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Good morning, James et al. While we're on letter abbreviations, I was wondering what FOY means - you have it in reference to the Winter Wren and also the Hermit Thrush. Bob Lindsay Dartmouth On 27/04/2011 10:09 AM, duartess@ns.sympatico.ca wrote: > hmmm, just curious, what do the letters in brackets mean beside some of the birds that you reported from your sightings yesterday ? > > Thank you, > > Gayle MacLean > Dartmouth > > ---- James Churchill<jameslchurchill@gmail.com> wrote: >> highlights from Monday, 25 April, birding on North River Road, towards >> Aylesford Lake: >> Beautiful day, nearly 20deg: >> >> *logging road east of McGee Lake* (where whip-poor-will heard in 2009): >> HERMIT THRUSH (1; FOY), WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH (P), RUFFED GROUSE (D), >> YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER (4) >> >> *McGee Lake from parking area along N.R. road, and floodplain just north of >> the road*: >> COMMON LOON (1), BROWN CREEPER (2), YELLOW-RUMPED (1), RUFFED GROUSE (D), >> BELTED KINGFISHER (S), CANADA GOOSE (3) >> >> *Granite Lane, north side* (olive-sideds, palms, common nighthawks, woodcock >> are prevalent here in summer): >> >> PALM WARBLERS (9), YELLOW-RUMPED (4), PILEATED (1), RUFFED GROUSE (D) >> >> ...7+ Eastern Painted Turtles basking in bog/marsh further towards Aylesford >> lake >> >> cheers, >> James. >> >> -- >> James Churchill >> Kentville, Nova Scotia >> jameslchurchill@gmail.com >> home: (902) 681-2374
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