Friday, May 31, 2024

May Recap--Migration & Mexico

Prothonotary Warbler, Huber Preserve
I missed a big chunk of migration with our trip to Mexico. So a lot of warblers are not on my list--the really colorful ones at that like Blackburnian, Chestnut-sided, Bay-breasted, and Cape May. With luck, I'll get them on the rebound in autumn. If not, I guess sitting on the beach, drinking beer with your friends, watching the frigatebirds drift overhead, is a good trade-off.

In the 3 weeks we weren't in Mexico, I hit all my favorite spots, but I never had a really big day where I got 10 or 12 new species. I seemed to get one or two at time--a really productive day would be 4 new species.  One thing I noticed is that there don't seem to be big numbers of warblers around other than Ovenbirds and yellowthroats. I remember that Shari & I used to joke about YARs--Yet Another Redstart. Of course, this is one man's perception--I suppose someone somewhere was overwhelmed by Blackpoll Warblers. 

Tomorrow starts another doldrum month--it's a period when I'll allow myself to chase a little more than usual just to break up the routine of seeing the same birds day after day.

For the month: 183 species

Counties birded
New Jersey: Atlantic, Burlington, Essex, Monmouth, Ocean, Union
Mexico: Quintana Roo, Yucatan

Species        First Sighting
Snow Goose   Brig
Brant   Island Beach SP
Canada Goose   Meadowedge Park
Mute Swan   Forsythe--Barnegat
Wood Duck   Cranberry Bogs
Mallard   Island Beach SP
American Black Duck   Whitesbog
Northern Pintail   Island Beach SP
Bufflehead   Island Beach SP
Red-breasted Merganser   Island Beach SP
Ruddy Duck   Brig
Plain Chachalaca   Casa Carolina
Wild Turkey   35 Sunset Rd
Horned Grebe   Island Beach SP
Rock Pigeon   South Toms River
Eurasian Collared-Dove   Puerto Morelos
Common Ground Dove   Puerto Morelos
Ruddy Ground Dove   Puerto Morelos
White-winged Dove   Parque Principal Francisco Cantón Rosado
Mourning Dove   35 Sunset Rd
Yellow-billed Cuckoo   Colliers Mills WMA
Chuck-will's-widow   Collinstown Road
Eastern Whip-poor-will   35 Sunset Rd
Chimney Swift   Island Beach SP
Ruby-throated Hummingbird   35 Sunset Rd
Clapper Rail   Island Beach SP
American Oystercatcher   Island Beach SP
Black-bellied Plover   Island Beach SP
Killdeer   Colliers Mills WMA
Semipalmated Plover   Waretown
Short-billed Dowitcher   Forsythe--Barnegat
Spotted Sandpiper   Colliers Mills WMA
Solitary Sandpiper   Colliers Mills WMA
Lesser Yellowlegs   Forsythe--Barnegat
Willet   Island Beach SP
Greater Yellowlegs   Island Beach SP
Ruddy Turnstone   Playa Puerto Morelos
Red Knot   Great Bay Blvd
Sanderling   Playa Puerto Morelos
Dunlin   Forsythe--Barnegat
Least Sandpiper   Colliers Mills WMA
Semipalmated Sandpiper   Great Bay Blvd
Laughing Gull   Island Beach SP
Ring-billed Gull   Manahawkin Lake
Herring Gull   Island Beach SP
Great Black-backed Gull   Island Beach SP
Black Skimmer   Great Bay Blvd
Least Tern   Great Bay Blvd
Gull-billed Tern   Brig
Caspian Tern   Manahawkin Lake
Forster's Tern   Island Beach SP
Common Tern   Island Beach SP
Sandwich Tern   Playa Puerto Morelos
Royal Tern   Playa Puerto Morelos
Red-throated Loon   Island Beach SP
Common Loon   Island Beach SP
Magnificent Frigatebird   Puerto Morelos
Anhinga   Casa Carolina
Double-crested Cormorant   Island Beach SP
American White Pelican   Brig
Brown Pelican   Playa Puerto Morelos
Black-crowned Night Heron   Great Bay Blvd
Little Blue Heron   Island Beach SP
Tricolored Heron   Island Beach SP
Snowy Egret   Island Beach SP
Green Heron   Cranberry Bogs
Great Egret   Island Beach SP
Great Blue Heron   Reeves Bogs
White Ibis   Island Beach SP
Glossy Ibis   Island Beach SP
Black Vulture   Playa Puerto Morelos
Turkey Vulture   Whiting
Osprey   Island Beach SP
Bald Eagle   Double Trouble SP
Red-shouldered Hawk   Jumping Brook Preserve
Red-tailed Hawk   Colliers Mills WMA
Eastern Screech-Owl   Cloverdale Farm
Turquoise-browed Motmot   Ek Balam
Belted Kingfisher   Whitesbog
Red-headed Woodpecker   Colliers Mills WMA
Golden-fronted Woodpecker   Puerto Morelos
Red-bellied Woodpecker   35 Sunset Rd
Downy Woodpecker   35 Sunset Rd
Hairy Woodpecker   Jumping Brook Preserve
Northern Flicker   Island Beach SP
White-fronted Parrot   Puerto Morelos
Rose-throated Becard   Ek Balam
Eastern Wood-Pewee   Colliers Mills WMA
Acadian Flycatcher   Michael Huber Prairie Warbler Preserve
Willow Flycatcher   Island Beach SP
Eastern Phoebe   Colliers Mills WMA
Dusky-capped Flycatcher   Puerto Morelos
Great Crested Flycatcher   35 Sunset Rd
Brown-crested Flycatcher   Puerto Morelos
Great Kiskadee   Casa Carolina
Boat-billed Flycatcher   Ek Balam
Social Flycatcher   Puerto Morelos
Tropical Kingbird   Puerto Morelos
Couch's Kingbird   Puerto Morelos
Eastern Kingbird   Island Beach SP
Rufous-browed Peppershrike   Ek Balam
White-eyed Vireo   Island Beach SP
MANGROVE VIREO   Puerto Morelos
Warbling Vireo   Colliers Mills WMA
Red-eyed Vireo   Colliers Mills WMA
Green Jay   Ek Balam
Blue Jay   35 Sunset Rd
American Crow   Cloverdale Farm
Fish Crow   Island Beach SP
Common Raven   Colliers Mills WMA
Carolina Chickadee   35 Sunset Rd
Tufted Titmouse   35 Sunset Rd
Bank Swallow   Burrs Mill Brook
Tree Swallow   Cloverdale Farm
Purple Martin   Waretown
Gray-breasted Martin   Propiedad Federal
Northern Rough-winged Swallow   Playa Puerto Morelos
Barn Swallow   Island Beach SP
Cliff Swallow   Wesley Lake
Ruby-crowned Kinglet   Island Beach SP
White-breasted Nuthatch   35 Sunset Rd
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher   Island Beach SP
House Wren   Cloverdale Farm
Marsh Wren   Manahawkin WMA
Carolina Wren   Island Beach SP
Spot-breasted Wren   Ek Balam
European Starling   35 Sunset Rd
Gray Catbird   35 Sunset Rd
Brown Thrasher   Island Beach SP
Tropical Mockingbird   Puerto Morelos
Northern Mockingbird   Island Beach SP
Eastern Bluebird   Cloverdale Farm
Veery   Island Beach SP
Wood Thrush   Island Beach SP
American Robin   Island Beach SP
Cedar Waxwing   Reeves Bogs
House Sparrow   Newark Liberty International Airport
House Finch   35 Sunset Rd
Pine Siskin   35 Sunset Rd
American Goldfinch   35 Sunset Rd
Chipping Sparrow   Island Beach SP
Field Sparrow   Colliers Mills WMA
White-crowned Sparrow   IBSP Visitors Center
White-throated Sparrow   Island Beach SP
Seaside Sparrow   Manahawkin WMA
Savannah Sparrow   Cedar Bonnet Island
Song Sparrow   Island Beach SP
Swamp Sparrow   Collinstown Road
Eastern Towhee   35 Sunset Rd
Yellow-breasted Chat   Brig
Orchard Oriole   Cranberry Bogs
Hooded Oriole   Casa Carolina
Yellow-backed Oriole   Puerto Morelos
Orange Oriole   Puerto Morelos
Altamira Oriole   Puerto Morelos
Baltimore Oriole   Colliers Mills WMA
Red-winged Blackbird   Island Beach SP
Brown-headed Cowbird   IBSP Visitors Center
Melodious Blackbird   Casa Carolina
Common Grackle   Island Beach SP
Boat-tailed Grackle   Island Beach SP
Great-tailed Grackle   Aeropuerto Internacional de Cancun
Ovenbird   Island Beach SP
Northern Waterthrush   Double Trouble SP
Blue-winged Warbler   Michael Huber Prairie Warbler Preserve
Black-and-white Warbler   Island Beach SP
Prothonotary Warbler   Michael Huber Prairie Warbler Preserve
Common Yellowthroat   Island Beach SP
Hooded Warbler   Colliers Mills WMA
American Redstart   Colliers Mills WMA
Northern Parula   Island Beach SP
Magnolia Warbler   Island Beach SP
Yellow Warbler   Island Beach SP
Blackpoll Warbler   Double Trouble SP
Black-throated Blue Warbler   Island Beach SP
Pine Warbler   35 Sunset Rd
Yellow-rumped Warbler   Island Beach SP
Prairie Warbler   Cloverdale Farm
Scarlet Tanager   Cloverdale Farm
Northern Cardinal   Island Beach SP
Rose-breasted Grosbeak   Island Beach SP
Blue Grosbeak   Colliers Mills WMA
Indigo Bunting   Ephraim P. Emson Preserve


Sunday, May 26, 2024

Burrs Mill Brook 5/26--Bank Swallow

I took a walk along Burrs Mill Brook this morning, a spot I found a few years ago while looking at Google Maps. It's preserved land in Burlco, a sand trail that seems to be part of the fire lane system in the woods there. The brook itself has some broken down sluice gates, so it must have had some commercial history in the past, but I have no idea what it was or who Burr was and where his mill was located.  I go there once a year in the spring or summer to supplement a walk I've taken elsewhere. The first time I went there I followed the trail along the brook then went right, crossed over a culvert and walked up into the woods where I found myself at the edge of one of the many sand quarries that are dotted all over the Pine Barrens. To my surprise (as I wrote yesterday in birding, surprise is my goal), I found a flock of Bank Swallows and their nests in the sandy sides of the quarry. Now, on my annual visit, I hike over there, stand just outside the property edge so I'm not trespassing, and find the swallows swirling around, their nests in a different area each year. Today, their nests were in the near bank, so I wasn't able to see them without standing on the edge of the quarry, but from watching their flight as they flew directly at the bank, they were obviously going in and out of the holes or else they were kamikaze swallows. Hard to count the rapidly shifting flock, but I figured there were at least 15 of them, plus a few I saw flying over the brook itself. 

I've been told that the quarrymen have instructions not to dig sand out of the area where the swallows are nesting and leave those areas untouched until the swallows depart in late summer. It's a story I'd like to believe. 

35 species

Wood Duck  2
Mourning Dove  4
Yellow-billed Cuckoo  3
Killdeer  1
Laughing Gull  2
Turkey Vulture  1
Red-tailed Hawk  1
Red-bellied Woodpecker  4

Northern Flicker  1
Eastern Wood-Pewee  3
Eastern Phoebe  1
Great Crested Flycatcher  5
Eastern Kingbird  2
White-eyed Vireo  2
Blue Jay  1
Fish Crow  1
Carolina Chickadee  1
Tufted Titmouse  2
Bank Swallow  15     
Carolina Wren  3
Gray Catbird  5
American Robin  1
Cedar Waxwing  2
Eastern Towhee  1
Baltimore Oriole  1
Red-winged Blackbird  5
Brown-headed Cowbird  1
Ovenbird  4
Black-and-white Warbler  1
Common Yellowthroat  5
Pine Warbler  4
Prairie Warbler  5
Northern Cardinal  1
Blue Grosbeak  1
Indigo Bunting  2

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Brig 5/25--Gull-billed Tern, American White Pelican, Yellow-breasted Chat

American White Pelican
The appeal of a huge white bird was enough to overcome my reluctance to go to Brig, a reluctance that springs from my "hunter's knowledge" of the place as it was phrased to me today by another birder. In other words, I've been there so many times, know the refuge so well, that there is rarely any novelty when I go there--I know what to look for at each Goose Marker and that prospect can be wearying.  

Usually, when I go to Brig alone, my routine is to walk from the Gull Pond through the upland section to Jen's Trail (or what used to be called Jen's Trail) then back. After that, I'd do a loop around the Wildlife Drive. Today, I changed it up to increase my chances of finding that big rare American White Pelican that has been floating around for the last few days. I drove directly onto the drive without even glancing at the Gull Pond, parked around GM 4 and walked up to the observation platform where the pelican has been seen paddling around in the impoundment. And didn't find it. I did come across a Gull-billed Tern on a sandbar with Laughing Gulls, Black Skimmers, and various peeps and thought that I might have to be satisfied with that as my new bird for the year. 

I turned around and walked to the beginning of the drive, tried to scare up a Sora at the first pool, failed, returned to my car and started birding in earnest (actually, I was in Galloway, NJ). As I approached the observation tower, I looked into the bay on my right and there it was! Unmistakable as the cliche goes on eBird. Where this huge bird was hiding I don't know, though I suppose it could hunker down behind a bank of the marsh--as the picture shows, they can change their aspect ratio pretty drastically. I also learned today (from the same birder who gave me the "hunter's knowledge" phrase) that the protuberance on its beak was not a growth, but something that appears in breeding season.  

American Oystercatcher
With that out of the way, I just drove leisurely around the dikes, picking up the birds where I'd expect them to be--the oystercatchers on the rocky shoreline, the Common Tern at the sluice gate at the NE corner, and every mud flat full of sandpipers, the largest numbers going to Dunlin and Semipalmated Sandpipers. The only real surprise (in life, I don't like surprises, in birding they're my goal) was a single Snow Goose off the north dike. Brig usually has one or two lingering Snow Geese; oftentimes they're injured birds. This one may be too, but it didn't seem in any distress. 

Common Tern

Snow Goose
When I got to the trail formerly known as Jen's (apparently it has been renamed as part of the Bristow Trail), I parked the car and began my walk through the uplands and over to the Gull Pond, reversing my usual route, wild man that I am. About a half mile down the road I came up on a Brig's regular Saturday bird walk--I knew a few of the participants and we stopped to chat--speaking of chats, I was informed that I had just walk past where they had heard one. I wrote myself a mental note to listen on the way back. 

On the way back, I did stop, and it didn't take long for me to hear the "blat blat blat" and other vocal stylings of a Yellow-breasted Chat. I even managed to see one hopping around bushes and a cedar tree, though never long enough to get a good look much less a photo. In fact, as far as I can tell, there were three chats, because I heard another from the other side of the road and still another farther along, close to the entrance road to the Refuge Overlook which everyone still calls the Experimental Pool just as everyone still calls it Brig (not Forsythe). Changing a brand name is very hard. 

A second drive around the impoundments added Red Knot, Ruddy Duck (late), American Black Duck, and the cry of a Red-shouldered Hawk (flagged as "rare") where the chats were still singing their idiotic "songs" 

So it turned out to a very good day, with 3 year birds and 77 species altogether:

Snow Goose  1
Canada Goose  75
Mute Swan  40
Mallard  7
American Black Duck  20
Ruddy Duck  1     Dogleg
Mourning Dove  4
Clapper Rail  3
American Oystercatcher  4
Black-bellied Plover  15
Semipalmated Plover  10
Short-billed Dowitcher  6
Willet  15
Ruddy Turnstone  100
Red Knot  3     Mud flat across from observation tower on south dike
Dunlin  500
Least Sandpiper  10
Semipalmated Sandpiper  500
Laughing Gull  300
Herring Gull  4
Great Black-backed Gull  1
Black Skimmer  20
Gull-billed Tern  5

Forster's Tern  30
Common Tern  1
Double-crested Cormorant  10
American White Pelican  1   
Black-crowned Night Heron  1
Snowy Egret  15
Green Heron  1     GM 5
Great Egret  45
Great Blue Heron  6
Glossy Ibis  2
Turkey Vulture  2
Osprey  15
Red-shouldered Hawk  1   
Red-bellied Woodpecker  1
Eastern Wood-Pewee  1
Eastern Phoebe  1
Great Crested Flycatcher  4
Eastern Kingbird  7
White-eyed Vireo  2
Red-eyed Vireo  1
Blue Jay  1
American Crow  3
Fish Crow  4
Carolina Chickadee  1
Tufted Titmouse  1
Tree Swallow  2
Purple Martin  25
Northern Rough-winged Swallow  2
Barn Swallow  4
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  1
House Wren  1
Marsh Wren  10
Carolina Wren  5
European Starling  1
Gray Catbird  15
Brown Thrasher  2
American Robin  4
House Finch  1
American Goldfinch  1
Chipping Sparrow  1
Field Sparrow  3
Seaside Sparrow  4
Song Sparrow  5
Eastern Towhee  2
Yellow-breasted Chat  3

Orchard Oriole  2
Red-winged Blackbird  125
Brown-headed Cowbird  2
Ovenbird  2
Common Yellowthroat  15
Yellow Warbler  20

Pine Warbler  1
Northern Cardinal  3
Blue Grosbeak  1

Monday, May 20, 2024

Great Bay Blvd 5/20--Red Knot, Semipalmated Sandpiper, Black Skimmer, Least Tern

Red Knots
The most reliable, nearby spot to find Red Knots this time of year that I know of is Great Bay Blvd in Tuckerton, so it was there I went this rather cool, late spring morning. But before I got to the inlet, there were a lot of stops to make on the 4+ mile stretch. I stopped at the access point for Tuckerton Cove and figuratively slapped my forehead when I saw a long line of Black Skimmers roosting on a sandbar. I had completely forgotten about Black Skimmers as a possibility. 

Black Skimmers
The marshes were filled with shorebirds, but nothing unusual--I spent more time checking Black-bellied Plovers than I usually do, since a few years ago a Pacific Golden-Plover was found down there around this time. When I got to the inlet, I saw my first Semipalmated Sandpipers of the year mixed in with Dunlins. There were some relatively big sandpipers with them with brick-red heads and chests that I at first took for Red Knots, but a moment's consideration told me no, they were something else. Then I realized I was looking at Sanderlings molted into alternate (breeding) plumage. I rarely see them in this state, thus the befuddlement. I walked the mud flats toward the Rutgers facility and scoped more flocks of sandpipers. There, seemingly out of nowhere, I suddenly found a tight group of Red Knots--which promptly flew off. However, while I was watching them go, two Least Terns landed on the beach, practically at my feet.

Least Tern
I walked back toward LBI, where the knots had flown, kind of hoping they'd make a landing over there, but really figuring that I'd give them time to come back to where I originally found them and that I would be stealthier when I returned.  Two American Oystercatchers were on the peat on the other end, no knots. But my strategy worked, because when I turned around and walked back, I found them in exactly the spot they'd been and this time I didn't flush them and got my photographs. 

So, four new year birds for the day and still feeling somewhat energetic, I drove up to Beach Avenue in Manahawkin, where a Prothonotary Warbler was "continuing." The problem was I had no real sense of where, along that mile stretch of road, I might find it and probably only because my ears were attuned to its "sweet sweet sweet" song from yesterday that I heard it, rather softly, coming from the woods around a wet area. No coaxing would bring it out, but I now had one for the county where it is flagged as rare. 

The Great Bay Blvd list:

42 species
Brant  1
Canada Goose  5
Mallard  2
Bufflehead  1     Drake.  Standing on dock by old boat launch
Mourning Dove  6
Clapper Rail  7
American Oystercatcher  2
Black-bellied Plover  35
Semipalmated Plover  25
Short-billed Dowitcher  3
Willet  20
Greater Yellowlegs  1
Ruddy Turnstone  40
Red Knot  10
Sanderling  20
Dunlin  75
Least Sandpiper  30
Semipalmated Sandpiper  40
Laughing Gull  45
Herring Gull  25
Black Skimmer  65
Least Tern  4
Forster's Tern  20
Double-crested Cormorant  6
Black-crowned Night Heron  1
Snowy Egret  25
Great Egret  30
Great Blue Heron  1
Glossy Ibis  7
Osprey  3
Eastern Phoebe  1     South of 2nd wooden bridge
Fish Crow  1
Tree Swallow  3
Barn Swallow  50
Gray Catbird  5
Seaside Sparrow  6
Song Sparrow  5
Red-winged Blackbird  30
Boat-tailed Grackle  75
Common Yellowthroat  5
Yellow Warbler  2
Northern Cardinal  1

Sunday, May 19, 2024

Huber Preserve | Waretown | Collinstown Road 5/19--Chuck-will's-widow, Semipalmated Plover, Acadian Flycatcher, Prothonotary Warbler

Semipalmated Plover, Waretown
Shari & I have a springtime tradition where we eat dinner at a little restaurant in Forked River, then drive down to Collinstown Road in Barnegat to listen for our yearly Chuck-will's-widow.  Because of our Mexico vacation, our trip was delayed this year (to our 17th wedding anniversary as it happens) and consequently sundown was a little later. To kill some time, we first stopped at Bay Parkway in Waretown, which this time of year can have wading and shorebirds and did. The very first bird we saw was a new one for year--Semipalmated Plover flushed from the roadside. There was a small flock of them interspersed with another small flock of Least Sandpipers (it kind of looked like a gang fight at moments) and a few very noisy Willets flying about, along with both white egrets and a half dozen flyover Glossy Ibis

When we got down to Collinstown Road it was one minute before sundown and we were prepared to wait for a while until it got dark, our experience being that this species takes its crepuscular reputation seriously, but we got lucky, since one minute after sundown one began repeating its incessant eponymous call very loudly and very close, though of course, we didn't get eyes on one. It wasn't even dark enough to hope that driving along the road we'd get some eyeshine.  

That ended a very interesting day for me, which started out in Burlington County this morning with a walk through the woods at Reeves Bogs and then a walk along the white trail at the lengthily named Michael Huber Prairie Warbler Preserve where I go each year to look for two species. I had no trouble at all finding Prothonotary Warblers--there were at least three of them, one of which I got good looks at while it hopped around the upper reaches of trees, but I had all but given up on my second target, since I couldn't find it at the bridge where I usually do, nor along the mile or so that I covered along the trail. It wasn't until I was heading out that I finally heard the sharp "Peet-sa!" call of an Acadian Flycatcher. Another bird that didn't want to show itself in the now thick foliage--one of the disadvantages of waiting to go looking for new birds when the trees have leafed out. 

For the day 61 species:

Species                First Sighting
Canada Goose    Reeves Bogs
Wood Duck    Reeves Bogs
Mallard    Reeves Bogs
Mourning Dove    Reeves Bogs
Yellow-billed Cuckoo    Reeves Bogs
Chuck-will's-widow    Collinstown Road
Eastern Whip-poor-will    35 Sunset Rd
Ruby-throated Hummingbird    35 Sunset Rd
Killdeer    Reeves Bogs
Semipalmated Plover    Waretown
Willet    Waretown
Least Sandpiper    Waretown
Laughing Gull    Reeves Bogs
Herring Gull    Waretown
Snowy Egret    Waretown
Great Egret    Waretown
Great Blue Heron    Reeves Bogs
Glossy Ibis    Waretown
Red-bellied Woodpecker    Huber Preserve
Eastern Wood-Pewee    Reeves Bogs
Acadian Flycatcher    Huber Preserve
Eastern Phoebe    Huber Preserve
Great Crested Flycatcher    Reeves Bogs
Eastern Kingbird    Reeves Bogs
White-eyed Vireo    Huber Preserve
Warbling Vireo    Reeves Bogs
Red-eyed Vireo    Reeves Bogs
Blue Jay    Huber Preserve
American Crow    Huber Preserve
Carolina Chickadee    Reeves Bogs
Tufted Titmouse    Reeves Bogs
Tree Swallow    Reeves Bogs
Barn Swallow    Reeves Bogs
White-breasted Nuthatch    Huber Preserve
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher    Reeves Bogs
Carolina Wren    Huber Preserve
European Starling    Waretown
Gray Catbird    Reeves Bogs
Eastern Bluebird    Reeves Bogs
Wood Thrush    Huber Preserve
American Robin    Collinstown Road
Cedar Waxwing    Reeves Bogs
Chipping Sparrow    Reeves Bogs
Field Sparrow    Huber Preserve
Song Sparrow    Reeves Bogs
Swamp Sparrow    Collinstown Road
Eastern Towhee    Reeves Bogs
Red-winged Blackbird    Reeves Bogs
Brown-headed Cowbird    Huber Preserve
Common Grackle    Reeves Bogs
Ovenbird    Reeves Bogs
Blue-winged Warbler    Huber Preserve
Black-and-white Warbler    Reeves Bogs
Prothonotary Warbler    Huber Preserve
Common Yellowthroat    Reeves Bogs
Hooded Warbler    Huber Preserve
American Redstart    Reeves Bogs
Yellow Warbler    Waretown
Pine Warbler    Reeves Bogs
Prairie Warbler    Huber Preserve
Northern Cardinal    Huber Preserve