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Date: | Sat, 18 Feb 2012 16:14:36 -0500 |
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Tammie and I had very good looks at a Northern Shrike at Indian Creek today.
Details are included below.
Bill Stanley
Williamsburg Ohio
Indian Creek Wildlife Area--Greentree Marsh, Brown, US-OH Feb 18, 2012 8:45
AM - 11:00 AM
Protocol: Traveling
5.4 mile(s)
32 species
Canada Goose 50
Mallard 12
Hooded Merganser 1
Turkey Vulture 8
Bald Eagle 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Killdeer 2
Rock Pigeon 8
Mourning Dove 3
Red-bellied Woodpecker 2
Downy Woodpecker 1
Northern Flicker 1
Pileated Woodpecker 1
Northern Shrike 1 Northern Shrike first seen as Tammie and I were
walking North on the dike at the west side of the impoundment I noticed a
grey bird sitting at the top of a shrub next to the parking lot
(39°10'54.99"N, 83°53'27.75"W) we looked at the bird and saw that it was a
shrike. As we moved closer the bird moved to the top of a large tree
boarding Campell Rd. At this time we put a scope on the bird and could see
that it was in fact a shrike. The back and head were light grey with a thin
black mask through the eye. The belly was white and at this time I could
not see any barring. The bill appeared to be large and we thought we might
have made out a downward hook on the end. Wings and tail were black. The
bird then flew east over Greentree Marsh. Tammie and I drove to the parking
lot on the East side of the marsh and started to walk around the ponds. The
NSHR was low in shrub along the first pond. When it saw us the bird flew to
the top of a very tall tree on the far side of the pond and at the
intersection of the dike separating the two ponds. Tammie watched the bird
and I took the scope and went to the field on the east side of where the
shrike was located. With the scope and very good light I could see that the
black mask on the bird was thin and only though the lower half of the eye.
A thin white line was over just the eye. The feathers above the bill were
white and the bill had a substantial downward hook at the end. There was
very faint barring on the white belly. Other than when we saw the bird by
the parking lot and the pond the bird was always high in the top of trees.
The bird frequently bobbed its tail. When the bird flew it was always very
direct. I managed to get a poor, but identifiable digiscope photograph in
which the large area of white on the wing is evident as well and the white
above the tail.
Blue Jay 15
American Crow 10
Carolina Chickadee 8
Tufted Titmouse 6
Carolina Wren 2
Golden-crowned Kinglet 1
Eastern Bluebird 8
American Robin 4
Northern Mockingbird 3
European Starling 10
Eastern Towhee 3
Song Sparrow 10
Dark-eyed Junco 12
Northern Cardinal 10
Red-winged Blackbird 12
Common Grackle 2
American Goldfinch 5
House Sparrow 3
This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)
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