| Blackburnian Warbler Setophaga fusca |
| Bay-breasted Warbler Setophaga castanea |
| Bay-breasted Warbler Setophaga castanea |
| Philadelphia Vireo Vireo philadelphicus |
Eastern Wood-Pewee Contopus virens |
| American Robin Turdus migratorius |
| Turkey Vulture Cathartes aura |
| Eastern Cottontail Sylvilagus floridanus |
| Eastern Cottontail Sylvilagus floridanus |
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| Mourning Warbler spot |
NDG, May 23, 2026
Best of the morning was my first warbler of the day. Something dark flushed from next to a steep, damp wooded trail, and ended up in some deep undertangle. After a minute or so, it relocated, and I got a quick look at an elongated, elegant bird with a greenish back, grey head, and a yellow belly contrasting with a black bib. Mourning Warbler! After the briefest of moments, it vanished. I never saw it fly off, but it did not reappear in spite of a silent 30-minute stakeout. It was my first record of the enigmatic species for the site (Warbler #20, Species #86). It’s been 10 years since I saw one properly… https://snowyowllost.blogspot.com/2016/05/o-canada-warbler.html
-->Other stuff
-27 species in 2 hours
-13 degrees and overcast
-2 personal first-of-year vireos: a pair of Philadelphia Vireos chasing each other through the treetops, and the return of the Red-eyed Vireos
-Warblers: 1 Mourning Warbler, 2 American Redstart, 10+ Bay-breasted, 1 Black-throated Green, 1 Magnolia, 1 Blackburnian
-No Tennessee Warblers in spite of hearing them ‘all over NDG’ earlier in the week
-A pair of Eastern Wood-Pewees
-3 Blue Jays moving overhead
-Eye bugs in full effect
-4-5 active Eastern Cottontails









