Showing posts with label Hermit Thrush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hermit Thrush. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Chat chat

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Yellow-Breasted Chat, Trinity Church
Very bird, such urban

We've had a lot of Yellow-Breasted Chats in Manhattan this Fall. By "a lot", I mean three or four--they're never an abundant bird here.

There was one in Central Park at the end of October, that I mentioned in an earlier post, and then two appeared in lower Manhattan--one in a traffic roundabout just south of City Hall, and one in the yard of Trinity Church. I wasn't able to get downtown to look for either until last Friday.

Trinity Church is a rather unlikely birding spot. The churchyard is fairly small, there's not much ground cover, and there isn't a water source. Nevertheless, birds show up there--75 total species at last count--, which we know mostly through the diligent efforts of Ben Cacace.

Last Fall, a pair of Connecticut Warblers showed up there. Like the Chat this year, these normally reclusive birds put on quite a show for a throng of birders. Not by choice, certainly; as I said, not much ground cover.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Winter Wren, Trinity Church
a real cutie

The church was doing some work on the churchyard last year, which is mostly done (though the Chat did like hiding in the raining construction material in the northwest corner of the yard).

They've put up a lot of low wire fencing to separate the paths from the grave plots, which is good even for the birders. Last year there was a little problem with one or two photographers stalking the Connecticut around the graves, lumbering like Frankenstein's monster. Some people just don't know what they're doing. You've got a big long lens, you don't need to try to get within ten feet of the poor bird. Sheesh.

Anyway. No such problems this year, and the Chat was relatively little disturbed by the assembled bird paparazzi (there were a dozen or so when I was there, even though the Chat had been there over two weeks by that point).

There were a few other birds around as well--a very cooperative Winter Wren, and two or three Hermit Thrushes.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Hermit Thrush, Trinity Church
memento birdie

As of today (11/23), the Chat is still there--three weeks and counting.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Yellow-Breasted Chat, Trinity Church
a long engagement




Thursday, December 17, 2015

Midtown birding

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Common Yellowthroat, International Paper Plaza

Until the end of October, when my job moved, I worked at 45th Street and Sixth Avenue. Across the street is a pedestrian plaza--a fountain, some cafe tables, a few trees--that I hadn't really paid much attention to in the Spring and Summer. But in September and October it was surprisingly birdy.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Brown Thrasher, International Paper Plaza

Several Common Yellowthroats passed through, and a Brown Thrasher stayed for a considerable time, only disappearing a few days before I did.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Brown Thrasher, International Paper Plaza

The photo above is a looking out of the plaza onto 46th Street. I don't have a good photo of the plaza's glory, which is a circle of five Dawn Redwoods. The history of the plaza is kind of interesting; here's an old New York Times article about the plaza.

The neighboring building was the headquarters of International Paper, whose symbol is a redwood tree. The redwoods can stand there because that part of the park was occupied by a building whose owner didn't sell out for years, so there isn't any building space below teh tree circle, so it can accommodate the tree's huge root balls.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Ovenbird, International Paper Plaza

One of the first interesting birds I noticed there was this Ovenbird, the only warbler besides The Yellowthroats I saw there. The Ovenbird moved on fairly quickly, which is good. Every year, one or two Ovenbirds try to overwinter a few blocks away in Bryant Park. They never make it.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Northern Flicker, International Paper Plaza

This Flicker showed upo one afternoon, farging furiously on the ground behind the benches, just a few feet away from peopel chattingon cellphones and drinking coffee. It wasn't there the next day. A Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker showed up one in a while. That one might be trying to stay the winter.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Song Sparrow, International Paper Plaza

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Swamp Sparrow, International Paper Plaza

A number of other migrants came through -- sparrows and Towhees and Catbirds and Hermit Thrushes. Some of them occasionally do manage to survive a winter in the city, but usually in Central Park.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Eastern Towhee, International Paper Plaza

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Hermit Thrush, International Paper Plaza


Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Gray Catbird, International Paper Plaza

The best bird I saw in the plaza was a Woodcock, who foraged fairly happily in the redwood circle, but flew out in the mid-afternoon. I think he found the street noise a bit much.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; American Woodcock, International Paper Plaza

Of course, the little park also had the usual New York street birds--House and White-Throated Sparrows, Starlings, and pigeons. Here's a couple of pigeons who were getting affectionate my on my last day there.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Affectionate Pigeons, International Paper Plaza

My new work neighborhood is less interesting, but I'll have something to say about it eventually. really, there are birds almost anywhere if you look.