I stopped at several parks in this NW Columbus suburb this morning, looking for patches of migrants. Because of the attractiveness of leafing oaks for many of these insect-eaters, I stopped at Sawmill Wetlands and was rewarded with a good fallout. Nearby Kiwanis Riverside Park also had migrants, but in smaller numbers. West of Kiwanis, the isolated oak grove at Heather Glen Park also had a good crop of migrants, so oaks really are the current magnet for many of these Birds. Notables this morning included: Crested Flycatchers - birds at all 3 locations Blue-headed Vireos - 2 at Sawmill, 1 at Kiwanis, 3 at Heather Glen Warbling Vireo - birds at all 3 sites Red-eyed Vireo - 1 singing at Heather Glen House Wrens - singers at all 3 sites, though Kiwanis had 4+ Gnatcatchers - common at all 3 sites, with 4-5 birds at each. Ruby-cr.Kinglets - 2-3 at all 3 sites Hermit Thrush - 1 still hanging out at Heather Glen Gray Catbirds - 2-3 at each of the 3 sites Blue-winged Warbler - 1 at Sawmill Yellow Warblers - all 3 sites, but Kiwanis had 3-4 while the other sites had 1 each Nashville Warbler - 2-3 at Sawmill & Kiwanis, 5 at Heather Glen Tennessee - 1 singing at Sawmill Chesnut-sided - 2 at Sawmill, 1 at Heather Glen Blackburnian - 1 at Sawmill, 2 at Heather Glen Black-thr.Green - 2 at Sawmill, 4 at Heather Glen Yellow-throated - 2 at Kiwanis (the only riparian site) Yellow-rumped - most common at all 3 sites; Sawmill had 15+ Palm - present at all 3 sites; Sawmill had 4, the other sites 1 each Black&White - 2 at Sawmill and at Heather Glen Redstart - 1 at Heather Glen Hooded Warbler - 1 at Heather Glen Ovenbirds - all 3 sites, but Heather Glen had 2. ComYellowthroat - 1 at Sawmill, 2 at Kiwanis Scarlet Tanager - 1 at Sawmill Rose-br.Grosbeak - single males at both Sawmill and Heather Glen Swamp Sparrows - 2 were at Kiwanis White-throated Sparrows - small flocks were at all 3 sites Baltimore Orioles - 1-2 were at every site Orchard Orioles - 1 1st-year male and a female were at Kiwanis All of these totals were from stops of only 30 minutes at each spot. In the forest patches at Sawmill & Heather Glen, you could hear lots of singing warblers as you approached the leafing-out oak trees. If you have any oak-dominated forests nearby, you might want to check them over the upcoming week. ______________________________________________________________________ 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]