Intrigued by postings about it, we visited this isolated State Nature Preserve on Saturday and were treated to loads of migrants. The only downside was that the lower canopy of the forest was mostly leafed out, making birding-by-ear the order of the day. Lawrence Woods is a second growth of maples coming in under some huge old oaks. The oaks were just leafing out, but you needed a break in the thick maple canopy to see up into the crown of the big trees. The list for an hour & a half included woodpeckers - all the common ones, including 1 Red-headed still calling around the swamp flycatchers - pewees, Great Crested, Least & Acadian & Willow Flycatchers, E.Kingbirds Vireos - 1 White-eyed, 6-7 Yellow-throated, 15+ Red-eyed Kinglets,Gnatcatchers - 3+ Ruby-crowns, 8-10 Gnatcatchers Thrushes - 5+ Wood Thrushes, 10+ Swainson's, 1 Gray-cheek (could've been more), 1 Veery Mimids - 6+ Gray Catbirds, 2 Brown Thrashers (in the Pin Oak Savannah at the entrance) Warblers - 16 species, including Parula, Nashvilles (6+), Tennessee, Magnolias (5+), Chesnut-sided (10+), Blackburnians (3-4), Black-thr.Greens (5+), Black-thr.Blue, Yellow-rumps (3), AmerRedstart (6+), Black&White (3), Ovenbirds (5), N.Waterthrush (2), Hooded Warbler, Wilson's Warblers (2), ComYellowthroats (7) Tanagers - 3-4 singing Scarlets, 1 calling Summer Grosbeaks,Buntings - 2 singing Rose-br.Grosbeaks, 5-6 Indigo Buntings Sparrows - a few White-trhaoteds to go with the presumably resident Fields & Songs Orioles - 2 Baltimores, 1 Orchard ______________________________________________________________________ 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]