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Sapsuckers are rare at any time of year here in Richmond County! I've only ever seen one in Richmond! Billy On 09 Apr 2018 10:19, NancyDowd wrote: > I believe eBird had it as rare throughout the spring and summer too > in past years. And, from what you say, that is understandable as most > of the checklists for Kings are not from this part of it. Sapsuckers > may indeed be rare in a lot of the more settled areas of the county > where 99% of the reports likely come from. Things may change in > future > with more reporting and may have already. Will be interesting to see > if still listed as rare past mid-April. > > Nancy > > On 2018-04-09, at 9:51 AM, Ken McKenna <kenmcken54@eastlink.ca> > wrote: > >> Hi Nancy and all >> >> It is not that eBird considers Yellow-bellied sapsucker (YBSA) as a >> rare NS bird but that birds seen before the second week of April are >> rare in the province and thus triggering a need for a supportive >> report before that date. Each species has a filter that is set for two >> factors and for each county in the province >> >> 1) the number observed >> 2) the date observed >> >> To date this year only 4 YBSA have been noted in the province, thus >> the main migration for this species although very close, has not >> really started yet. >> >> Now for Pictou Co for instance, any YBSA seen between Late Oct to >> April 12 will trigger a need for a supportive report. After April 12, >> you could report 10 and not trigger a report. >> These filters are still a work in progress for each county but for >> the most part are working pretty well. Some fine-tuning is still >> required however like for Scoter and Merganser numbers in Pictou Co >> where they tend to me more common than other parts of the province. >> Cheers >> Ken >> >> >> >> Sent from my iPad >> Ken McKenna >> Stellarton >> NS >> >> On Apr 9, 2018, at 9:00 AM, nancy dowd <nancypdowd@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> eBird lists YB Sapsucker as rare too. It is in winter but a dime a >>> dozen here in summer and many other places in NS too. I find this >>> strange since eBird is very up to date on most every other aspect of >>> bird distribution. >>> >>> Evening Grosbeak are residents in this part of Kings Co (southern >>> corner). They can be heard all year in most forested areas. >>> >>> For anyone on FB, Richard has an amazing shot of a N Mockingbird in >>> flight, landing gear up and mouth open. I can hear the hoarse call it >>> was probably making just looking at the pic. It may be in his eBird >>> checklist too or photo gallery? >>> >>> Nancy >>> E Dalhousie, Kings Co. >>> >>> Sent from my iPad >>> >>> On Apr 8, 2018, at 3:03 PM, Richard Stern <sternrichard@gmail.com> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> There's an old orchard area between Fox Hill subdivision and the >>>> Dykes by the Cornwallis River, in Kentville, with bushes and trees- >>>> quite open and good for dog walking and birding. This morning there >>>> was a pair of Mockingbirds chasing each other around and singing >>>> from a bush. They are listed as rare in Ebird, although in that >>>> particular subdivision they have actually been regular for years, >>>> and probably nest. >>>> >>>> Rarer to me, I heard the chip notes of Evening grosbeaks, and saw >>>> 2 females in a high tree, which then flew off. They are the first >>>> of this species I have seen since early 2017, although I have seen >>>> occasional reports this winter in the county. There were also 5 >>>> separate Cardinals singing. See today's ebird for the full list. >>>> -- >>>> Richard stern >>>> sternrichard@gmail.com >>>> Sent from Gmail Mobile >>>> On my iPhone
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