Swifts are one of my favorites. Last year I finally saw them fly into a chimney. I was at the reservoir in Waterbury (the bar, not the pond), and a wicked summer thunderstorm was brewing. Seconds before the downpour commenced, probably 30-40 swifts circled overhead and the plunged into a brick chimney at eye level next door (the Reservoir is on a hill). Very cool sight!!
In recent news sitings, I saw my first swifts of the year here in Rochester yesterday (10 or so swarming over the town).
Graham
Rochester, VT
Sent from my iPhone
On May 13, 2013, at 8:02 PM, Ken Copenhaver <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Great story, Scott. Some years ago my wife and I were in Bennington.
> While walking back to our motel just before dusk, a swarm of probably
> hundreds of swifts streamed into a large brick chimney on an old industrial
> building. The show lasted only a minute or so. There weren't many other
> people out walking, but those who were there didn't seem to notice or
> care. I've often wondered if the swifts continue to use that chimney? Is
> the chimney even still there? I don't remember reading any reports of this
> on VTBird. Can any Benningtonians fill me in?
>
> --Ken Copenhaver
>
>
> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 6:23 PM, Scott Sainsbury <[log in to unmask]
>> wrote:
>
>> This afternoon, in Montpelier, a merlin -- probably that seen often
>> recently and reported here by the city's denizens -- caught my eye.
>>
>> Near it, were a few Chimney Swifts. Soon, the Merlin headed back toward
>> the State House and out of my view. But the Swifts did not.
>>
>> First there were a few. Then 10. Then twenty or thirty. Soon there were
>> well over a hundred -- more than I can ever recall having seen at one time.
>>
>> It was a wondrous aerial show. They seemed to concentrate over the
>> hillside where National Life sits. Then, they would wave over downtown,
>> and circle back to the south.
>>
>> After about 10 minutes, they just melted away. In 30 seconds or so, there
>> wasn't a single one in sight. If you asked me, I couldn't tell you where
>> they went -- or even what direction. They just suddenly weren't there.
>>
>> It was like it never happened. And what was even stranger was that there
>> was a large number of people around me, walking up and down Main Street.
>> Here I was standing in the middle of the path looking up at the sky
>> through binoculars, virtually blocking their way, and not a single person
>> looked up. It was kind of eerie -- like I was in the Chimney Swift
>> Twilight Zone and no one else got it. I think it's one of those great
>> birding moments you tend to remember for a long while.
>>
>> Scott Sainsbury
>> Moretown
>>
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