I made stops at several migrant traps along Big Darby Creek west of Columbus, including Darby Bend Lakes, Kuhlwein Wetlands, Trail of the Ancients, and Grassle Rd. access. For 3 hours, migrant numbers were spotty, with no one group or species standing out. Notables included: Sora - one was calling from the tiny wetland near the bridge at Darby Bend lakes Red-headed Woodpecker - an adult persists in the dead trees along the River Rock Trail at Darby Bend Lakes Flycatchers : Pewees widespread, but also had Phoebe, Acadian, GreatCrested (4), and 2 late E.Kingbirds (Darby Bend Lakes, Grassle Rd) Swallows - hardly any, with only a smattering of Barn Swallows. 15 at Kuhlwein was the high, so you know it was slow. Vireos - single Warbling (Darby Bend Lakes), White-eyed (TrAncients), and Red-eyed (Grassle) Thrushes - nothing other than some Robins & E.Bluebirds Cedar Waxwings - flocks at every stop; Darby Bend Lakes had 60+ Warblers - not many, but the list did include Yellow, Parula, Tennessee, Chaesnut-sided, Yellow-throated, Black&White, Blackpoll, and ComYellowthroat. Yellowthroats were easily the most common. BlueGrosbeak - a singing male was near the Kuhlwein parking lot, around where one has been seen off-and-on all summer Icterids - small flocks of Redwings at several spots, as well as a bigger flock of grackles (100+) on Trail of Ancients. A Baltimore Oriole male was still hanging around Darby Bend Lakes. ______________________________________________________________________ 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.miamioh.edu/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=OHIO-BIRDS Send questions or comments about the list to: [log in to unmask]