she had finished eating the fish. Another interesting occurrance. A hundred or so DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANTS were swimming and fishing down the middle of Vasona Reservoir. Apparently, some of the fish they were hunting headed toward the shore. Some 30 AMERICAN and SNOWY EGRETS were taking advantage of this by working the shallows along the shore. As the cormorants preceded down the lake, the egrets flew forward to keep abreast of them, stopped to fish, then fly forward again. Jean -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 20 02:51:04 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On the way to the San Felipe Valley on Sunday, 19 Nov 00, I had an OSPREY over the Metcalf Ponds. An adult RED-SHOULDERED HAWK was near the intersection of Metcalf and San Felipe Roads. In the valley I saw a small PRAIRIE FALCON, undoubtedly a male, hunting over the horse pastures. It made a number of low-level forays, skimming along about a foot or two above the surface of the ground, looking to surprise an unwary ground squirrel. Also present was a SAY'S PHOEBE and a dark-morph RED-TAILED HAWK. I could hear WILD TURKEYS calling from the tree line. I then visited the Ogier Ponds, where I found another OSPREY feeding on a fish at the top of a bare tree. Ducks that were present on the ponds included large numbers of GADWALLS, 52 RING-NECKED DUCKS, 15 LESSER SCAUP, 7 AMERICAN WIGEON, 2 NORTHERN SHOVELERS, 5 CANVASBACK, 4 BUFFLEHEADS, and uncounted RUDDY DUCKS. There were 4 COMMON MERGANSERS (1 male, 3 females) and 7 HOODED MERGANSERS (3 males, 4 females). The gull flocks included over 100 CALIFORNIA, 37 HERRING, 2 THAYER'S, 2 GLAUCOUS-WINGED, and 5 MEW GULLS. A flight of 55 AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS slightly to the south was interesting. On the way home I saw another dark-morph RED-TAILED HAWK at Monterey Hwy and Bailey. 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 Nov 20 05:53:28 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On a lunch time walk today, 20 Nov 00, I stopped at the trees near San Tomas Aquino Creek and Mission College Blvd. Besides the abundant YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERS, I found a gummy-faced ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER and a TOWNSEND'S WARBLER. There was a nice sized flock of CEDAR WAXWINGS here as well. Another TOWNSEND'S WARBLER, a bright male, was at the corner of Scott and Olcott. 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 Nov 20 08:14:08 2000 Subject: [SBB] Almaden Birds -------- Hello All, Here are some birds of interest seen over the weekend in the Almaden area. Calero Reservoir (Nov 18): The male EURASIAN WIGEON was still present (finally saw it after three tries); it was seen preening and resting on a mud spit in the midst of a bunch of coots. Another interesting duck was a female HOODED MERGANSER. Six AMER WHITE PELICANS were circling and flying over the reservoir then seen heading northwest over the dam - they may have been displaced by the arrival of 150+ Canada Geese on the mudflats at the eastern end. 50+ EARED GREBES were at the lower end near the dam. Most of the interesting birds were at the shallower eastern end, and here's a list of ducks seen (besides the two noted above): Green-winged Teal, Mallard, N. Pintail, N. Shoveler, Gadwall, Amer Wigeon, Canvasback, Ring-necked Duck, Lesser Scaup, Comm Goldeneye, Bufflehead, Comm Merganser, Ruddy Duck - and shorebirds: Killdeer, Black-necked Stilt, Greater Yellowlegs, Least Sandpiper, Dunlin, Long-billed Dowitcher. An immature PEREGRINE FALCON was also seen on the shoreline at the eastern end. Almaden Reservoir (Nov 19): Only 15 WOOD DUCKS were seen this time - a disappointing number as last week (Nov 12) 63 were present; however, an unseen person was shooting off a shotgun scaring most of the waterfowl - very disturbing at this usually tranquil locale. Four COMMON MERGANSERS were on the reservoir, and on the peripheral mudflats ten COMMON SNIPE and three SPOTTED SANDPIPERS were seen. There was a lot of passerine activity at one of the pullouts along Alamitos Road and here I found a tan-striped WHITE-THROATED SPARROW in the underbrush with a mixed sparrow/junco flock, and higher up in an oak a HERMIT WARBLER - a little birdy bonanza. And just a final note - please support our CBC's if you can. The areas just described are covered in the Calero-Morgan Hill CBC. Thanks, 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 Nov 20 15:08:03 2000 Subject: [SBB] EEC Possibles -------- Serious Birders, Sharon, at the Environmental Education Center, said a party of out-of-county birders, who claimed to be serious birders, reported a BAIRD'S SANDPIPER just off the board walk, and also saw a RUSTY BLACKBIRD. Two neat birds to look for when at the EEC. Reference the recent report of Great Blue Herons chasing ground squirrels, has anyone out there ever seen the GB Heron actually swallow a ground squirrel? Would they peck the squirrel to death? Lee Lovelady, Volunteer Naturalist, EEC. ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 20 15:09:03 2000 Subject: [SBB] Historical Query -------- Folks: San Mateo, Marin, Santa Cruz, and Alameda counties all have books on place names, but not so Santa Clara, I guess. So for you historians out there, where would _Ferguson's Swamp_ be? A few weeks ago I discussed some of the early birders, including H. R. Taylor of Alameda County, who was a fierce oologist. On 30 Apr 1889, he collected a set (2 eggs) from a Swainson's Hawk's nest in Ferguson's Swamp. This was a period when Swainson's Hawk was a common to abundant species in southern Monterey County and western Fresno County with scattered records in San Benito, Contra Costa, and Yolo counties. There is a second egg set from Berryessa, collected by Rollo Beck on 21 Apr 1894. Interestingly, there is no mention by early observers, such as Barlow, Van Denburgh, and Grinnell of either of these records, but the oologist-naturalist connection was often tenuous. 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 Nov 20 16:10:01 2000 Subject: [SBB] Re: Great Blues & Ground Squirrels -------- When I was first birding, in 1983, I watched a Great Blue Heron stalk ground squirrels. He was in a field, stood absolutely still and waited until one appeared. He speared one with his beak and proceeded to eat it whole, head first. This was down at UC Santa Barbara . Kathy Parker -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 20 16:30:28 2000 Subject: [SBB] BAGO -------- All, The adult male BARROW'S GOLDENEYE was still at the east end of Shoreline Lake this afternoon 11/20/00. Twenty COMMON GOLDENEYES were also on the lake. 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 Nov 20 17:56:52 2000 Subject: [SBB] White-headed Ruddy Duck -------- This morning at the mouth of Alviso Slough, while conducting a survey, Sue Macias and Yvonne McHugh saw a SHORT-EARED OWL and the immature BALD EAGLE that had previously been seen in the same area. Late in the afternoon, Yvonne McHugh and I saw an AMERICAN BITTERN flush from the marsh between pond A9 and the Mouth of Alviso Slough, 4 EURASIAN WIGEON in A9 with a large group of mixed ducks including AMERICAN WIGEON, a BLUE-WINGED TEAL in the northwest corner of the pond, and a white-headed RUDDY DUCK toward the northeast corner of the pond mixed in with many other RUDDY DUCKS. Unfortunately we didn't have time to examine the white-headed duck more closely, since the sun was approaching the horizon. How common is it for RUDDY DUCKS to have a white head? I think there was a recent post about this, but I don't have it at hand. Cheryl Millett Biologist San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory PO Box 247 1290 Hope Street Alviso, CA 95002 phone 408/946-6548 fax 408/946-9279 -------- Attachment 1.4 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Mon Nov 20 18:52:47 2000 Subject: [SBB] CCFS Saturday 11/18/00 -------- Banding on Saturday at Coyote Creek Field Station (SFBBO) didn't net anything as unique as Sunday's Palm Warbler, but there were some interesting birds. Most unlikely was a HUTTON'S VIREO, which is rarely banded at CCFS. A female ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER was recaptured; it appeared to be of the gray-headed, celata race, based on wing length and sex, less so on gray-headedness. We also banded a GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET, 4th for the fall season, so far. The bulk of the species were Audubon's YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERS (8), HERMIT THRUSH (6), LINCOLN'S SPARROW (5), SONG SPARROW (5), and RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET (3). Also recaptured a BEWICK'S WREN. Only one WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW (pugetensis) was netted. This morning, 11/20/00, at our home along Skyline Blvd., a SHARP- SHINNED HAWK came down to the ground looking for prey. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 21 07:59:00 2000 Subject: [SBB] Los Gatos Creek Park Osprey -------- Hi, For the second day in a row, I've seen an Osprey perched in the tree on the island just past the entrance to Los Gatos Creek Park. I wonder if he commutes to Vasona. Don Ganton -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 21 10:16:52 2000 Subject: [SBB] Rusty Blackbird -------- Dear Birders, I stirred up quite a few letters over the report of the Rusty Blackbird at the EEC Sunday. Sharon is off today, but I E-mailed her and hope to hear something back Tuesday. One thing in favor of the RB. In fifteen years at the Environmental Education Center, I have never seen a Brewer's Blackbird there. But the bird guides show the Rusty Blackbird as an inhabitant of marshy situations. Note that at low tide, the shorebirds flock to the mudflats in Mallard Slough, near the floating pier. At high tides, they move over to the shallow pond just west of the observation deck in New Chicago Marsh. I admit I would have difficulty singling out a Barid's Sandpiper. Cheers, Lee Lovelady, Volunteer Natuaralist. ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 21 13:53:48 2000 Subject: [SBB] Charleston/Shoreline -------- Hi, all Yesterday and today I guided two bird field trips to the Charleston Slough area for my Zoology class at De Anza, and had a few good birds. Yesterday's highlights included an AMERICAN BITTERN (which lifted up from Charleston Slough and flew toward the Flood Control Basin area), one CALIFORNIA THRASHER, and a great look at BLACK SKIMMERS skimming (and harrassed by Ring-bills whenever they caught anything, of course). Today, in the rain, the female HOODED MERGANSER was again at the northern end of Shoreline Lake, with a couple of female COMMON GOLDENEYE. We didn't go far enough to check on the Barrow's, seen recently on the lake. We also had a great look at a male RING-NECKED PHEASANT, toward Charleston Slough, near where the new observation deck is being built. Happy Thanksgiving, Jesse Conklin _____________________________________________________________________________________ Get more from the Web. FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.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 Nov 21 16:11:14 2000 Subject: [SBB] birding quandary -------- Dear Birders, My husband and I have just moved into the area from Toronto, Canada where we were avid local birders. We had a wonderful sighting at Shoreline on Sunday, November 12 of a raptor enjoying his lunch of squirrel on a low branch. However we were most perplexed because it was a large bird, larger than the Red Tails we knew well at home; dark body, front and back; head feathers down the nape of the neck shining a lighter brown, almost gold in contrast to the rest of the back. It had very white feathers down the legs and a banded tail. I could see no red colouration to the tail at all. These last three observations confounded me completely. My guide books are not very helpful about identifying a bird with all these features. Piecing bits of information together I think it might be an immature dark morph red tail. Can someone verify this for me? Thank you so much. Debbie -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 21 17:25:49 2000 Subject: [SBB] Central Valley Birding and Symposium -------- Greetings Friends: I just returned from several days of enjoying birds and birders in the Central Valley. Myself and Al DeMartini were invited by the Central Valley Bird Club to lead several field trips during their "4th Annual Central Valley Birding Symposium" held in Stockton Nov. 16-19. We departed early Thursday (11/16) morning for some pre-symposium scouting in Merced County. O'Neil Forebay was our first destination. A thorough check of the vast open waters yielded no noteworthy avian apparitions but a glaucous-winged gull perched on a pier was a Central Valley rarity. A prairie falcon adorned a tall tower above us while a merlin on patrol caused frayed nerves among the meadowlark populace. We headed just south of the forebay to Jasper Sears Road where 4 vesper sparrows were perched on the barbed wire fence along the road. The Los Banos Landfill (dump) along Billy Wright Road provided us with an opportunity to exercise our gull identification skills. There's nothing like the sights, sounds and smells of a dump to sharpen one's senses! Among the several hundred gulls present we picked out 2 western gulls (very few County records), 3 glaucous-winged gulls (rare but regular) and 2 Thayer's gulls (also rare but regular here). There were also a few birds that defied identification (i.e., hybrids). Then it was off to Merced N.W.R. where the Auto Tour Loop was swarming with thousands of birds. We picked out 2 blue-morph snow geese among the "clouds" of white geese. A careful scouting of shorebirds paid off with the discovery of 2 stilt sandpipers among the dowitchers as well as 11 lesser yellowlegs. As the sun neared the horizon we drove north to Stockton where the symposium was underway at the Radisson Hotel. What an enjoyable and enlightening experience we were to have! For the next three action-packed days we were treated to slide presentations, identification workshops, artist exhibitions, a book-signing party, a "Birder Marketplace" (good thing I left my credit card at home), tasty meals, visits to world-class birding destinations, and best of all--a chance to socialize with fellow birders from all over the state. A star-studded cast of characters made the scene to educate and entertain us; Kenn Kaufman, Jon Dunn, Kimball Garrett, Keith Hansen, Debi Shearwater, and Joe Morlan, to name a few. I picked out several familiar Santa Clara and San Mateo County faces among the 370 symposium attendees. Friday (11/17) morning Al and I joined fellow bird-brains, John Sterling and Steve Abbott, to co-lead our first field trip: Merced County hotspots. With a caravan of birders and two reporters from a local newspaper in tow we enjoyed a gorgeous crisp, clear autumn day with rare birds popping out at us from every direction. We "hit-the-jackpot" at Merced Refuge. First off, we located the stilt sandpipers Al and I had discovered the previous day. Further down the road Steve spotted an eastern phoebe at a weedy ditch near the same spot one wintered last year. Then John picked out a very late pectoral sandpiper roosting with other "peeps." An adult bald eagle dove down into the marsh scaring up thousands of ducks, geese, blackbirds, shorebirds, sandhill cranes and white-faced ibis. What a sight! Back at the Radisson we celebrated "happy hour" (appropriately so, since the term "symposium" is derived from the Greek "synposis" which means "to get together and drink"). A scrumptious dinner followed over which we compared our field trip results with fellow attendees..... And on and on it went for another two memorable days......I surely will return for next year's symposium which promises to be even bigger and better. I'll keep you posted. Cheers! Peter J. Metropulos -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 21 18:58:56 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] birding quandary -------- >My husband and I have just moved into the area from Toronto, Canada where >we were avid local birders. welcome! (and my sympathies for leaving toronto... great city!) I won't even pretend to answer the question, given my history for misidentifying stuff I've *seen* (as this lsit well knows.. grin), but I had to say hello, and this is a big migration area for raptors, so it could well be something on the way from here to there, also... So if you're using a guide specific to the bay area, it might not have what's currently here... -- Chuq Von Rospach - Plaidworks Consulting (mailto:[[email protected]]) Apple Mail List Gnome (mailto:[[email protected]]) The vet said it was behavioral, but I prefer to think of it as genetic. It cuts down on the liability -- Get Fuzzy -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 21 23:22:57 2000 Subject: [SBB] Osprey & Peregrine -------- All, Day 50 for the Vasona Reservoir OSPREY. After breakfasting on fish, she left for the day. At noon I saw an immature PEREGRINE FALCON perched on the osprey's roost. It left after about 20 minutes, having been harassed by some crows. Jean -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 22 07:02:28 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- I went for a lunch time walk along San Tomas Aquino Creek today, 22 Nov 00. Let's get the bird stuff out of the way first. I saw a BELTED KINGFISHER perched over the creek on a wire. Nothing else of avian interest. What was certainly cool though, was a spawning STEELHEAD RAINBOW TROUT. The Scott Ave bridge over the creek sits on a concrete slab, over which the creek flows. The fish was sitting upright in about 2-3 inches of water on the concrete, where I was able to get nice binocular views. Soon it began working its way upstream in a couple of surges that took it about 20 feet, before it stopped to rest again. When I came back, the fish was in the shadow of the bridge (not quite under it), laying on its side near the edge of the creek flow. It slowly opened and closed its mouth, as if gasping for breath (it certainly looked tired). Presently the flow of the creek started to move it slowly back downstream. It twisted perpendicular to the flow as it lay on its side but, as it got into slightly deeper water at the center of the creek, it righted itself and turned back into the flow, facing upstream. I watched it for another 5 minutes or so as it sat here unmoving. The fish was about 2 feet long, or slightly more, and probably weighed about 5-7 pounds. It had a steely gray head and face. The upper back was an olive/brown, with irregularly-shaped dark spots. The spots were also present on the dorsal fin and the upper half of the caudal fin. The sides of the fish were somewhat paler and grayer, with no spotting. There was a dull irridescent wash of rose color in a stripe from just ahead of the caudal fin up about 1/3 of the fish's body length. If anybody knows of an agency that might be interested in spawning steelhead in urban Santa Clara, please let me know and I will forward the observation on to 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]] Wed Nov 22 07:40:58 2000 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 11/22/2000, I watched an adult PEREGRINE FALCON feeding on an American Coot on the Shoreline GC near the boathouse at Shoreline Lake. At one point a female Northern Harrier landed about 10 feet away, but she then left. The Peregrine left without finishing the coot, when some golfers "played through." A bonus bird in the same binocular view was the adult male BARROW'S GOLDENEYE on the east end of the lake. I saw a second adult PEREGRINE FALCON, a lighter bird, on a tower at the Stevens Creek Tidal Marsh about 10 min. later. I counted 11 BLACK SKIMMERS at Charleston Slough. 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 Nov 22 07:52:18 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] birding quandary -------- In regards to .. At 04:11 PM 11/21/00 -0800, Debbie wrote: Dear Birders, We had a wonderful sighting at Shoreline on Sunday, November 12 of a raptor enjoying his lunch of squirrel on a low branch. However we were most perplexed because it was a large bird, larger than the Red Tails we knew well at home; dark body, front and back; head feathers down the nape of the neck shining a lighter brown, almost gold in contrast to the rest of the back. It had very white feathers down the legs and a banded tail. I could see no red colouration to the tail at all. These last three observations confounded me completely. Given your brief description and having not seen the bird, I will not venture to identify the bird, but ... by the much larger size, almost gold contrast to the head/nape, and a banded tail ... presuming this was white at the base with a dark outer band ... I would say look in your guides at an immature Golden Eagle. In addition, the following was posted on November 18th. On Saturday morning, the 18th, at the eastern end of Shoreline Lake there were a couple of Horned Grebes and a male Barrow's Goldeneye. At the Crittenden Marsh walk-in/parking area, there were a flock of American Pipits. While I was observing them, an adult Golden Eagle flew in over my head and landed on the squirrel-infested hillside just outside the heavy wooden fence. It spent the next several minutes chasing squirrels around on foot! Then it flew off to a power tower. Later, on my way out, I found the eagle again on the ground near that slight northern excursion of the heavy wooden fence where a couple of Burrowing Owls were still to be seen. It soon flew off to the west, but then seemed to return in a few minutes with a friend of his. Altogether, I probably got views of 3 Golden Eagles and 3 Burrowing Owls. Frank Vanslager All the best, Eric Eric Feuss ABTS Application Developer, Administrator Program Management, Program Management Technologies (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]] Thu Nov 23 10:40:50 2000 Subject: [SBB] Stanford Campus sapsucker -------- Attachment 679 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Thu Nov 23 13:44:11 2000 Subject: [SBB] BAGO, EUWI -------- All, Today at Redwood Shores in the large water treatment pool there was a male EURASIAN WIGEON along with multitudes of HOODED MERGANSERS and all the other expected waterfowl. A PEREGRINE FALCON streaked through and scattered all the small birds, but most seemed to settle back down on the pond again. There are still 2 BARROW'S GOLDENEYES near the boathouse on Shoreline Lake coming close enough to shore to photograph easily and allowing good comparisons to the numerous COGOs. Both HORNED and EARED GREBES are present as well. The Palo Alto Flood Control Basin still has good numbers of BLUE-WINGED TEALS, although not in the same quantity as earlier in the week. An AMERICAN BITTERN, flushed from the small waterway beside the trail on the way to the deadend where the Teals were. At Lake Cunningham the LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL remains near the small island off to the right. It seems to have established a 20 yard circle of water which it protects from other gulls. It swam leisurely just off shore back-and-forth across its territory until I left. Hopefully the photos will turn out... Elsewhere in the park the parking lot had RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH. I saw no interesting Geese among the CAGOs. On a trip to Grant Ranch yesterday I failed to find the Summer Tanager, but did have good looks at RED-BREASTED SAPSUCKER, SAY'S PHOEBE, and RING-NECKED DUCK. Matthew Dodder http://www.birdguy.net/ P.S. I'm still looking for volunteer counters to help with the Palo Alto Christmas Bird Count on Dec. 18. And any previous Regional Coordinators who would like to cover Region 3 (since Garth can't do it this year) should contact me immediately. Thanks, M. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 23 13:50:59 2000 Subject: [SBB] AMBI -------- All, I forgot to mention that the AMERICAN BITTERN that I saw at the Palo Alto Flood Control Basin was unusually GRAYISH. Almost as pale and dull as an imm. Black-crowned Night Heron. It stil had the dark flight remiges and dark malar stripe, but lacked any of the gold tones or warm "autumn" coloration of most Bitterns. That's all, Matthew Dodder http://www.birdguy.net/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 24 20:34:19 2000 Subject: [SBB] Calero and Uvas Rd, Thanksgiving day -------- We made our first visit to Calero Reservoir while taking the long way to San Martin for Thanksgiving. Spent our time at the eastern end of the water between about 1:15-2:45pm. Plenty to see: a white tailed kite, a red shouldered hawk, and several probable red tails were hunting the shores, while 7 or 8 White Pelicans, several American Wigeon and one possible Eurasian Wigeon, at least a dozen Buffleheads, a couple of N. Pintails, several immature D.C. Cormorants, five Ring-Necked ducks, some Ruddys, and a fair number of N. Shovelers joined the many hundreds of Coots, several hundred Canada Geese, and plentiful Mallards in and near the water. There were a few Killdeer, a scattering of Great and Snowy Egrets, a nice Great Blue Heron, a couple dozen unidentified Sandpipers, lots of Black-Necked Stilts, and a few Dowitchers. The trees nearby had a flock of busy White Crowned Sparrows and one lively but almost impossible to see probable Kinglet. Quite a few Black Phoebes, the most I've seen in one area. Mark also spotted several tri-colored blackbirds in the big flocks near the reservoir, and we saw all sorts of great animal prints near the water. Heading further south on Uvas Road, we saw a Yellow-Billed Magpie fly into a field right next to the road. This was somewhere between Oak Glen and Little Uvas Rd.. A great way to finish! The only other bird of note was a nicely browned turkey in San Martin....;) Natasha -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 25 07:07:33 2000 Subject: [SBB] Eastern Fox Sparrow in San Jose -------- We have an Eastern - Red - Fox Sparrow coming to our backyard feeder in Almaden, San Jose. We first saw it on Thursday and it is still here today - Saturday. If you would like to see it please call us at 408-268-7097 Bruce Barrett -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 25 09:32:50 2000 Subject: [SBB] Pileated again -------- A male Pileated has been foraging in the Douglas Firs around our "neighborhood" for the past several days. I got great looks this morning and could easily see the red chin patch. I guess you don't have to be shy when you're that big! Also had a huge flock of American Robins, several hundred birds feeding on madrone berries and probably lingered due to provided water. First Hermit Thrush of the winter appeared yesterday. Varied Thrushes have been present for several weeks. Please excuse the cross posting. We live near intersection of 35 and 84, at about 2200' and a bit north of Santa Clara/San Mateo County line. Happy post-turkey day and good birding, Janet Hanson -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 25 13:17:29 2000 Subject: [SBB] Ducks at Sausal Pond, Portola Valley -------- Apologies for crossposting, this is a report for a spot in San Mateo County, not far north of Santa Clara County> Deb Bartens informed me that she saw some nice ducks this morning, 11/25/00, at Sausal Pond. She saw several HOODED MERGANSERS and RING- NECKED DUCKS. She went to see if any Wood Ducks were present but did not find any. The pond is located behind the senior living facility, the Sequoias, on Portola Rd. in Portola Valley. It is at the bottom end of Windy Hill Open Space. Access is from Wayside(?) Road on the southwest side of Portola Rd., just north of the Sequoias. Les Chibana -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 25 14:57:50 2000 Subject: [SBB] BAGO, MERL, COSN -------- All, Yesterday both of the BARROW'S GOLDENEYES were still off the boathouse shore on Shoreline Lake. COMMON GOLDENEYES abounded. A MERLIN flew over the parking area on Terminal Way and over the Mountain View Forebay. Today at the Palo Alto Flood Control Basin, there continue to be BLUE-WINGED TEALS and I flushed 4 COMMON SNIPE from the trail leading out toward the Bay. That's all, Matthew Dodder http://www.birdguy.net/ -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 25 17:32:25 2000 Subject: [SBB] 11/24 Birds at Lake Cunningham -------- Birders, Just a quick note about some birds that Denise Wight and I saw at Lake Cunningham on Friday, 11/24. On Capitol Expressway near the intersection with Cunningham Road was a Peregrine plaing with pigeons before flying to a nearby phone pole. At the lake, we were greeted by a large flock of CALIFORNIA and RING-BILLED GULLs with a few HERRING GULLs in the northern parking lot. There was one THAYER'S GULL and one GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULL in the muddy area near the parking lot. A quick check of the lake produced the LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL not far from its adopted island home. A surprise was a single CATTLE EGRET on the island, a new Lake Cunningham bird for me. 6-8 WHITE PELICANs plied the lake. Birding along the perimeter road yielded HUTTON'S VIREO and a group of 5-6 RED-BREASTED NUTHATCHes in the pines close to the eastern entrance. The place was loaded with the more expected passerines including skads of YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERs, RUBY-CROWNED KINGLETs, COMMON BUSHTITS, and groups of ROBINs. HERMIT THRUSH and NUTTALL'S WOODPECKERs called nearby as CEDAR WAXWINGS flew overhead. An AMERICAN KESTREL looked on from its treetop perch.....a very birdy place! On the south side of the pond with the flock of barnyard geese were an adult ROSS'S GOOSE and an immature SNOW GOOSE. There were two drake and one possible very distant female BARROW'S GOLDENEYE on Shoreline Lake. A female HOODED MERGANSER was also on the lake. Good birding! Jim Danzenbaker San Jose, CA 408-264-7582 (408-ANI-SKUA) [[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 Nov 25 20:33:32 2000 Subject: [SBB] Stevens Creek Shoreline, Mtn. View -------- On this week's walk this morning in the fog, we again saw just short of 50 species. The highlights were a Golden Eagle, Red-Tailed Hawk, and Peregrine Falcon all on adjacent power towers by the impoundment east of the kite flying area and mitigation channel. The Peregrine voiced its dislike of the Red-Tailed being there, and buzzed it before flying away. The group this time got to see the Loggerhead Shrike on the bay side, making a meal of a bird, of which there was not much left. There was a Downy Woodpecker in coyote brush near the metal bridge, and a female Hooded Merganser in the mitigation channel. Debbi Brusco ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 25 20:49:51 2000 Subject: [SBB] Stevens Creek Shoreline again -------- I forgot to mention that we also saw a Says Phoebe, and 3 of the 5 Burrowing Owls that we saw last week. And, unfortunately, a feral cat on the west side of the creek. Debbi Brusco ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 26 08:33:09 2000 Subject: [SBB] Golden Eagle at Moffett Field -------- Greetings, My husband and I notice a juvenile Golden Eagle cruising the open field area near Moffett Field as we were winging our way south on 101 yesterday about 1 PM. On our way back, about 45 minutes later, it was still there. We exited at Ellis (or whatever the exit is just south of the Moffett Field exit) and travelled south on the service road to a place where we could stop and watch it for awhile. We didn't have binoculars with us but we didn't need them. We had an excellent view until it caught a thermal and drifted high and west. Mary Kenney -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 26 16:29:33 2000 Subject: [SBB] Tropical Kingbird -------- At 10 am today (Sunday, 26 November), a TROPICAL KINGBIRD was in the Palo Alto Baylands at the bike bridge crossing of San Francisquito Creek. - Dick Richard Stovel [[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 Nov 27 05:17:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- On Thanksgiving day, 23 Nov 00, I found a fair-sized flock of CANADA GEESE in the stubble field at Bailey and Monterey Hwy. In with this flock were 4 small-form geese, which were probably of the ALEUTIAN race. These birds had the flat-headed look and white chin straps that are typical of this race. Two of them had thin white neck-rings. the other two were immatures and, as such, lacked neck-rings. On the ground behind this flock of geese was an adult PEREGRINE FALCON of the anatum race. On Sunday, 26 Nov 00, I birded the Shoreline Park and Baylands area with Deborah Bartens. The 12 BLACK SKIMMERS continue on Charleston Slough. Also present here were 2 WHIMBRELS, along with a small number of other assorted shorebirds. The Palo Alto FCB had 4 BLUE-WINGED TEAL in the North Pond (2 males, 2 females). A flyby PEREGRINE FALCON didn't stick around. Also, for you ichthyologists out there, it may be that the fish I saw last week was a Coho Salmon, rather than a steelhead. 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 Nov 27 07:37:57 2000 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: Yesterday, 11/26/2000, I saw two GOLDEN EAGLES (unaged) in the fog at the Stanford dish. Nearby, were four LARK SPARROWS, which have become decidedly uncommon in the northern Santa Cruz Mountains in the last 40 or so years. This morning, 11/27/2000, a female HOODED MERGANSER was in (remains in?) the channel immediately west of the Stevens Creek Tidal Marsh. The count of BLACK SKIMMMERS at Charleston Slough is holding at 12. 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 Nov 27 07:51:59 2000 Subject: [SBB] Good day for raptors -------- Saturday afternoon (11/25), Marti and I walked at the Stanford dish. On the way up from Alpine Road, we found a White-tailed Kite working on a substantial meal on a snag near the trail. Atop the dish, a pair of Golden Eagles was perched. As we watched, a young eagle landed lower on the dish and screeched repeatedly at the adult pair (“feed me”?). Descending clockwise on the loop circuit, two Ravens shared a snag with a Red-shouldered Hawk. Rather than chase the hawk away, it seemed that they were perhaps hoping to scavenge a meal at its expense. A bit farther on, we saw a Kestrel drop to the ground and return with small prey. A Northern Harrier made a turn at the trail so close we could almost have grabbed a wing tip. We had good looks later at another Kestrel with prey, a perched Red-tailed Hawk, and a Kite harassing a Raven. The raptor viewing finished as it began, with a Kite working on prey. In this case, we saw feathers drifting down from the perch. Other birds: Black Phoebe, Says Phoebe, W. Bluebird, A. Robin, Lesser Goldfinch, Golden-crowned & White-crowned Sparrows, Scrub Jay, Acorn Woodpecker. ---------------- George Oetzel <[[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 Nov 27 09:06:56 2000 Subject: [SBB] RE: Oka Ponds/ Los Gatos Creek -------- Good Morning This came back to me this morning and thought I should resend it as waiting four days someone might miss the ducks. Thanks and best regards, Linda Subj: Warning: could not send message for past 4 hours Date: 11/26/00 10:23:17 PM Pacific Standard Time From: [[email protected]] (Mail Delivery Subsystem) To: [[email protected]] ********************************************** ** THIS IS A WARNING MESSAGE ONLY ** ** YOU DO NOT NEED TO RESEND YOUR MESSAGE ** ********************************************** The original message was received at Sun, 26 Nov 2000 17:37:16 -0800 (PST) from imo-r01.mx.aol.com [152.163.225.1] ----- Original message follows ----- Return-Path: <[[email protected]]> Received: from imo-r01.mx.aol.com (imo-r01.mx.aol.com [152.163.225.1]) by lists.Stanford.EDU (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id RAA13722 for <[[email protected]]>; Sun, 26 Nov 2000 17:37:16 -0800 (PST) From: [[email protected]] Received: from [[email protected]] by imo-r01.mx.aol.com (mail_out_v28.33.) id 3.21.40a4fcf (4245) for <[[email protected]]>; Sun, 26 Nov 2000 20:36:24 -0500 (EST) Message-ID: <[[email protected]]> Date: Sun, 26 Nov 2000 20:36:23 EST Subject: Oka Ponds/Los Gatos Creek Park To: [[email protected]] MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: Windows AOL sub 124 Good Evening All, Sorry I did not post this last night, I wanted to get a confirmation of my sighting. I was lucky to get confirmation tonight on a female WOOD DUCK in the large pond near the bridge (Los Gatos Creek Park side). I spotted her last night with two NORTHERN SHOVELERS and RING-NECKED DUCKS. The COMMON SNIPE (1) is on the creekside, was there last night also. The OSPREY was there last night too! I was told tonight that a Male Wood Duck has been there this past week, I have not found him yet, but I will! Tonight, lots of GADWALLS, AMERICAN WIDGEONS, HOODED MERGANSERS, BUFFLEHEADS, LESSER SCAUPS, RING-NECKED DUCKS (Oka Pond side) and the other usual great birds! Sorry no OSPREY tonight. BELTED KINGFISHERS (2) both nights. One COMMON SNIPE tonight too! Have a great week of birding. My best regards, Linda Sullivan Saratoga 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 Nov 27 09:45:03 2000 Subject: [SBB] Almaden updates -------- Hello All, Here are some updates for the Almaden area over the Thanksgiving weekend. Almaden Reservoir (11/24): The WOOD DUCK count was back up to 32. Also seen were seven COMMON MERGANSERS, sixteen COMMON SNIPE, and one SPOTTED SANDPIPER. Calero Reservoir (11/25): The male EURASIAN WIGEON was still present. Also 14 AMER WHITE PELICANS and 191 CANADA GEESE at the eastern end. I scanned the geese flock carefully hoping for an interesting smaller goose, but they were all large "honkers". Almaden Lake (11/25): Two first-winter THAYER'S GULLS were at the outflow channel. Many Herring Gulls are now gathering at the lake as well as the usual California and Ring-billed Gulls. Water District Ponds (Coleman & Almaden Expwy) (11/26): The most interesting birds here were land birds - a TOWNSEND'S WARBLER in the riparian willows along the Guadalupe channel, and a seemingly out-of-place CALIFORNIA THRASHER in the brushy undeveloped area just north of the pond; in fact, the thrasher was seen in a small tree bordering the undeveloped area and the back parking lot of Lazy Boy Furniture (Blossom Hill Rd). Ducks on the pond were as follows: Mallard (55), Gadwall (10), Ring-necked Duck (22), Lesser Scaup (17), Bufflehead (2), and Ruddy Duck (12). 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 Nov 27 13:15:32 2000 Subject: [SBB] Re: Tropical Kingbird -------- My turn to make an apology for cross-posting, but all these birds are showing up on the San Mateo/Santa Clara county line. (And even our S. Clara list administrator has done it!) Dick Stovel reported a Tropical Kingbird yesterday near the bike bridge across San Francisquito Creek in the Baylands. He didn't specify in which county (or both) he saw the bird. I was there from about 11:30 to near noon today, and partly succeeded: that is, the bird was easy to find and see, but I couldn't get a county bird out of it (for Santa Clara). The location is most quickly reached from the east end of O'Connor Street in East Palo Alto. An alternative route is to park at the end of Geng Road in Palo Alto, and follow the bike path until it crosses the bridge. There is a fenced-in pond and an adjacent concrete structure (also fenced) on the west (San Mateo) side. The bird this morning basically hung out on those fences, happily (I presume) catching good-sized insects. Some motorcyclists (that can't be legal, can it?) came by once and flushed the bird up to the bridge, where it landed about 1/4 of the way across. I walked toward it (for closer inspection, of course, no ulterior motive), but I only succeeded in flushing it back to the fences. From then on, it resolutely stayed in San Mateo County. The Kingbird was silent, so strictly speaking I could not rule out Couch's, but both probabilities and the rather long bill favor Tropical; also, the green of the back was not strikingly bright. This pond, by the way, has reeds all along one edge, and is one of the best spots in San Mateo County to find Common Moorhen. None came out for me today, but I did see an adult Sora working just inside the reeds. There were also 26 Greater Yellowlegs (but, alas, no Lesser). If the Tropical Kingbird sticks around and is seen on the Palo Alto CBC, it would be a first-ever for that Count. Thanks, Dick! Cheers, Al -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 27 14:29:12 2000 Subject: [SBB] TRKI -------- All, At noon today 11/27/00 I went to look for the TROPICAL KINGBIRD found by Dick Stovel yesterday. It was still near the rusty bike bridge over San Francisquito Creek behind the Palo Alto Golf Course, feeding from the fence lines around the pumphouse and from those along the barbed wire fence along the bayside edge of the nearby pond. The bird was quite tame and I got what should be some nice photographs of it. Throughout my 20+ minute observation the bird never called (and also never got anywhere near Santa Clara County - which county did you have it in Dick?), but the bill shape looks typical of a Tropical Kingbird and not a Couch's. Two SORAs called from the pond here and an immature PEREGRINE FALCON perched atop the high voltage tower along the nearby bike path. A quick stop at the duck pond turned up an incredible variety of GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULL plumages, an adult MEW GULL, and a first-winter THAYER'S GULL. The SCAUP flock on the Bay off the harbor mouth was relatively close in, but I could find no scoters or other unusual ducks among it. 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 Nov 27 15:27:54 2000 Subject: [SBB] Re: Bi-county Tropical kingbird -------- Thanks to Al Eisner for adding detail on the San Francisquito Creek Tropical Kingbird and access thereto. I definitely wasn't in detail mode when I sent the report in. My encounter on Sunday morning was nearly all on the Santa Clara County side of the creek. The bird made one foray across the creek, but spent most of its time in trees inside the Palo Alto golf course fence. It was quite active and not easy to approach for study. I concur with Al that Couch's can't be ruled out but that Tropical is probable based on bill length and occurrence. (But, of all the records of west coast Tropical Kingbird's, how many were examined to eliminate Couch's?) (No apologies for cross-posting; if it's relevant to both lists, it belongs on both lists!) - Dick Richard Stovel [[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 Nov 27 15:38:18 2000 Subject: [SBB] No Tropical Kingbird but Short-eared Owl & Blue-winged Teal -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I tried for but did not find the Tropical Kingbird seen yesterday by Dick Stovel near the bike bridge over San Francisquito Creek (Palo Alto Baylands). From the trail that follows the creek, east of Byzzby Park, we did see a Short-eared Owl flying low over the northern end of the Palo Alto Flood Control Basin. Later we also had an adult male Blue-winged Teal in the usual place in the North Pond. Take care, Bob Reiling, 1:37 PM, 11/27/00 -------- Attachment 575 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Mon Nov 27 15:39:24 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Re: Bi-county Tropical kingbird -------- I just tried for the Tropical kingbird, but he appears to be hiding -- no Kingbird sitting anywhere exposed within 200 yards of that bridge. -- Richard C. Carlson Chairman, Spectrum Economics Palo Alto, CA [[email protected]] 650-324-2701 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 27 16:06:18 2000 Subject: [SBB] Re: No Tropical Kingbird -------- All, Anyone who read my last post must realize that we birded the wrong creek this morning (I wondered why no one else seemed to be interested in this really good "Santa Clara County" bird). Unfortunately in my rush to find the bird I made assumptions as to what creek was in the "Palo Alto Baylands". Sigh! Bob Reiling, 4:04 PM, 11/27/00 -------- Attachment 419 bytes -------- From [[email protected]] Tue Nov 28 02:48:48 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- This morning, 28 Nov 00, I stopped at San Francisquito Creek to see the TROPICAL KINGBIRD. Steve Miller and I watched it for about 15-20 minutes as it caught bees from the fence surrounding the small pond on the San Mateo side of the bike bridge. This was at approximately 10:00am. 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 Nov 28 07:23:57 2000 Subject: [SBB] : -------- Returning at lunch time to San Francisquito Creek showed the TROPICAL KINGBIRD continuing its stay on the San Mateo side. I doubt it will move from here until it runs out of bees. The golf course pond had 5 HOODED MERGANSERS, 2 males and 3 females. 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 Nov 28 10:29:58 2000 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: Today, 11/28/2000, I watched the TROPICAL KINGBIRD at the small pond in East Palo Alto, San Mateo County, from about 10:25 to 10:40 (I ran into Mike Mammoser and Steve Miller as they left). Also, a pair of HOODED MERGANSERS were in the small pond on the Palo Alto Municipal GC next to the Geng Road parking. 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 Nov 28 13:06:31 2000 Subject: [SBB] Tropical Kingbird, Ross's Goose, Snow Goose and Lesser Black-backed Gull -------- All, This morning Frank Vanslager and I saw the Tropical Kingbird in both Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties (on both sides of the right :-) San Francisquito Creek). A two county lifer for both of us! When we arrived at the bridge the bird was in a pine tree about 125 feet inside the golf course south of a tee located in corner of the course. While we watched the bird caught and ate several (at least 12) large insects. Our initial ID based on the shape of the bill was that the bird was a Tropical Kingbird. After a while some golfers moved to the tee and a few minutes later the bird flew across the creek to southern edge of a barbed fence around a pump house. At this point the sun had broken thru the fog and in bright sunlight using my scope and then Franks Questar we were able to determine that the primaries on the bird had unevenly spaced tips thereby verifying that the bird was an adult Tropical Kingbird (the tips of individual primaries on adult Couch's Kingbirds are evenly spaced). The outer three primaries on the Tropical Kingbird had narrow spacing, the next two spaces were much wider (between the third and fourth, fourth and fifth primaries from the tip of the wing) followed by more medium to narrow spaces. We then went to Lake Cunningham Park in search of Red-breasted Nuthatches. None were found, we did however see an adult Ross's Goose and an immature Snow Goose feeding with domestic geese. The wild geese seemed to be quite tame but also seemed to be taking their que from the domestic geese, becoming agitated when we came to within about twenty feet of them. While we were there we decided to check up on the Lesser Black-backed Gull which was quickly found guarding the southern edge of "his" island. Take care, Bob Reiling, 1:01 PM, 11/28/00 -------- Attachment 2.0 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Tue Nov 28 14:27:22 2000 Subject: [SBB] Kingbird/Orioles -------- Hi, all Yes, the TROPICAL KINGBIRD at San Francisquito Creek was easily found today at noon. I was there until about 12:50, and the bird stayed along the fence on the San Mateo side, flycatching busily (and efficiently, I might add. Quite a few yellowjackets and a couple of small dragonflies met their demise.) During that hour, the area around the fenced-in pond also produced an AMERICAN BITTERN, a male RING-NECKED PHEASANT, and one female COMMON GOLDENEYE. On the Santa Clara side, three unseasonal fall-plumaged BULLOCK'S ORIOLES were right near the trail head at the Geng Road parking lot. They were flitting around in the bushes about 30 feet down the trail. Also, a MERLIN watched over the golf course from a treetop. Good day, Jesse Conklin _____________________________________________________________________________________ Get more from the Web. FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.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 Nov 28 14:32:39 2000 Subject: [SBB] Tropical Kingbird Continues.... -------- South-Bay-Birders, Pen-Birders: This afternoon I made it over to see the Tropical Kingbird near the San Mateo/Santa Clara County line. Three birders were already there looking at it on perched on the fence next to the pond at the San Mateo County side. From time to time it would fly up and grab a yellow jacket. At no time while I was there did the bird venture into Santa Clara County. There was some discussion earlier whether this was a Couch's or a Tropical Kingbird. Although the bird made no calls, the bird's longish thick bill and deeply knotched tail would give me reason to call this a Tropical Kingbird. I know of no other records of Couch's Kingbird in California other than the one two years ago in Orange County in Southern California. Interesting would be to draw up a list of Santa Clara/San Mateo County line species of rare birds. At the moment, besides this Tropical Kingbird, I can only think of the male Indigo Bunting of this year, the Solitary Sandpiper of last year, and the Summer Tanager of a few years ago.... Directions: from US 101 take Embarcadero Road toward the Baylands, turn left on Geng, drive to the end and park. Take the levee trail toward the bay...after some distance you will see the rusty bridge that crosses the creek. The bird should be in this vicinity. Also present was one American Bittern that flew into the pond behind the Tropical Kingbird on the San Mateo County side. -- Mike Feighner, Livermore, CA ----- Sent using MailStart.com ( http://MailStart.Com/welcome.html ) The FREE way to access your mailbox via any web browser, anywhere! -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 28 15:37:42 2000 Subject: [SBB] Red - Eastern - Fox Sparrow -------- The sparrow was back in the yard briefly today. As far as I can gather from Sparrows and Bunting by Byers, Curson, & Olsson, it is of the race Zaboria. Bruce Barrett -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 28 20:12:19 2000 Subject: [SBB] TRKI... -------- was still present this morning at the end of Geng Road near the footbridge leading to East Palo Alto. It was an easy bird to spot and well worth the pre-office visit. Hooded Mergansers, as reported, were in the small pond near the parking lot. Matthew Dodder -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 28 22:27:49 2000 Subject: [SBB] possible redbreasted sapsucker in los altos -------- Got a very quick glimpse of a woodpecker with a dark-ish red head in Los Altos on Fremont about halfway between Grant and Miramonte. Really only saw it from the back and noticed the head--did not notice any patterning on the dark back. It was in the middle of a small and noisy flock of A. Robins, but pretty quiet itself--just a little light drumming, no calls. I'm guessing it was a Red-Breasted Sapsucker. I'd be interested in hearing if anyone else in that neighborhood happens to see it and can confirm the ID. Also saw a Stellar's Jay today close by, but _no_ Scrub Jays that I can recall (this is very unusual!). Must be one of those days when the foothill birds come exploring a little lower... Natasha -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 29 22:51:39 2000 Subject: [SBB] Tropical Kingbird -------- All, This afternoon about 2:00PM I found the Tropical Kingbird flycatching from the chain link fence that is the eastern boundary of the Ravenswood Childrens Center in East Palo Alto. It was about 150 ft. north along the fence from the end of Garden St. Access to the trail is posible from a hole in the fence at the end of Garden St. I was about 30 ft. from the bird and watched it for about 20 min. Also of possible interest Dennis Eccles and I saw a light morph Rough Legged Hawk from a high spot at Windy Hill OSP Sunday morning around 9:30. John Hutz -------- Attachment 1.3 KBytes -------- From [[email protected]] Thu Nov 30 07:42:00 2000 Subject: [SBB] - -------- Folks: This morning, 11/30/2000, I saw a PACIFIC LOON on Shoreline Lake, actively foraging. There were two male BARROW'S GOLDENEYES at the east (boathouse) end of the lake. The count of BLACK SKIMMERS at Charleston Slough remains at 12. 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 Nov 30 10:34:32 2000 Subject: [SBB] Nuttall's -------- Dear Birders, I don't know how rare this is, but my son just called and said he saw a NUTTALL'S WOODPECKER in his backyard. His yard backs up on the small park west of Harwood and south of Michon, called Lone Vintner Hill Park. He has a bird bath in his yard and trees that can be seen by anyone walking along the east side of the park. He described from memory barring on back, striping on lower breast lightening up on the upper breast, red behind the head, and black face. Lee Lovelady. ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 30 10:54:13 2000 Subject: Re: [SBB] Nuttall's -------- I don't have precise data, but my impression is that Nuttall's populations are doing very well. I now see them everywhere, even near the Baylands or right at my suburban home in Palo Alto. I think there is some combination of suburban trees getting larger and older, and this species adapting to living in urban areas. Twenty years ago I had to search for this bird, now they appear to be the most common local woodpecker. -- Richard C. Carlson Chairman, Spectrum Economics Palo Alto, CA [[email protected]] 650-324-2701 -++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== 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 Nov 30 11:54:16 2000 Subject: [SBB] PALO etc -------- All, A quick check of Shoreline Lake showed Bill's PACIFIC LOON (a first-winter bird) to still be present, foraging actively among the DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANT flock. Also there were the two adult BARROW'S GOLDENEYES and the female HOODED MERGANSER. An interesting array of gulls was on the beach at the east end of the lake, including mostly RING-BILLED and GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULLS, or gulls with at least some GLAUCOUS-WINGED genes in them. Besides the usual WESTERN x GLAUCOUS-WINGED hybrids there was an adult gull with a white iris that looked very like a HERRING GULL, except that the black in the wing tip was a little dull and the underside to the wing was pure white - presumably a HERRING x GLAUCOUS-WINGED hybrid. Also present was a very dark (sooty) first-winter GLAUCOUS-WINGED GULL very similar to the one I photographed at Newby Island two years ago (figures 6 and 7 at http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Canopy/6181/gl-w2.htm on Steve Hampton's web site). It is unclear if this is natural variation in GWGU or if this indicates introgression with Western Gull. A third-winter HERRING GULL seemed to be pure, as did a single first-winter THAYER'S GULL (although with so many GWGU hybrids about one wonders...). Got several photos of these birds for gull enthusiasts to ponder :) 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]]