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Jan. 29, 2008 - At our home feeders in Wolfville, I have NOT seen the CLAY-COLOURED SPARROW for perhaps 4-6 days, but we do still have at least one CHIPPING SPARROW and the imm. WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW. Also missing for several days is the RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH, and I only saw the 2 WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCHES on the one day. No FLICKERS nor the SONG SPARROW for a few days either. We still have at least 2 CARDINALS, a male and a female, regularly. Also again two separate RED SQUIRRELS today. Still lots of juncos, several white-throated sparrows, up to 6 blue jays, up to 13 pheasants, a few mourning doves, an occasional starling, at least one downy woodpecker and one hairy woodpecker, a few goldfinches, and only occasionally up to a few common redpolls. Also back on January 21st, at Avonport Pat (Hawes) had a good look at a probable PEREGRINE FALCON that flew along next to her car at close range. And Sheila Burke, who lives at Hortonville, had been seeing a N. HARRIER there daily, up to Saturday, Jan. 26th, when I talked with her on the 27th. Cheers :-) from Jim in Wolfville, 542-9204 --------------------- Jim (James W.) Wolford 91 Wickwire Avenue Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada B4P 1W3 phone (902)542-9204 (home) fax (902)585-1059 (Acadia Univ. Biology Dept.) e-mail <jimwolford@eastlink.ca> ---------------------- "Education: the path from cocky ignorance to miserable uncertainty." - Mark Twain --------------- ³Life is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient premises² -- -- Samuel Butler ----------------------
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