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Date: | Fri, 17 Oct 2014 16:01:02 -0400 |
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Interesting. Twice this fall Team Pipit found late Nashville Warblers and
twice suspected an Orange-crowned was also present. In both cases, we did
not see the bird well enough to rule out Tennessee. Also, as you know, some
Orange-crowneds are devilishly similar to Nashvilles, showing broken rather
than complete eye circles. On one occasion I concluded that I had probably
seen two Nashvilles.
Pipit
On Thu, Oct 16, 2014 at 9:34 PM, Chris Rimmer <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
> For a second time this month, today I found an Orange-crowned and
> Nashville warbler foraging together. They were in second growth scrub
> behind the Norwich Racquet Club, off Rt. 5 near Fogg's Hardware. I first
> saw the Nashville, then the Orange-crowned, and I watched both forage side
> by side in the same willow for ~2 minutes. It's likely pure coincidence
> that the only two Orange-crowneds I've seen this fall were associating
> closely with Nashvilles, but it has been striking both times.
>
> Highlights of birds seen here and around the Coop gardens:
>
> Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted) 1
> Blue-headed Vireo 1
> Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2
> American Robin 8
> Orange-crowned Warbler 1
> Nashville Warbler 1
> Palm Warbler (Yellow) 2
> Chipping Sparrow 6
> Song Sparrow 8
> Lincoln's Sparrow 1
> White-throated Sparrow 8
> White-crowned Sparrow 1
> Pine Siskin 2 calling in flight
>
> View this checklist online at http://ebird.org/ebird/view/
> checklist?subID=S20252635
>
> --
> Chris Rimmer
> Vermont Center for Ecostudies
> P.O. Box 420
> Norwich, VT 05055
> 802-649-1431 ext. 1
> www.vtecostudies.org
>
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