
The last couple of days were very busy birding-wise, with many birds moving into and through our area. On Friday after work I went to Sterling Forest State Park. I birded the Ironwood Drive area and I did pretty well, getting 15 new county birds for the year:
- Eastern Whip-poor-will
- Yellow-throated Vireo
- Wood Thrush
- Gray Catbird
- Baltimore Oriole
- Ovenbird
- KENTUCKY WARBLER
- Common Yellowthroat
- Hooded Warbler
- American Redstart
- Cerulean Warbler
- Black-throated Blue Warbler
- Prairie Warbler
- Scarlet Tanager
- Rose-breasted Grosbeak

This morning I met up with Linda Scrima and we birded Pochuck Mountain State Forest. It was a slow start, but then it got pretty busy; at times it was hard to know which bird to look at there were so many. We had a total of 37 species; highlights included my FOY Great-crested Flycatchers and Veery, Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, and 10 Species of Warbler:
- Ovenbird
- Worm-eating Warbler (FOY)
- Black-and-white Warbler
- American Redstart
- Northern Parula (FOY)
- Magnolia Warbler (FOY)
- Black-throated Blue Warbler
- Yellow-rumped Warbler
- Prairie Warbler
- Black-throated Green Warbler


Afterwards, we went over to the Wallkill River National Wildlife Refuge. Highlights included my first Orange County Eastern Kingbirds of the year, a flyover of 2 SANDHILL CRANES, hearing a couple of SORA calling, and a handful of shorebirds (Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs, Solitary Sandpiper, Wilson’s Snipe, and Killdeer).

I spent the afternoon trying to find more shorebirds. At the Camel Farm I had more yellowlegs and although they were distant, I believe I had 3 Pectoral Sandpipers. On Lynch Avenue in the black dirt I had the same shorebirds that we had at Wallkill River NWR, plus I added my FOY Spotted Sandpiper. My final stop was at Stewart Forest; I stopped quickly at Ridge Road (one Solitary and one Spotted), and then spent some time at the 207 Marsh, where there were many shorebirds present, but I did not add any new species.
For the day today, I added 9 more county year birds – that’s a total of 24 new birds in 2 days, which sure makes for some fun birding.

