Category: birdwatching
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As Foretold, a Red-breasted Merganser Visits Inwood Hill Park

Cornell Lab’s BirdCast resumed posting live migration tools on March 1, noting on the Migration Dashboard for New York County that among the expected nocturnal migrants this time of year we should look for Red-breasted Mergansers. And, sure enough, a Red-breasted Merganser showed up in our local waters. On the early morning of March 6…
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American Goldfinches Gather for an Early Spring Feast

This past week, near the stone stairs at W. 207th Street in Inwood Hill Park, American Goldfinches have been busy pulling apart the new buds on elm saplings and gorging on them. They flit about a group of young trees, opening the buds and chewing on the flowers. On the morning of February 28, I…
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The Great Tufted Titmouse Food Operation

Throughout a stressful week that began with a tumultuous election and ended with nearby wildfires, Tufted Titmice were pulling off a methodical food relay operation in a small area between the basketball courts and the forest of Inwood Hill Park. The Tufted Titmouse food operation was simple and brilliant. These little athletic birds like to…
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Brainy Black-capped Chickadees Arrive En Masse

Black-capped Chickadees, the famously cute and clever birds of the northern latitudes, have been everywhere in Inwood Hill Park this past week. I’ve seen them flitting about trees in the sunken willow corner of the marsh path, perching on low branches on top of the W. 207th steps, jumping around trees on the trail leading…
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An Incognito Blackpoll Warbler Identified in Visual Look Up on iPhone

On the morning of October 10, a small olive bird with white wing bars caught my eye as it flew around the marsh regeneration area of Inwood Hill Park. I couldn’t immediately identify the bird, but I thought it was a type of warbler passing through the park during fall migration. A feature available on…

