April 2001 Field Journal

4.1 [SFBirds] A few birds of note
A SURF SCOTER seemed very out-of-place just north of the concrete bridge at
Lake Merced. Eric found an AMERICAN GOLDFINCH and a CEDAR WAXWING at the
Boathouse. There were only four AMERICAN WIGEON left at South Lake, but
there was a LESSER GOLDFINCH at the north end of Middle Lake.

Lots of activity at North Lake with large numbers of YELLOW-RUMPED and
TOWNSEND'S WARBLERs in partial to full song, seemingly staging to push
north. CEDAR WAXWINGs were plentiful as well.

North Lake also had the best bird by far, a briefly-seen sparrow with a
bright rufous cap, black eye line, and an otherwise apparently unmarked gray
face and an unmarked pale belly. The bird was in the dense vegetation at
the southeast end of the lake. My field identification was CHIPPING
SPARROW, but I'm not so sure now, particularly since the habitat seems
better for SWAMP SPARROW than for CHSP. Don't find something unexpected
after a big night. :-|

The East Wash also had AMERCIAN GOLDFINCHES and 23 SURFBIRDS at the Cliff
House were unusual.

4.1 [SFBirds] Cinnamon Teal at South Lake Merced
A male and female were also at norhtwest end of the concrete bridge.

4.5 [SFBirds] Re: [SFBirds] Wed
There was one hanging around North Lake in '97 or '98, I seem to recall.

Mark

harryfuller@techtvcorp.com wrote:
>
> BC Night-heron at North Lake, an unusual bird for anywhere in GG Park except
> Stow in my experience
> Also present: large flock of Waxwings plus all the usual birds of the season

4.6 [SFBirds] Re: [SFBirds] Sutro Heights Park Birds (fwd)
lagomorf@att.net wrote:
>
> red fox sparrow one week ago,

Nice bird; I'm sure several people on this list would be interested in
seeing it...

4.7 [SFBirds] A few birds of interest
I headed out today and found the following birds:

Pine Lake
Bullock's Oriole
Pine Siskin
American Goldfinch
Orange-crowned Warbler
Townsend's Warbler
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Golden-crowned Sparrow
Song Sparrow
California Towhee
American Crow
Red-winged Blackbird
Dark-eyed Junco
Allen's Hummingbird
Anna's Hummingbird
Brown Creeper
Downy Woodpecker

Buffalo Paddock
Tropical Kingbird

4.8 [SFBirds] SF Big Day, April 8
First, a little background. In 1999, Alan Hopkins, Hugh Cotter, Mark Eaton and
I did the first known "official" spring Big Day in San Francisco. Despite
intermittent rain and 20-30 mph wind all day, we managed 127 species on the
day. The previous "official" record, of 113, had been from a fall effort by
Harry Fuller, Josiah Clark, Ivan Samuels and myself. (For those of you who
have been on Alan's Bird Blitz and seen more than 113 in a day, as I have, the
Bird Blitz does not count as an official big day under ABA rules.) Last year,
an intrepid team went out and saw 134 species on a spring big day, wiping our
names off the record books (and off Joe Morlan's SF birding web page).

Having had our crown stolen from us by an upstart group of Young Turks (Jay
Withgott, Kevin McKeregan, Paul Saraceni and Rich Ferrick), we felt we had to
redeem our honor and wrest back the now-coveted Maltese Falcon trophy (an
impressive piece of plaster now residing at Jay's house, perhaps to his wife's
chagrin). We had to do a Big Day, in fact a Bigger Day than they had. We
needed 135. Alan was not able to make it, so we slotted in Eric Preston in his
stead.

We started out at 4:30 with high hopes, decent weather, a cooler full of Dr.
Pepper, and a singing Mockingbird in Hugh's driveway. Off to the Presidio
where Great Horned Owl hooted obligingly. Lake Merced yielded rails and ducks
at first light, and by 6:50 we were headed to Mt Davidson with more than 30
birds under our belt. An excellent start! Mt D (expertly scouted for us by
the magnanimous Mr. Saraceni) added another 20 birds, including the Hermit
Warbler which was heard by all except Mark who was "taking care of business."
Winter Wren, Orange-crowned warbler, Hermit thrush, Allen's hummer, pygmy
nuthatch were all there, but we could not find a Band-tailed pigeon.

Off to Pine Lake Park, where Mark had scouted a Bullocks Oriole and
White-throated Sparrow the day before. We had siskin and waxwing, but the two
staked out birds did not materialize. Back to the north end of Lake Merced,
where Bewicks Wren and Black-throated Gray Warbler warmed us up and took us to
60 -- by 8:40 am. We were on a roll. Fort Funston gave us two loons and two
scoters, but no Pacific and no white-winged. No snowys visible on our quick
dip into Ocean Beach. The Cliff House gave us the expected Surfbird,
Oystercatcher, black turnstone (no ruddy!) and a nice flock of Bonies migrating
far offshore. We left with 80 birds, heading to the Presidio.

Hugh picked out the Hooded Oriole's distinctive call at Kobbe and Upton. He
had had flicker, Hairy WP and RB nuthatch in the Presidio the day before, but
we did not turn them up, and our morale flagged briefly. A quick stop at the
Palace of Fine ARts turned up nothing, and our spirits took another slight dip.
Crissy added a few, including an unexpected Lesser Scaup. On to Golden Gate
Park!

On to dullsville! The park was over-run with tourists, the birds were very
quiet if they were even there at all. All the good birds in the arboretum
seemed to have gone to sleep or to Oregon, one or the other. We pushed through
90 birds just after noon, but we were losing steam. Hugh spotted the Tropical
Kingbird at the Buffalo Paddock to revive us, and the Dr. Pepper helped too.

Off to the eastern part of the city to add to our list -- we had 100 as we
headed to Herons Head, and 135 was looking distant. A quick 10 birds bolstered
our effort, and our morale, considerably -- white-winged scoter and pelagic
cormorant were treats we earned. As we left the eastern side of the city at
3:45, we had 114, and 135 felt completely out of reach.

As we drove to McLaren, Hugh announced that I had miscounted, that we actually
had 119 -- we only needed 16 birds, and there was 4 hours of light left! We
were back in the game! We could easily do it -- and we came up with several
different lists of the 16 that would bring us the prize. We were going to do
it!

45 minutes at McLaren without a single new bird later, we werent so sure. At
Lake Merced, I pulled out a Bank Swallow, and then a woody, to pick us back up.
Back at Pine Lake Park, Mark and Hugh found the white-throated sparrow for us.
123 by 5:20, we were in the hunt. Only 12 birds to glory...

But which 12? Back to the Presidio, where we picked up Flicker (124).
Everything was quiet. Our scouted birds werent there. We went to our trusty
spots -- the wrentit overlook, Lobos Creek, you name it. We couldnt buy a
bird. At ten of 7 we scoped Mile Rock, hoping for Peregrine. No dice. Hugh
spotted a Heerman's Gull for us (125), but even that goodie wasn't enough to
overcome the pall that had fallen over the team. Another Dr. Pepper didnt
help, either. The sun was starting to go down, and we still needed 10 birds.

Our last push was back to Mt Davidson -- surely those Band-tails were
somewhere, and maybe a sharpie? A swift? Something? Anything? Nope.

As we watched a glorious sunset ("Jesus rays," I've heard them called recently)
from the top of Mt Davidson, we admitted to ourselves that the Young Turks
would keep the crown, for now. Our attention turned to dinner. Another great
day of birding in the City -- no glory, but a lot of great birds, with great
birders and friends, on a beautiful day to be outside in Northern California.

We finished up with 125, drove 101 miles (name another county in CA where you
can do a big day and only go 101 miles!), and vowed to retake the trophy next
year. Young Turks, beware!

Luke

Luke Cole

4.10 [SFBirds] I knew this would happen...
I was driving home this evening when I realized there was still enough light
to bird. I headed over to Pine Lake not really expecting to find the Black-throated Green Warbler.
I didn't of course, but I did have killer looks at the WHITE-THROATED
SPARROW, resplendent in alternate plumage, which was the only zonotrichia
sp. which I saw. A quick trip around the lake a dusk had a very retiring
SORA barely vocalizing near the southeast corner of the lake.

4.19 [SFBirds] New high count for Coit Tower "Parrot" Flock
I counted 45 as they flew overhead around 5:30.

4.21 [SFBirds] More SF birds
Hugh and I gout for a couple of hours this morning. There are still BLACK
TURNSTONES and a single SURFBIRD at the Cliff House, but little else of
interest moving about other than some indications of migration activity
including 5 MARBLED GODWITS moving south and three small sandpipers moving
north.

In the East Wash, we had slightly different birds than Brian. We had at
least four and possibly as many as six HOODED ORIOLES in the East Wash, with
a memorable three in one bush at once. There were also at least two
BULLOCK'S ORIOLES present. We had eight to ten ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLERS in
both washes and at least two WILSON'S WARBLERS and a flock of nine CEDAR
WAXWINGS flew out of a flowering eucalyptus.

In the west wash, there were at least two TOWNSEND'S WARBLERS and a stunning
full alternate HERMIT WARBLER at eye level for a five warbler morning. A
HUTTON'S VIREO was also calling in the west wash.

At the plateau on Fort Miley, we had a fly-over LESSER GOLDFINCH and along
El Camino del Mar there was an unseen bird sp. that was either an
OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER or perfect mimid thereof.

4.23 [SFBirds] [Still] Red-breasted Nuthatch...
...in my yard; maybe he'll summer... :-)

4.24 - 30 South Florida
4.24
Hugh and I arrived promptly at Miami International and were greeted by the unmistakable odor of mold in the decaying and overcrowded airport. Our bags arrived promptly and we promptly got our rental car shuttle, but it took 45 minutes to get a car and get out of the airport through the rush hour traffic. Fortunately, the birding was much better than the traffic.

The first stop was the Baptist Hospital in Kendall. It wasn't hard to find the parrots, but it took awhile to make sure we had seen MONK PARAKEET, YELLOW-CHEVRONED PARAKEET and CANARY-WINGED PARAKEET. Hugh also found a RED-WHISKERED BULBUL. Onto the Kendall Tennis Courts and there was a COMMON MYNA there easy to see.

It was getting late, so we started our trip to the Everglades. Smooth-billed Ani is nearly extirpated in South Florida, so we had staked out a spot in Homestead. However, the anis were not cooperating. We did pick up EASTERN KINGBIRD en route, however. Also, we had a fine meal at the Mutineer Restaurant in Florida City. We sack out dog tired in our room in the Flamingo Lodge in the Everglades.

4.25
Hugh arises early and fetches coffee. I arise more leisurely, using the excuse that it's still too dark to bird. Only after Hugh returns do I realize that the windows are tinted dark! Nonetheless, we head over to Eco Pond where the pond is covered in a humid haze. WHITE-EYED VIREOs are everywhere and we pull a BROWN THRASHER out of the thicket. WHITE IBISes are everywhere with a few GLOSSY IBISes as well and we hear a LEAST BITTERN calling. WHITE-CROWNED PIGEON is first elusive, but then several flush on the back side of the pond. GRAY CATBIRD is easy to find too. It takes a little while, but finally our ears tune into the call note of GREAT CRESTED FLYCATCHER. COMMON GROUND-DOVEs are fairly easy to spot and an INDIGO BUNTING obliges on a subsequent loop around the pond.

We return to Flamingo and check the mudflats. The light isn't good, but we can pick out CAPSIAN, ROYAL and LEAST TERNS. However, it's getting hot and the tropical species are warming to the heat. BLACK-WHISKERED VIREOs are calling in several spots and we finally track one down near the mudflats. On the way back to the car, we have a GRAY KINGBIRD in the parking lot that affords fine views. A quick return back to Eco Pond nets SWALLOW-TAILED KITE, but the Mangrove Cuckoo that had been reported earlier this week eludes us.

In a bit of questionable logic, we decide to hike Snake Bight in the heat of the day. We have a few warblers including AMERICAN REDSTART, BLACK-THROATED BLUE and CAPE MAY WARBLERs, but the best view is of a very obliging BLACK-WHISKERED VIREO. However most of the trail is an unmitigated horror of debilitating heat and humidity and mosquitoes of stunning ferocity. In particular, there's only a ROSEATE SPOONBILL at the end of the boardwalk; no sign of any flamingos, which made the hike seem even more absurd.

On the way out of the park, WOOD STORKs are easy to find near Paurotis Pond. We return to the junction of 187th street/avenue with 296th street/avenue where the anis had been reported. I tape with gusto, but there is little shaking in the early afternoon. Hugh urges me to return to the car and I start walking back, taping as I go. Hugh's back at the car when I look at a small mound I've scanned several times before. Sure enough, there's two SMOOTH-BILLED ANIs on the mound. Hugh's amazed at how we pulled that one out of our ass.

We head north then east on the Tamiani Trail to the abandoned airboat concession just west of the Miccosukee restaurant. Two or three LIMPKIN are lolling about in the mid-afternoon heat along with a ridiculously cooperative ANHINGA, and with a little scope work, we pull out at least two distant SNAIL KITEs due north of the concession. We immediately head south towards the keys, using Card Sound Road rather than Hwy. 1 which was still closed by a nasty wildfire. Hugh spots the first of many MAGNIFICENT FRIGATEBIRDs on Key Largo; we won't tire of looking at these guys throughout the trip.

We arrive around 10:00 and cart our gear onto the boat. Paul Lehman introduces himself and Gary Rosenberg and shows us to our berths.

4.26
The trip to the Dry Tortugas starts as advertised. COMMON TERN is quite accommodating on a couple of buoys allowing relatively close looks. It's a banner day for NORTHERN GANNETs and several small groups pass us by on the trip. As we start approaching the Fort, a BROWN BOOBY sits obligingly on a large buoy and several BRIDLED TERNs pass us by. I stepped inside for a moment and the first AUDUBON'S SHEARWATER zips by and is gone. I am mortified until a second passes by shortly thereafter. Near the fort, the first BROWN NODDYs and SOOTY TERNs appear, which will be welcome friends for the duration of the trip.

When we get to Fort Jefferson, Paul announces that there's been quite a few good birds around and he's correct. In short order, we pick up our first MERLIN, a BANK SWALLOW and both GRAY-CHEEKED THRUSH and VEERY. As expected, the looks are quite good due to the paucity of vegetation and the general condition of the birds. Warblers include BLACK AND WHITE, AMERICAN REDSTART, PRAIRIE, CAPE MAY, BLACK-THROATED BLUE, PRAIRIE and PALM and YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOOs are easy to find. With a little work, CAVE SWALLOWs can be picked out from the swallows circling above. Outside the fort, a CHUCK-WILL'S WIDOW has been located roosting in a thicket, affording fine views and photos and a female PAINTED BUNTING is hanging around the spring.

However, the best birds are yet to be found at Loggerhead Key. A lovely YELLOW-THROATED WARBLER greets us as we get off the skiff, followed by TENNESSEE WARBLER, BOBOLINK, INDIGO BUNTING and more great looks at GRAY KINGBIRD. Could it get better? Paul refinds the SHINY COWBIRD that's been present for some time. We work the other side of the key and have BLACKPOLL, WORM-EATING, MAGNOLIA, BLACK-THROATED GREEN and NORTHERN WATERTHRUSH to add to the list. What a day!

But's it not over yet. Back at Fort Jefferson, there's even more to be seen. A RED-EYED VIREO is in the same tree as a BLACK-WHISKERED VIREO, often right next to each other. We add LOUISIANA WATERTHRUSH, OVENBIRD, ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK, NORTHERN PARULA, a SUMMER TANAGER and HOODED WARBLER to the bounty. A GREATER BLACK-BACKED GULL is hanging around on the beach and an ORCHARD ORIOLE is a nice find late in the day. We end the day with a whopping 20 warbler species; a nice day by just about any measure!

4.27
The morning at the Fort begins with much the same birds as before. New arrivals include a male RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD and a bizarre PURPLE GALLINULE hanging out in a tree. We take a skiff out to Hospital Key and the MASKED BOOBY colony does not disappoint. I again take the skiff over to the frigratebird colony later in the afternoon and get nice shots of the Frigatebirds and have my binoculars trained on a struggling warbler trying to make land as it is taken out of the air by a MERLIN. However, hot on the Merlin's heels is a PEREGRINE FALCON! Back at the Fort, a RUDDY TURNSTONE puts on a nice show.

4.28
The morning begins with the usual suspects at the Fort, though the lack of food at the Fort is clearly taking its toll. We lose a BANK SWALLOW and many of the BARN SWALLOWs are soon for the grave or fodder for a CATTLE EGRET. There's also a corpse of a CATTLE EGRET lying around as well. However, one of the leaders manages to find an ANTILLEAN NIGHTHAWK perched on the ground. Everyone gets killer looks at the bird and I get killer photos of the bird. A BROWN NODDY is not doing well either and also affords fine photos.

It's soon time to depart for Key West and the trip back is horribly rough. The seas aren't bad by west coast standards, but the boat moves an amazing amount for relatively calm seas. Birding is nonexistent. Back on dry land, Paul obligingly makes a few phone calls and locates a few rarities for us. After we book a very overpriced room in Key West, we head out to Boca Chica. On the way into the pond, we run into Paul and Gary again and they had just seen a beautiful alternate-plumaged CURLEW SANDPIPER on the pond. We hurried in and got brief looks of the bird before it left the pond to feed with the rest of the peeps. While we were there, we got nice looks at WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER and very close looks at WILSON'S PLOVER.


4.29
This would be the day that we would chase Mangrove Cuckoo. We head over to Sugarloaf Key and the weather is cool, gray and drizzly. We start taping and walking the road and, finally, we get a single response note from a cuckoo. It's probably our bird, but I'm not convinced and neither is anyone else. Finally, after repeating this exercise three or four times, not two seconds after stopping the tape, I hear a single note immediately opposite of me that is convincingly MANGROVE CUCKOO. Hugh is further down the road and remains unconvinced. Were I further down the road, I wouldn't have been convinced either. Such is birding. The rest of the day is chewed up driving back up to Miami. In the one of the urban parks there, a Bahama Mockingbird had been reported. I have no tape of this, but we try to tape it in with Northern Mockingbird songs and succeed only in (you guessed it) taping in NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRDs. Had we access to the Internet, we would have known that the bird had moved and had been seen earlier in the day in an area we didn't search much. However, the South Florida RBA is transcribed and basically useless for up-to-date information. I dump Hugh at the airport and head towards Central Florida.

4.30
I find lodging near Sebring and head up to the Avon Park AFB and Bombing Range. I get there around 7:00 but "recreation" doesn't start until 7:30. Actually, I'm lucky it's Monday; on Tuesday they would have been closed entirely! The day is again cool and rainy and I spent a fruitless hour or so trying to locate both Red-cockaded Woodpecker and Short-tailed Hawk, but do get nice looks at PINE WARBLER. After that, I drive several "roads" trying to not to bottom out too badly looking for Florida Scrub-Jay. Finally, I'm driving on one road and I drive past a sparrow sitting on the barbed wire. I realize there aren't many sparrows in Central Florida at this time of year and stop. Sure enough, it's a BACHMAN'S SPARROW. I look around at the habitat and it's perfect for Bachman's Sparrow; palmetto scrub with isolated pine trees. It turns out there were at least three singing as well! Too bad the local recreation office didn't list this spot as being good for Bachman's Sparrow.

I head further on onto even rougher roads; at one point I surely would have become trapped in sand had I not negotiated a parallel track with some grass on it. I keep finding EASTERN TOWHEEs and other birds, but finally get a nice look at a FLORIDA SCRUB-JAY in a very remote corner of the park. So much for having the bird "easy" to find here! On the way out, SANDHILL CRANEs were tamely walking around the grounds. The return to Miami is uneventful and frankly boring with only a BALD EAGLE breaking the monotony on FL 710. To use up some idle time, I photographed some obliging BOAT-TAILED GRACKLES near the rental car return.

South FL
4.24
Kendall Baptist Hospital
Blue Jay
Ring-billed Gull
Anhinga
White Ibis
Monk Parakeet
Canary-winged Parakeet
Yellow-chevroned Parakeet
Red-whiskered Bulbul
Northern Mockingbird
Fish Crow
Red-winged Blackbird
Boat-tailed Grackle
Common Grackle
House Sparrow
Green Heron
Mallard
Double-crested Cormorant

Kendall Tennis Courts
Common Myna
Red-bellied Woodpecker

Homestead
Common Nighthawk
Eastern Kingbird

4.25
Flamingo
Northern Cardinal

Eco Pond
Barn Swallow
Northern Shoveler
Snowy Egret
Sora
Black-crowned Night Heron
American Crow
Brown Thrasher
Common Moorhen
White-eyed Vireo
Tricolored Heron
Cape May Warbler
American Coot
Glossy Ibis
Common Yellowthroat
Least Bittern
White-crowned Pigeon
Osprey
Gray Catbird
Cattle Egret
Great Crested Flycatcher
Great Egret
Reddish Egret
Common Ground-Dove
Little Blue Heron
Indigo Bunting
Swamp Sparrow
Turkey Vulture
Gray Kingbird

Flamingo
Laughing Gull
Dowitcher sp.
Brown Pelican
Marbled Godwit
Dunlin
Black-bellied Plover
Caspian Tern
Royal Tern
Least Tern
Great Blue Heron
Semipalmated Plover
Black-whiskered Vireo
Gray Kingbird
Red-shouldered Hawk

Eco Pond
Swallow-tailed Kite
Little Blue Heron

Snake Bight
American Redstart
Painted Bunting
Northern Parula
Black-throated rbler
Black-whiskered Vireo
Roseate Spoonbill
Spotted Sandpiper
Bald Eagle

Paurotis Pond
Wood Stork

Park Entrance
Eastern Meadowlark

187 & 296
Smooth-billed Ani

West of Miccosukee Restaurant
Snail Kite
Limpkin
Wuerrdemann's Heron

Key Largo
Magnificent Frigatebird
Killdeer

4.26
Pelaqic
Roseate Tern
Sandwich Tern
Northern Gannet
Brown Booby
Bridled Tern
Red-necked Phalarope
Audubon's Shearwater
Common Tern
Ruddy Turnstone
Brown Noddy
Sooty Tern

Ft. Jefferson
Chuck-will's Widow
Merlin
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Bank Swallow
Gray-cheeked Thrush
Veery
Black and White Warbler
American Redstart
Prairie Warbler
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
Purple Martin
Cape May Warbler
Palm Warbler
Cave Swallow
Cliff Swallow
Chimney Swift
Common Yellowthroat
Summer Tanager
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Gray Catbird
American White Pelican
Herring Gull

Loqgerhead Key
Peregrine Falcon
Yellow-throated Warbler
Cape May Warbler
Tennessee Warbler
American Redstart
Bobolink
Indigo Bunting
Cattle Egret
Gray Kingbird
Prairie Warbler
Shiny Cowbird
Yellow Warbler
Worm-eating Warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Black and White Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Black-throated Blue Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
Northern Waterthrush
Palm Warbler
Prairie Warbler
Glossy Ibis

Fort Jefferson
Red-eyed Vireo
Louisiana Waterthrush
Ovenbird
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
White-crowned Sparrow gambelli
Blackpoll Warbler
Worm-eating Warbler
Black-throated Blue Warbler
Northern Parula
Hooded Warbler
Greater Black-backed Gull
Orchard Oriole

4.27
Fort Jefferson
Veery
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Purple Gallinule

Hospital Key
Masked Booby

Ft. Jefferson
Northern Harrier
Lesser Yellowlegs
Antillean Nighthawk

4.28
Key West
Sandwich Tern

Boca Chica
Western Sandpiper
Least Sandpiper
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Curlew Sandpiper
White-rumped Sandpiper
Black-bellied Plover
Willet
Semipalmated Plover
Wilson's Plover
Dunlin

4.29
Sugarloaf Key
Mangrove Cuckoo
Least Tern

4.30
Avon Park AFB
Eastern Bluebird
Downy Woodpecker
Pine Warbler
Loggerhead Shrike
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Florida Scrub-Jay
Brown-headed Nuthatch
Eastern Towhee
Sandhill Crane
Bachman's Sparrow

FL 710
Bald Eagle

4.30 [SFBirds] April Parrot Sightings
Note the RED-MASKED PARAKEET seen on 4.23.

3-Apr-01 0 Not heard. Very windy.
4-Apr-01 7 (est.) Heard at lunch
5-Apr-01 5 to 7 Heard around 4:00
6-Apr-01 25 Heard late after it cleared up
9-Apr-01 25 Flyover at 6:45
10-Apr-01 2 Heard at 1:30
12-Apr-01 0 Not heard at 1:00
13-Apr-01 15+ Heard at 1:00
16-Apr-01 25 (est.) Heart at 2:00
17-Apr-01 12 Seen at 6:45 PM
18-Apr-01 0 Not heard at 12:15
19-Apr-01 45 Seen at 5:30
20-Apr-01 25 Flew by at 2:00
23-Apr-01 10 to 15 Seen at 4:30, including one RED-MASKED PARAKEET

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