I'm curious to hear if many people are seeing Cedar Waxwings this season. I've done 2 Christmas Bird Counts (Oceanville & Marmora) and sightings were at an all time low for us. The woods and fields around the Stockton College observatory historically have 200+ birds. There were none to be found this year! The wild food crop - Eastern Red Cedar berries - are abundant. Another sepcies that eats these berries - Yellow rumped warbler - was also missing.
Since many of you spend time in the field, I was wonder what you've seen - or haven't seen!
I'm curious to hear if many people are seeing Cedar Waxwings this season. I've done 2 Christmas Bird Counts (Oceanville & Marmora) and sightings were at an all time low for us. The woods and fields around the Stockton College observatory historically have 200+ birds. There were none to be found this year! The wild food crop - Eastern Red Cedar berries - are abundant. Another sepcies that eats these berries - Yellow rumped warbler - was also missing.
Since many of you spend time in the field, I was wonder what you've seen - or haven't seen!
A short walk at IBSP yesterday. Two flocks of Cedar Waxwings, hundreds of Yellow-rumped and the Snowy is where I left it. The usuals in the inlet.
Friends tell me the Bohemians are in upstate NY again, perhaps the cold will bring some further south.
Where is IBSP?And what are Bohemians? Anyone have a photo?
Island Beach State Park, it's south of Seaside at the end of the Island. Bohemians are another strain of waxwings
Strange plce to find waxwings, I always thought they could be found in the woods like bluejays and carinals.
Not meaning to get off The Bohemians, a new breed of Punk Rockers from Canada, we saw a Gray Fox meandering along the road at IBSP back in the 70's---it was beautiful!