October has now come to an end and overall for the month I found a total of 17 species with many of the total occurring early in the month. By the end of the month the diversity was down to just a handful of species. Probably the biggest highlight for the month was the sighting of a very late Connecticut Warbler (presumed to be the same individual) on October 13th and October 15th. This beat my previous late date for the species by over a week. The month was overall warmer than normal and fairly dry with lots of good nights of migration which moved a lot of species along fairly quickly. The end of the month got much cooler and rainier. As always for October there were some species that lingered a bit but nothing too unusual. The numbers of both Tennessee Warblers and Nashville Warblers seemed a bit above average for the month.
An ongoing story of my search to see all the new world warbler species as well as general sightings of warblers locally
Sunday, October 31, 2021
Warblers for October
Thursday, October 21, 2021
Warblers to end the third week of October
I finished the third week of October with an after work visit to Arcadia and then over to the East Meadows. Warbler diversity and numbers continue to drop as many birds have already moved through with lots of good nights for migration. It is now down to just a handful of expected warbler species but the chance of turning up some lingering species and the remote chance of a rarity keeps me looking. During the morning I turned up just three species of warbler with two Common Yellowthroats being the only late species (just slightly late at this point). I also found Palm Warblers and Yellow rumped Warblers.
Sunday, October 17, 2021
An even later date for Connecticut Warbler
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Very late Connecticut Warbler and other stuff for the second week of October
After work today I headed down to nearby Arcadia and arrived to find the location very foggy (a common theme the last few mornings). I didn't have any target species in mind and just planned on walking a few of the edges and fields and hope the fog lifted early (it did not do so). As far as warblers go it was quite slow with a noticeable decline in both overall diversity and numbers (the lack of sun didn't help the situation). Overall I had just five species of warbler at Arcadia but what the stop there lacked in quantity it made up for in quality. After walking a few edges and finally coming across my first Common Yellowthroats of the morning I noticed another bird pop up and a quick look with binoculars revealed a very late Connecticut Warbler! The bird was exceptionally cooperative (at least as far as this species is concerned) and allowed great looks in the open and some great photos despite the less than ideal photography conditions. The sighting today blew away from previous late date for the species in Hampshire County by nearly a week (my previous late date for the species was October 7 which I had in both 2016 and 2017). Not what I was expecting to find in the middle of October but was certainly very happy to see it.
Besides the Connecticut Warbler today I had a total of half a dozen species today plus a few others for the second week of the month totaling eleven species of warblers. Nothing too unusual which is not too surprising as the migration conditions have been great for most of the month so far which has moved most species along and resulted in less lingering species.
Thursday, October 7, 2021
Warblers for the first week of October
The first week of October has come to an end and the diversity of warblers continues to drop off but I nonetheless still had some good stuff with a total 16 species. Today I started my morning at a very foggy Arcadia. The fog made viewing difficult at times and after a couple hours I decided to try another spot as the fog just would not burn off. I headed to the nearby East Meadows where the visibility was slightly better. Overall a fairly quiet morning for warblers with a total of just seven species. I'm sure if the sun came out earlier I could have added a few more but that was not in the cards today. By midday the sun finally broke through the temps responded with highs in the mid 70's.
Yesterday I birded at Arcadia in mainly overcast conditions but it was at least fairly warm (which unfortunately meant mosquitoes again). Diversity was way down with just five species of warblers despite covering a lot of territory. The lack of sun probably had some impact on turning up a number of birds.
It was rainy for most of both Monday and Tuesday (plus I had to work) which resulted in few warblers to be seen.
After work on Sunday I went down to Arcadia once again with the highlights being a late Cape May Warbler plus continued good counts of a number of species including Tennessee Warbler.
I started the month at Arcadia where I spent a few hours tracking down warblers and had nine species including another morning with double digit counts for Tennessee Warblers plus continued good numbers of Nashville Warbler and Common Yellowthroat plus over a hundred Yellow rumped Warblers. I also made a brief visit to the East Meadows and found at least one late Yellow Warbler continuing in a large weedy patch.
We recently got some bad news which has curtailed my birding a bit. My boy Wilson has cancer and I don't want to leave him home too long as he has to wear a cone when I'm not there. The soft tissue sarcoma developed on his right front paw as a mass that was biopsied last week and we got the results yesterday. We have a surgical consult next week and then we go from there. I'm having a hard time with it as we lost Kody to cancer too. Wilson is doing just fine and is his normal self with the exception of having to endure a dressing on his foot as we wait for the biopsy wound to heal. We are hopeful we can beat the cancer and have more years to go out exploring. We have no idea how much the treatment will cost but we will pay whatever it takes to get Wilson better. If one is so inclined to donate they can following the following GoFundMe link.