Date: Fri 06-Feb-1998
Date: Fri 06-Feb-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
birds-weather
Full Text:
Birds Of A Different Feather Enjoying Mild Winter
(with cuts)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
Bird watchers for all seasons know what DEP wildlife biologist Julie Victoria
means when she says, "This El Nino winter has been the best in years for
spotting birds."
And what do confirmed birders have to say about these mild temperatures in
combination with leafless trees, bare ground and open water? All the better to
see you, my dears.
Given these favorable conditions, winter birds are bound to be lingering in
local ponds and frequenting nearby trees and feeding stations, and bird
watchers need not go far afield to find them.
Red-tailed hawks have been abundant and are most easily seen perching in the
tall trees along a highway where there are open fields nearby, Ms Victoria
said.
"They are looking for mice, rodents or voles. Starting now, you might see them
in pairs, since breeding season begins in March," she added.
The smaller hawks, such as sharp-shinned or Cooper's hawks, hang around
feeding stations preying on the little birds.
"It's a fact of life. The amount that a hawk would take out is relatively low.
It's all part of the big picture," she reassured.
Ring-necked pheasants might also be spotted foraging underneath feeders for
scattered seeds. The mild winter has been kind to those pheasants that weren't
shot during hunting season last fall.
"It's possible that they could even breed and produce young this spring, but
they are not native to this country," Ms Victoria said, explaining that
pheasants originated in China and are only bred in captivity in the United
States for release in the wild.
"They're not going to reestablish themselves here," she said.
Seldom Seen
A call to the Rare Bird Alert on February 2 produced several interesting and
unusual Connecticut sightings, along with detailed information about where
those birds were last spotted.
There was, of course, no guarantee that they would stay put long enough to be
seen again in the same place.
Excerpts from Monday's sightings list included three tundra swans floating on
the Connecticut River in Essex; an immature greater white-fronted goose
hanging out with several Canada geese on a golf course driving range in
Hamden; and red and white-winged crossbills and a Lapland longspur seen at
Hammonassett State Park in Madison.
According to the report, the "hills of northwest Connecticut are a hot area"
right now.
An immature golden eagle was seen on Housatonic River Road in Salisbury; A
pair of common ravens were spied in Canaan; and 25 pine and evening grosbeaks
were seen feeding on fruit trees in Goshen.
Further south and closer to Newtown, there was an "amazing though not
unprecedented" concentration of 21 black vultures roosting alongside 25 turkey
vultures off Route 202 along Van Car Road in New Milford.
And last but not least, an adult lesser black-backed gull was seen on Hawley
Pond in Stamford. That sighting was recorded January 28. Perhaps by now, the
lesser black-backed has flown north to another Hawley Pond -- the one in
Newtown -- and we can all walk down Main Street to see him.
To find out more, call the Rare Bird Alert, which is jointly sponsored by the
Connecticut Audubon Council and the Connecticut Ornithological Association, at
203/254-3665.
