20 February 2014

Th 20 Feb 2014 survey

Th 20 Feb 2014

All,

   It was a beautiful day on Bulls today, even with the fog that just wouldn't go away even in high wind. Sarah carted me out there and Greg brought me back--thanks to both. 

   Both waterfowl and shorebirds continue in good numbers: 47 target species, 80 species overall; eBird report appended, below. I had good counts of Northern Pintail, Green-winged Teal, Redhead, Greater Scaup, Ruddy Duck, Piping Plover, Sanderling, Dunlin, and Short-billed Dowitcher. Also Canvasback and American White Pelican continue. Of particular note otherwise, I had a Great Black-backed Gull (in Bulls Bay, not on the island), an Orange-crowned Warbler, and my best ever view of a Sedge Wren posing and calling just feet away in perfect light.

   Gulls and terns were few and far between compared to many surveys. Misses included Bald Eagle. The north beach continues to disappoint this winter. I was almost skunked on avian species there; several small flocks of Dunlin flew by, otherwise there was one American Oystercatcher, three Black-bellied Plover, six Ruddy Turnstone, and five Sanderling. Today's tide was very moderate, but I'm still trying to figure out why the last two winters were so productive there and this one so poor.

   The water level at Jack's Creek has dropped just a bit (it's a big pond to drain through one trunk!) and the water at Upper Summerhouse Pond (USP) has dropped below the water level gauge! This (USP) was by design to expose mudflats and attract shorebirds, and it worked! There was a large mixed flock of shorebirds at Upper Summerhouse Pond and the waterfowl continue as well. Greg put one riser board back into the trunk draining USP to stop the draining and to collect some of the rain forecast for tomorrow (they're still trying to lower the salinity there).

   I saw three fox squirrels (Dan, one was immediately behind the Dominick House, one was on Beach Road immediately beyond House Pond, and one was on Summerhouse Road between the cemetery and USP). I also photographed some canine tracks (clearly showing toenails) in the dunes at the north beach; the prints were approximately 60 mm long and 45 mm wide. Don't know if that suggests fox or coyote. 

   Looking ahead at the tide calendar, favorable tides for the next survey appear to fall on Wednesday 5 March 2014 (5.0 ft tide at 10:44 AM). Stay tuned.

Regards,

David


Cape Romain NWR--Bulls Island, Charleston, US-SC
Feb 20, 2014 7:45 AM - 4:22 PM
Protocol: Traveling
19.0 mile(s)
Comments:     Conducting the ongoing Bulls Island waterfowl/shorebird survey. Effort: 4.15 mi (one way) and 30 min by boat plus 11.0 mi and 2 hr by vehicle plus 3.8 mi and 6 hr by foot. Weather: heavy fog in early AM that variously cleared then returned through the day; otherwise mostly sunny; temps 58 F to 73 F; early AM winds calm; late AM and PM winds SW at 10 mph to 20 mph with gusts to 30 mph.  <br />Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.6.3
80 species (+2 other taxa)
Gadwall  22
American Wigeon  39
American Black Duck  6
Mallard  2
Mottled Duck  4
American Black/Mottled Duck  6     Large dark ducks seen in silhouette. Unable to distinguish between American Black Duck and Mottled Duck.
Blue-winged Teal  3
Northern Shoveler  18
Northern Pintail  10
Green-winged Teal  64
Canvasback  2
Redhead  70     In mixed flocks with Lesser Scaup, American Coot, Canvasback, and others.
Greater Scaup  6     Round green head, bright white sides, fat cheeks. Seen in good light in the company of Lesser Scaup for direct comparison.
Lesser Scaup  200     A conservative estimate.
Bufflehead  32
Hooded Merganser  7
Red-breasted Merganser  6
Ruddy Duck  255     A conservative estimate.
duck sp.  100     Large flock that flushed as I drove up and before I could focus optics on them.
Pied-billed Grebe  42
Horned Grebe  6
Double-crested Cormorant  16
Anhinga  1
American White Pelican  21
Brown Pelican  3
Great Blue Heron  7
Great Egret  47
Snowy Egret  30
Little Blue Heron  6
Tricolored Heron  3
Black-crowned Night-Heron  4
White Ibis  32
Turkey Vulture  11
Northern Harrier  1
Red-shouldered Hawk  1
Common Gallinule  30
American Coot  230
American Oystercatcher  7
Grey Plover  29
Semipalmated Plover  24
Piping Plover  4     None appeared to be banded
Killdeer  19
Greater Yellowlegs  22
Willet  16
Lesser Yellowlegs  10
Marbled Godwit  1
Ruddy Turnstone  28     Mostly on the beach.
Sanderling  405     Two large groupings.
Dunlin  1736     A conservative estimate.
Western Sandpiper  33
Short-billed Dowitcher  106     A conservative estimate.
Bonaparte's Gull  1
Laughing Gull  1
Ring-billed Gull  7
Herring Gull  1
Great Black-backed Gull  1
Forster's Tern  14
Mourning Dove  3
Belted Kingfisher  4
Red-bellied Woodpecker  2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker  1
Pileated Woodpecker  1
Eastern Phoebe  4
Tree Swallow  1
Sedge Wren  1
Carolina Wren  2
Golden-crowned Kinglet  1
Northern Mockingbird  2
Cedar Waxwing  4
Orange-crowned Warbler  1
Common Yellowthroat  1
Pine Warbler  7
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)  40
Eastern Towhee  2
Savannah Sparrow  1
Song Sparrow  1
Swamp Sparrow  1
White-throated Sparrow  1
Northern Cardinal  2
Red-winged Blackbird  46
Eastern Meadowlark  7
Boat-tailed Grackle  31
View this checklist online at http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S17120568
This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)

Th 20 Feb 2014 survey

Th 20 Feb 2014

All,

   It was a beautiful day on Bulls today, even with the fog that just wouldn't go away even in high wind. Sarah carted me out there and Greg brought me back--thanks to both. 

   Both waterfowl and shorebirds continue in good numbers: 47 target species, 80 species overall; eBird report appended, below. I had good counts of Northern Pintail, Green-winged Teal, Redhead, Greater Scaup, Ruddy Duck, Piping Plover, Sanderling, Dunlin, and Short-billed Dowitcher. Also Canvasback and American White Pelican continue. Of particular note otherwise, I had a Great Black-backed Gull (in Bulls Bay, not on the island), an Orange-crowned Warbler, and my best ever view of a Sedge Wren posing and calling just feet away in perfect light.

   Gulls and terns were few and far between compared to many surveys. Misses included Bald Eagle. The north beach continues to disappoint this winter. I was almost skunked on avian species there; several small flocks of Dunlin flew by, otherwise there was one American Oystercatcher, three Black-bellied Plover, six Ruddy Turnstone, and five Sanderling. Today's tide was very moderate, but I'm still trying to figure out why the last two winters were so productive there and this one so poor.

   The water level at Jack's Creek has dropped just a bit (it's a big pond to drain through one trunk!) and the water at Upper Summerhouse Pond (USP) has dropped below the water level gauge! This (USP) was by design to expose mudflats and attract shorebirds, and it worked! There was a large mixed flock of shorebirds at Upper Summerhouse Pond and the waterfowl continue as well. Greg put one riser board back into the trunk draining USP to stop the draining and to collect some of the rain forecast for tomorrow (they're still trying to lower the salinity there).

   I saw three fox squirrels (Dan, one was immediately behind the Dominick House, one was on Beach Road immediately beyond House Pond, and one was on Summerhouse Road between the cemetery and USP). I also photographed some canine tracks (clearly showing toenails) in the dunes at the north beach; the prints were approximately 60 mm long and 45 mm wide. Don't know if that suggests fox or coyote. 

   Looking ahead at the tide calendar, favorable tides for the next survey appear to fall on Wednesday 5 March 2014 (5.0 ft tide at 10:44 AM). Stay tuned.

Regards,

David


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <do-not-reply@ebird.org>
Date: Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 8:29 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Cape Romain NWR--Bulls Island, Feb 20, 2014
To: dcmclean@gmail.com


Cape Romain NWR--Bulls Island, Charleston, US-SC
Feb 20, 2014 7:45 AM - 4:22 PM
Protocol: Traveling
19.0 mile(s)
Comments:     Conducting the ongoing Bulls Island waterfowl/shorebird survey. Effort: 4.15 mi (one way) and 30 min by boat plus 11.0 mi and 2 hr by vehicle plus 3.8 mi and 6 hr by foot. Weather: heavy fog in early AM that variously cleared then returned through the day; otherwise mostly sunny; temps 58 F to 73 F; early AM winds calm; late AM and PM winds SW at 10 mph to 20 mph with gusts to 30 mph.  <br />Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.6.3
80 species (+2 other taxa)

Gadwall  22
American Wigeon  39
American Black Duck  6
Mallard  2
Mottled Duck  4
American Black/Mottled Duck  6     Large dark ducks seen in silhouette. Unable to distinguish between American Black Duck and Mottled Duck.
Blue-winged Teal  3
Northern Shoveler  18
Northern Pintail  10
Green-winged Teal  64
Canvasback  2
Redhead  70     In mixed flocks with Lesser Scaup, American Coot, Canvasback, and others.
Greater Scaup  6     Round green head, bright white sides, fat cheeks. Seen in good light in the company of Lesser Scaup for direct comparison.
Lesser Scaup  200     A conservative estimate.
Bufflehead  32
Hooded Merganser  7
Red-breasted Merganser  6
Ruddy Duck  255     A conservative estimate.
duck sp.  100     Large flock that flushed as I drove up and before I could focus optics on them.
Pied-billed Grebe  42
Horned Grebe  6
Double-crested Cormorant  16
Anhinga  1
American White Pelican  21
Brown Pelican  3
Great Blue Heron  7
Great Egret  47
Snowy Egret  30
Little Blue Heron  6
Tricolored Heron  3
Black-crowned Night-Heron  4
White Ibis  32
Turkey Vulture  11
Northern Harrier  1
Red-shouldered Hawk  1
Common Gallinule  30
American Coot  230
American Oystercatcher  7
Grey Plover  29
Semipalmated Plover  24
Piping Plover  4     None appeared to be banded
Killdeer  19
Greater Yellowlegs  22
Willet  16
Lesser Yellowlegs  10
Marbled Godwit  1
Ruddy Turnstone  28     Mostly on the beach.
Sanderling  405     Two large groupings.
Dunlin  1736     A conservative estimate.
Western Sandpiper  33
Short-billed Dowitcher  106     A conservative estimate.
Bonaparte's Gull  1
Laughing Gull  1
Ring-billed Gull  7
Herring Gull  1
Great Black-backed Gull  1
Forster's Tern  14
Mourning Dove  3
Belted Kingfisher  4
Red-bellied Woodpecker  2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker  1
Pileated Woodpecker  1
Eastern Phoebe  4
Tree Swallow  1
Sedge Wren  1
Carolina Wren  2
Golden-crowned Kinglet  1
Northern Mockingbird  2
Cedar Waxwing  4
Orange-crowned Warbler  1
Common Yellowthroat  1
Pine Warbler  7
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)  40
Eastern Towhee  2
Savannah Sparrow  1
Song Sparrow  1
Swamp Sparrow  1
White-throated Sparrow  1
Northern Cardinal  2
Red-winged Blackbird  46
Eastern Meadowlark  7
Boat-tailed Grackle  31

View this checklist online at http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S17120568

This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)

06 February 2014

Th 6 Feb 2014 survey


Th 6 Feb 2014
All,
   On Tuesday 4 Feb 2014 Dan Ashford motored me out then joined me for the waterfowl/shorebird survey onBulls Island. My eBird report is appended below. It was cold and breezy Tuesday--wished I'd worn warmer clothes, but since I was out birding it was all good. About two weeks ago one riser board in the trunk connecting Jack's to the bay and another riser board in the trunk connecting Upper Summerhouse Pond to the marsh were removed; both impoundments are still draining and the water level in each has dropped very slightly but noticeably. Salinity measurements show Jack's about on target (14.0 ppt), Upper Summerhouse Pond a bit higher than desired (11.9 ppt), and all other impoundments being essentially fresh water (<= 1 ppt) [accepting Moccasin Pond that continues to receive salt water intrusions on astronomically high spring tides, according to Dan].
   Highlight bird of the day must go to the four Canvasback in Jack's Creek. I'd seen Canvasback there on Monday 13 Jan 2014 while conducting the USF&WS midwinter waterfowl survey, and that was the first time in many years that I'd seen any Canvasback at all on Bulls (so long ago that I can't remember when that was--maybe decades.) Now we've gotten them officially on our waterfowl/shorebird survey! [Were they seen on thesurvey prior to my joining in Dec 2011? I've not looked at the data.] Hope they hang around for the rest of the winter.
   Waterfowl on Bulls continue in relatively good numbers this winter, the best showing that I've seen in many years. Hopefully the actual numbers (when I get some time to look at them) will support this impression. There were good counts of Northern Shoveler (57) Northern Pintails (23) , Redheads (240), Lesser Scaup (766), Buffleheads (136), and Ruddy Ducks (437). Other species of note include a good flock of Black-crowned Night-Herons (44), Piping Plover (2), Killdeer (43--they seem to be everywhere I look since our recent frozen precipitation event), Wilson's Snipe (11) and Forester's Terns (141). We tallied 78 species in total for the day's outing including 51 target species.
   Interestingly the north beach continues to disappoint this winter. The only shorebirds present during Tuesday's survey were Ruddy Turnstone (2) and Sanderling (6); otherwise there were only a few flyby Double-crested Cormorant (12), Lesser Scaup (12), a single Black Scoter (plus a recently deceased and Black Scoter), and a small contingent of gulls and terns (11 individuals, total). The beaches at Price's Inlet were also nearly completely void of birds. (I surveyed that SW end of the island specifically for the statewide shorebird surveythat just concluded.)
   I did spend a few minutes looking for the recently reported White-crowned Pigeon and Scissor-tailed Flycatcher but without success. Mammals seen included Fox Squirrel (3), White-tailed Deer (3), and Raccoon (1). Oh...and there may be canines on the island; tracks resembling canine tracks have been seen and are being scrutinized as possibly from coyote or fox. No sightings of actual canines yet. [The Red Wolves currently at the See Wee Visitors' Center don't count, and the Red Wolf breeding program hasn't operated on Bulls for several years.]
   The high tide on Thursday 20 Feb 2014 will be 4.6 ft at 10:44 AM. That will be our target date for the nextsurvey, so stay tuned for a confirmatory email with those plans.
Regards,

David


Cape Romain NWR--Bulls Island, Charleston, US-SC
Feb 4, 2014 7:50 AM - 4:46 PM
Protocol: Traveling
25.999 mile(s)
Comments:     Conducting the ongoing Bulls Island waterfowl/shorebird survey with Dan Ashworth. Effort: 4.15 mi (one way) and 40 min by boat plus 18.5 mi and 2 hr by vehicle plus 3.37 mi and 6 hr 16 min by foot Weather: heavy overcast, windy, and cold with a trace of rain; temps 48 F to 53 F; winds NE at 10 mpg with gusts to 20 mph. High tide (forecast to be 5.15 ft) was at 11:13 AM. <br />Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.6.3
78 species (+1 other taxa)
Gadwall  63
American Black Duck  14     Observed in different locations and times. Seen both floating and in flight.
Mottled Duck  2
Blue-winged Teal  6
Northern Shoveler  57
Northern Pintail  23
Green-winged Teal  20
Canvasback  4
Redhead  240     A conservative estimate.
Greater Scaup  1     Stood out from many Lesser Scaup with very bright white plumage on sides when floating and for very rounded head in profile.
Lesser Scaup  766     Widespread around the island.
Black Scoter  1
Bufflehead  136     Seen across the island and in the marshes behind the island.
Hooded Merganser  11
Red-breasted Merganser  12
Ruddy Duck  437     Multiple groupings counted.
duck sp.  7     Seen in flight at distance.
Common Loon  1
Pied-billed Grebe  17
Horned Grebe  20     A fairly accurate count.
Double-crested Cormorant  36
Anhinga  1
American White Pelican  40     A conservative count.
Brown Pelican  11
Great Blue Heron  12
Great Egret  14
Snowy Egret  18
Little Blue Heron  9
Tricolored Heron  6
Black-crowned Night-Heron  44     Apparently flushed out of Jack's Creek along the oceanfront dike.
White Ibis  91
Turkey Vulture  7
Osprey  3
Northern Harrier  2
Sharp-shinned Hawk  1
Bald Eagle  1     1 imm.
Sora  1
Common Gallinule  9
American Coot  132
American Oystercatcher  9
Grey Plover  24
Semipalmated Plover  12
Piping Plover  2     None had obvious leg bands.
Killdeer  43
Spotted Sandpiper  1
Greater Yellowlegs  66     A fairly accurate count.
Willet  1
Lesser Yellowlegs  1
Ruddy Turnstone  2
Sanderling  7
Dunlin  864     Fewer than often seen.
Western Sandpiper  8
Short-billed Dowitcher  50
Wilson's Snipe  11
Bonaparte's Gull  3
Ring-billed Gull  45
Herring Gull  9
Forster's Tern  141     Flying in loose flocks all over Jack's Creek.
Royal Tern  1
Rock Dove (Domestic type)  2
Mourning Dove  5
Belted Kingfisher  11
Red-bellied Woodpecker  1
Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted)  2
Eastern Phoebe  1
Blue Jay  2
Tree Swallow  66
Carolina Wren  1
Eastern Bluebird  6
American Robin  2
Northern Mockingbird  2
Common Starling  1
American Pipit  2
Cedar Waxwing  185     A conservative estimate as I saw flocks of 20 to over 100 all around the island.
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)  53
Song Sparrow  3
Swamp Sparrow  1
Northern Cardinal  6
Red-winged Blackbird  22
View this checklist online at http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S16801609
This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)

Th 6 Feb 2014 survey


Th 6 Feb 2014
All,
   On Tuesday 4 Feb 2014 Dan Ashford motored me out then joined me for the waterfowl/shorebird survey onBulls Island. My eBird report is appended below. It was cold and breezy Tuesday--wished I'd worn warmer clothes, but since I was out birding it was all good. About two weeks ago one riser board in the trunk connecting Jack's to the bay and another riser board in the trunk connecting Upper Summerhouse Pond to the marsh were removed; both impoundments are still draining and the water level in each has dropped very slightly but noticeably. Salinity measurements show Jack's about on target (14.0 ppt), Upper Summerhouse Pond a bit higher than desired (11.9 ppt), and all other impoundments being essentially fresh water (<= 1 ppt) [accepting Moccasin Pond that continues to receive salt water intrusions on astronomically high spring tides, according to Dan].
   Highlight bird of the day must go to the four Canvasback in Jack's Creek. I'd seen Canvasback there on Monday 13 Jan 2014 while conducting the USF&WS midwinter waterfowl survey, and that was the first time in many years that I'd seen any Canvasback at all on Bulls (so long ago that I can't remember when that was--maybe decades.) Now we've gotten them officially on our waterfowl/shorebird survey! [Were they seen on thesurvey prior to my joining in Dec 2011? I've not looked at the data.] Hope they hang around for the rest of the winter.
   Waterfowl on Bulls continue in relatively good numbers this winter, the best showing that I've seen in many years. Hopefully the actual numbers (when I get some time to look at them) will support this impression. There were good counts of Northern Shoveler (57) Northern Pintails (23) , Redheads (240), Lesser Scaup (766), Buffleheads (136), and Ruddy Ducks (437). Other species of note include a good flock of Black-crowned Night-Herons (44), Piping Plover (2), Killdeer (43--they seem to be everywhere I look since our recent frozen precipitation event), Wilson's Snipe (11) and Forester's Terns (141). We tallied 78 species in total for the day's outing including 51 target species.
   Interestingly the north beach continues to disappoint this winter. The only shorebirds present during Tuesday's survey were Ruddy Turnstone (2) and Sanderling (6); otherwise there were only a few flyby Double-crested Cormorant (12), Lesser Scaup (12), a single Black Scoter (plus a recently deceased and Black Scoter), and a small contingent of gulls and terns (11 individuals, total). The beaches at Price's Inlet were also nearly completely void of birds. (I surveyed that SW end of the island specifically for the statewide shorebird surveythat just concluded.)
   I did spend a few minutes looking for the recently reported White-crowned Pigeon and Scissor-tailed Flycatcher but without success. Mammals seen included Fox Squirrel (3), White-tailed Deer (3), and Raccoon (1). Oh...and there may be canines on the island; tracks resembling canine tracks have been seen and are being scrutinized as possibly from coyote or fox. No sightings of actual canines yet. [The Red Wolves currently at the See Wee Visitors' Center don't count, and the Red Wolf breeding program hasn't operated on Bulls for several years.]
   The high tide on Thursday 20 Feb 2014 will be 4.6 ft at 10:44 AM. That will be our target date for the nextsurvey, so stay tuned for a confirmatory email with those plans.
Regards,

David


Cape Romain NWR--Bulls Island, Charleston, US-SC
Feb 4, 2014 7:50 AM - 4:46 PM
Protocol: Traveling
25.999 mile(s)
Comments:     Conducting the ongoing Bulls Island waterfowl/shorebird survey with Dan Ashworth. Effort: 4.15 mi (one way) and 40 min by boat plus 18.5 mi and 2 hr by vehicle plus 3.37 mi and 6 hr 16 min by foot Weather: heavy overcast, windy, and cold with a trace of rain; temps 48 F to 53 F; winds NE at 10 mpg with gusts to 20 mph. High tide (forecast to be 5.15 ft) was at 11:13 AM. <br />Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.6.3
78 species (+1 other taxa)
Gadwall  63
American Black Duck  14     Observed in different locations and times. Seen both floating and in flight.
Mottled Duck  2
Blue-winged Teal  6
Northern Shoveler  57
Northern Pintail  23
Green-winged Teal  20
Canvasback  4
Redhead  240     A conservative estimate.
Greater Scaup  1     Stood out from many Lesser Scaup with very bright white plumage on sides when floating and for very rounded head in profile.
Lesser Scaup  766     Widespread around the island.
Black Scoter  1
Bufflehead  136     Seen across the island and in the marshes behind the island.
Hooded Merganser  11
Red-breasted Merganser  12
Ruddy Duck  437     Multiple groupings counted.
duck sp.  7     Seen in flight at distance.
Common Loon  1
Pied-billed Grebe  17
Horned Grebe  20     A fairly accurate count.
Double-crested Cormorant  36
Anhinga  1
American White Pelican  40     A conservative count.
Brown Pelican  11
Great Blue Heron  12
Great Egret  14
Snowy Egret  18
Little Blue Heron  9
Tricolored Heron  6
Black-crowned Night-Heron  44     Apparently flushed out of Jack's Creek along the oceanfront dike.
White Ibis  91
Turkey Vulture  7
Osprey  3
Northern Harrier  2
Sharp-shinned Hawk  1
Bald Eagle  1     1 imm.
Sora  1
Common Gallinule  9
American Coot  132
American Oystercatcher  9
Grey Plover  24
Semipalmated Plover  12
Piping Plover  2     None had obvious leg bands.
Killdeer  43
Spotted Sandpiper  1
Greater Yellowlegs  66     A fairly accurate count.
Willet  1
Lesser Yellowlegs  1
Ruddy Turnstone  2
Sanderling  7
Dunlin  864     Fewer than often seen.
Western Sandpiper  8
Short-billed Dowitcher  50
Wilson's Snipe  11
Bonaparte's Gull  3
Ring-billed Gull  45
Herring Gull  9
Forster's Tern  141     Flying in loose flocks all over Jack's Creek.
Royal Tern  1
Rock Dove (Domestic type)  2
Mourning Dove  5
Belted Kingfisher  11
Red-bellied Woodpecker  1
Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted)  2
Eastern Phoebe  1
Blue Jay  2
Tree Swallow  66
Carolina Wren  1
Eastern Bluebird  6
American Robin  2
Northern Mockingbird  2
Common Starling  1
American Pipit  2
Cedar Waxwing  185     A conservative estimate as I saw flocks of 20 to over 100 all around the island.
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)  53
Song Sparrow  3
Swamp Sparrow  1
Northern Cardinal  6
Red-winged Blackbird  22
View this checklist online at http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S16801609
This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)


-- David C. McLean, Jr.DCMcLean AT gmail DOT com