Present at 2:30! Where Mae described. Thanks for the reports, and happy new year, all. On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 2:26 PM Scott Morrical <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > The Snowy Owl was still there as of 1:45 PM. Also an adult Bald Eagle was > in the area, plus a female Greater Scaup. > Scott Morrical > > Sent from my iPhone > > > On Jan 1, 2019, at 11:21 AM, Laura Bonazinga Bouyea < > [log in to unmask]> wrote: > > > > Still there! It’s cold and windy but worth it! thank you so much to the > kind birder who showed my son a close up shot of him. It was his first ever > snowy :) > > > > Laura Bonazinga Bouyea, M.S., CCC-SLP > > Vermont Speech Language Pathology > > University of Vermont > > The Stern Center for Language & Learning > > > > Confidentiality Notice: > > This message, and any attachments, may contain information that is > confidential, privileged, and/or protected from disclosure under state and > federal laws that deal with the privacy and security of medical > information. If you received this message in error or through inappropriate > means, please reply to this message to notify the Sender that the message > was received by you in error, and then permanently delete this message from > all storage media, without forwarding or retaining a copy. > > > >> On Jan 1, 2019, at 9:05 AM, B Bobolinks < > [log in to unmask]> wrote: > >> > >> Bill and are are here in the wind with Clem Nilan looking at a snowy > owl at the coastguard station. (Mike Palombo and Jim Morris just left.) The > owl is on the breakwater that protects the Coast Guard docks—the breakwater > with a tower on the left end, bearing a DANGER sign. The bird is hunkered > down, but stands out against the dark stones. Mae Mayville Essex Jct. > >> > >> > >> Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone > -- Sent from mobile