In reply to Gabe's post early this past week. I decide to take a break from my studies to go see the Nelson's Sharp- tailed Sparrow at the Richfield Coliseum Site (Summit Co.). When I arrived around 11:30am, four individual were out in the field look and walking around the field in search of the bird. I walk towards these individuals to see if they had spotted the sparrow, but had no success. So I joined in hunt for bird. We walked to both wet patches of the field. We kicked up two birds in the second wet patch on the western side of the field. We cased (ie.walked) these two sparrow-like birds north through the wet patch/ditch. The two birds would fly 30, 40, 50 ft then dive into the vegetation. We final cased the birds within 50ft of the north woodline and the two birds turn towards the east and we loss them after that. We returned to the south end of the wet patch, once again we kicked up a sparrow-like bird and the bird flew west and dove into vegeation. After that we decided to walk over to the first wet patch in the middle of the field. Once again as we approached the wet patch a sparrow-like bird flew up. This time the bird flew 25-30ft to a tuft of dead vegetation. I was able to get a short and brief look at the bird morphology, but the lighting was fair to poor, and could only make-up the light brown color of the wing feather (mediam, greater parts, also the rump and uppertail coverts which are light brown in color). My final conclusion is that this potential bird was the Nelson's Sharp-tail Sparrow, but since the birds' behavior was shy and quick when it feels threatened by predators. Additional birds seen at the Coliseum Site: Song Sparrow Field Sparrow Vespor Sparrow Red-tail Hwak Turkey Vulture Blue Jay I took a drive down to O'Niel Woods, Serving Summit Co. Metroparks. I walked to the late successional field. The usually suspect were present: Cedar Waxing Wings (12) Blue Jay American Crow (on the wing) Black-capped chickadee White-breasted Nuthatch Northern Cardinal Field Sparrow Song Sparrow Baltimore Oriole Ruby-Crowned Kinglet (was foraging for insects on and amongest crab apple trees) Canadain Geese on the wing, when I was leaving. Thank you Gabe for the heads-up!!! See you in the field, Jeremaih W. Roth ______________________________________________________________________ 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]