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by Elliotte Rusty Harold.
Original Post: Another Cold Day in Prospect Park
Feed Title: Mokka mit Schlag
Feed URL: http://www.elharo.com/blog/feed/atom/?
Feed Description: Ranting and Raving
I spent a few hours in Prospect Park again this morning, mostly to try out the new Canon 400/f5.6L lens I’ve rented. the lens performed reasonably well, though the lack of image stabilization was a more serious impediment than I expected. I did get some nice shots, and 400 mm was really only too long for a few close gulls that were responding to chumming. Once again, the Park was extremely quiet aside from a few hotspots that featured relatively abundant food. The Vale of Cashmere had tufted titmouse, black capped Chickadee, Downy Woodpecker, Northern Cardinal, Morning Dove, Blue Jay, White-throated Sparrow, but nothing unusual.
The feeders on Breeze Hill supported Red-winged Blackbird, White-breasted Nuthatch, Downy Woodpecker, American Goldfinch, Black-capped Chickadee, and one Red-breasted Nuthatch. This is the only even remotely unusual bird I found. There haven’t been a lot of them in the park this season, and if there’s a good seed crop up north next winter, there might not be any. They’re an irruptive species. Some years they’re everywhere. Some years you have to struggle to find one or two in the county.
The final spot that was worth checking out was the south end of the lake. Lots of gulls here, mostly Ring-billed but also at least one Herring Gull and a couple of Great Black-backed Gulls. One American Crow flew onto the ice. Most of the Northern Shovelers and Ruddy Ducks that sometimes number in the hundreds here seem to have decamped for less frozen climes but there were still a few of each, along with a couple of American Coots, six or so Mute Swans, a lone male Bufflehead, and many, many Canada Geese and Mallards. The feral Muscovy (possibly Mallard hybrid) is still hanging out too. One Red-tailed Hawk flew to the top of a tree on West Island.
Total species count was 23 including 7 new BGBY birds: