GREAT STUFF!! The three Wood Storks were still present and actively feeding until about 8:30 - 8:45 pm last night, when I left. It was so dark then that only three white blobs were still visible feeding in the pond. They did not go to roost before I left the area. I left work in Cincinnati at about 5:50 pm and arrived at 8:00 pm to a large group of Amish birders and a few others, who were respectfully watching the three Wood Storks actively feeding quite close to the road. Several of us, including Jen Brumfield and Gabe Leidy tried some photography with only fair results as it was quite dark. However, the birds were quite visible in detail through my Swarovski 80 mm HD spotting scope. What a sight for OHIO!! Hopefully the birds will stay, and there will be better light in the next few days. I wondered why the birds were still feeding so actively and so late. Were they in preparation for another long flight?? Hopefully, not!! I took the fastest route in MayQuest to get to the location and not the shortest. It was I-71, I-270, I-70 to SR 93 north toward Adamsville to CR/TR 145. It is only about 23-25 mile north of I-70 by SR 93 to the location. Special thanks to Bruce Glick who kept us informed over the past two days, and particularly those Amish birders who found these birds. It was especially pleasing to see the respectful and quiet Ohio birders in action. I just returned from an unsuccessful attempt to see the Jabiru in Texas near Raymondville. We (Curt Dusthimer and I) and Dan Sanders separately, arrived too late on Saturday, 08/23/08 only to discover that the bird was no longer there. It flew off Friday apparently after a group of birders and/or photographers pushed the bird on Friday morning, so hard that it left the area. The sad tale has been discussed ad nauseum on TEX BIRDS. All of the other birders that came from a long distance to Texas were respectful of property and the birds in the flooded areas near Raymondville. I have met many of them on each trip to see a rare bird in North America over the past 8 years, or so. Let's keep up a great tradition here in Ohio and be respectful of property and the birds when there are rare birds present!! Jay Jay G. Lehman Cincinnati, OH ______________________________________________________________________ Ohio-birds mailing list, a service of the Ohio Ornithological Society. Our thanks to Miami University for hosting this mailing list. Additional discussions can be found in our forums, at www.ohiobirds.org/forum/. You can join or leave the list, or change your options, at: http://listserv.muohio.edu/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=OHIO-BIRDS Send questions or comments about the list to: [log in to unmask]