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We may find that the migration count on May 14 has a lot of birds that we don's normally get. My Eastern Shore route is normally devoid of warblers but it seems they may be arriving early this year. Don Don MacNeill donmacneill@eastlink.ca ----- Original Message ----- From: "Clarence Stevens" <birder_ca@yahoo.com> To: <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca> Sent: Friday, May 06, 2011 6:18 PM Subject: [NatureNS] Lots of Metro Migrants -10 Species of Warblers & Vireos, Etc. Lots of migrants evident around Metro this week. Here's a quick list of 67 species encounter over that last couple of days, including 10 species of warblers & vireos. - cheers, Clarence American Black Duck American Crow American Goldfinch American Robin Bald Eagle Barred Owl Belted Kingfisher Black Scoter Black-and-White Warbler Black-capped Chickadee Black-throated Green Warbler Blue Jay Blue-headed Vireo Broad-winged Hawk Brown Creeper Brown-headed Cowbird Canada Goose Common Eider Common Grackle Common Loon Common Raven Common Tern Dark-eyed Junco Double-crested Cormorant Downy Woodpecker European Starling Evening Grosbeak Golden-crowned Kinglet Great Black-backed Gull Great Blue Heron Greater Yellowlegs Hairy Woodpecker Hermit Thrush Herring Gull House Sparrow Iceland Gull Lesser Scaup Magnolia Warbler Mallard Mourning Dove Northern Cardinal Northern Flicker Northern Goshawk Northern Parula Northern Waterthrush Osprey Ovenbird Palm Warbler Purple Finch Red-breasted Nuthatch Red-eyed Vireo Red-winged Blackbird Ring-billed Gull Ring-necked Duck Ring-necked Pheasant Rock Pigeon Ruby-crowned Kinglet Song Sparrow Surf Scoter Swamp Sparrow Tree Swallow White-breasted Nuthatch White-throated Sparrow White-winged Scoter Willet Winter Wren Yellow-rumped Warbler
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