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--0-1860676682-1158696226=:7192 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ....the warblers and vireos have been visiting here in jeddore as well,..all of those lsted below excepting nashville and chestnut sided,...but one whom i could not i.d, that may have been the latter ..and on the 17th a solitary gray carbird popped by,...one overwintered here from january to april this year ..also on the 15th there were 2 wood peckers, perceivably smaller than hairy but much larger than downy...slow drum, very different call,..they were noisily making their way through the tops of the dead conifers... traversed our propery then disappeared...overall more black than the two aforementioned species slightly barred backs...any suggestions???,,,or are there seasonal changes on the hairy woodpecker that i've mistaken for someone new?? j foley head of jeddore James Hirtle <jrhbirder@hotmail.com> wrote: I took a quick walk on the Fauxburg Trail today and was rewarded with a smatering of migrants. Not a large group, but enough to make it exciting. There was a blue-headed vireo with two red-eyed vireos, three black-throated green warblers, one chestnut-sided warbler, three northern parulas, three overbirds, four blackpoll warblers, two nashville warblers, two common yellowthroats, two downy woodpeckers, two least flycatchers, a gray catbird, a bluejay, and four black-capped chickadees. Not a bad breakdown for two groups of birds at two separate locations. James R. Hirtle Lunenburg --------------------------------- Be smarter than spam. See how smart SpamGuard is at giving junk email the boot with the All-new Yahoo! Mail --0-1860676682-1158696226=:7192 Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ....the warblers and vireos have been visiting here in jeddore as well,..all of those lsted below excepting nashville and chestnut sided,...but one whom i could not i.d, that may have been the latter<br> ..and on the 17th a solitary gray carbird popped by,...one overwintered here from january to april this year<br> ..also on the 15th there were 2 wood peckers, perceivably smaller than hairy but much larger than downy...slow drum, very different call,..they were noisily making their way through the tops of the dead conifers... traversed our propery then disappeared...overall more black than the two aforementioned species slightly barred backs...any suggestions???,,,or are there seasonal changes on the hairy woodpecker that i've mistaken for someone new??<br><br>j foley<br>head of jeddore<br><br><b><i>James Hirtle <jrhbirder@hotmail.com></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> I took a quick walk on the Fauxburg Trail today and was rewarded with a <br>smatering of migrants. Not a large group, but enough to make it exciting. <br>There was a blue-headed vireo with two red-eyed vireos, three black-throated <br>green warblers, one chestnut-sided warbler, three northern parulas, three <br>overbirds, four blackpoll warblers, two nashville warblers, two common <br>yellowthroats, two downy woodpeckers, two least flycatchers, a gray catbird, <br>a bluejay, and four black-capped chickadees. Not a bad breakdown for two <br>groups of birds at two separate locations.<br><br>James R. Hirtle<br>Lunenburg<br><br><br></blockquote><br><p>  <hr size=1>Be smarter than spam. See how smart SpamGuard is at giving junk email the boot with the All-new Yahoo! Mail --0-1860676682-1158696226=:7192--
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