I noticed on this morning's NEXRAD radar ( http://www.pauljhurtado.com/US_Composite_Radar/2014-4-24/animated_sunrise.html) that the storm passed into Ohio just as night migrants were landing around sunrise. If went birding at your local migrant traps despite the wet weather, did you find anything new? Positive and negative reports are welcomed! :-) If you're stuck in the city for the day, definitely those small patches of green surrounded by heavily paved urban areas (e.g. the gardens around the state house in Columbus, etc.) -- any birds that put down in your area have likely found and used those patches of temporary shelter as stopover habitat. Good birding, -Paul Hurtado PS: White-eyed Vireo and Swainson's Thrush at Glen Echo park in Columbus yesterday evening. -- Paul J. Hurtado Postdoctoral Fellow, The Ohio State University Mathematical Biosciences Institute, http://mbi.osu.edu/ Aquatic Ecology Laboratory, http://ael.osu.edu/ E-mail: [log in to unmask] Webpage: http://people.mbi.ohio-state.edu/hurtado.10 ______________________________________________________________________ Ohio-birds mailing list, a service of the Ohio Ornithological Society. Please consider joining our Society, at www.ohiobirds.org/site/membership.php. Our thanks to Miami University for hosting this mailing list. You can join or leave the list, or change your options, at: listserv.muohio.edu/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=OHIO-BIRDS Send questions or comments about the list to: [log in to unmask]