Year 1, Issue 4

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* The unofficial electronic publication of the David Cup/McIlroy competition.

*       Editors: Allison Wells, Jeff Wells

*       Key Grip: Jeff Wells

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Why bother?  That's what you're thinking, isn't it?  When you signed up to

receive The Cup you no doubt expected it to arrive in a timely fashion.

That's not too much to ask, yet here we are almost halfway through the month

of May and The Cup 1.4 has only now perched in your e-mail box.  The Coach's

Corner--you've lost a good portion of the month's migration, what good is a

coach now?  Kickin' Tail--huh!  April's leader's totals are toast.

Pilgrim's Progress--there's been plenty of progress since, indeed!

 

Give you one good reason to read on?  How's this: pity.  Not pity for me,

having wrangled this unruly beast into publishable form near

single-handedly.  No, read it out of pity for the Sapsuckers, that same

flock of hot-shot birders that soared out of the Basin for birdy-er pastures

in New Jersey (under the guise of a fundraiser for the Lab of

Ornithology--participating in the World Series of Birding.)  While the Big

Boys were off enjoying fabulous looks at Summer Tanagers and Blue Grosbeaks,

the faithful stayed behind--and now our David Cup and McIlroy lists make

theirs look like a day of birding the railroad station in Hoboken.  Even as

I type, they're out scrambling for a fraction of the warblers the rest of us

have become pals with in City Cemetery.  You could spend the time required

to read this issue of The Cup out birding and  pummel the Sapsuckers into

the ground for good.  Instead, pity the poor fools.  Kick up your heels and

relax.

 

                               @   @    @    @    @     @

                                NEWS, CUES, and BLUES

                                 @   @    @    @     @     @

 

WELCOME TO THE DAVID CUP CLAN: There's been talk that in Ken Rosenberg's

absence during the World Series of Birding, his wife, Ann James, put in some

serious Cup time and made substantial gains on his totals.  There's only one

problem: she's not yet a Cupper.  Please, go out of your way to gently prod

Ann (and when she's not looking, give her a good, hard shove) into the David

Cup.

 

T-SHIRT UPDATE: The countdown has begun!  Another day or two and Cuppers

will be the best dressed people in the Basin.  Our spiffy David Cup T's are

expected any day!  As part of an in-depth publicity study, our marketing

committee is asking you to do one more thing:  When you notice someone

wearing their David Cup T, let us know who, when, where, and any interesting

behavioral observations and other noteworthy particulars.  Don't worry about

letting them know you're spying on them.  They'll find out about it soon

enough--and so will everyone else--in the pages of The Cup.

 

SUCKING UP: This just in, from on-the-scene reporter Jeff Wells: "You've all

read about the Sapsuckers exploits on CayugaBirds so I won't go into detail.

Let me say though, that the World Series for the Sapsucker's was a day of

incredible contrasts.  We began during the early morning hours of Saturday

listening to hundreds of nocturnal migrants pass over in the warm sky.  By

8:00 in the morning we were picking out warbler songs in a beautiful hemlock

swamp amidst the sound of someone getting violently sick.  We thought the

day was over when the policeman pulled us over after we made that wrong turn

into Pennsylvania and were relieved when all he did was give us directions

to Cape May--a ticket would have meant disqualification.  The Kentucky

Warblers, Prothonotary Warblers, Summer Tanagers, and Blue Grosbeaks came so

easily for us in the late afternoon that we were dismayed at how low the

list was at the next tally.  As we raced up to Brigantine for the last bit

of daylight, our spirits soared again when we realized that we'd forgotten

to check 12 species off on the list!  Then our nerves frayed as we saw an

intimidating line of dark thunderheads moving south as we raced north; we

hit bottom again when we pulled into Brigantine accompanied by the sound of

thunder and torrential downpours.  Every species came hard during that last

45 minutes as we struggled to peer through the rain and darkening skys.  But

by the time we were done and had heard a Chuck-will's Widow between the rain

showers, our spirits were high and we had set a new Sapsucker World Series

of Birding Big Day record."

 

TICKED OFF: This past April, when Dateline NBC wanted a warm human-interest

story featuring an advice columnist that would satiate the minds of curious

viewers, who did they interview?  Dear Tick?  No!  Ann Landers!  That's

right, rather than take a chance on a guest who wouldn't sugar-coat tough

answers, Jane Pauley and friends took the safe road and showcased a

tooty-fruity, our sources tell us.  If you feel moved to write NBC in

protest, far be it from the editors of The Cup to discourage you.

Meanwhile, Dear Tick has this to say:  "Fooey!"

 

I NEED MY SPACE--AND YOURS, TOO: Don't think for a minute that the chilly

winds of winter have left us.  Oh, no.  Jeff and Allison Wells found out the

hard way that nippy billows are still very much with us.  On a sunny Sunday

afternoon in April, upon returning to their car after scouring Allan Treman

Park in their quest for a LeConte's Sparrow, they found a little something

slapped to their windshield.  It read, "There are hundreds of parking spaces

open here this morning.  Why, oh, why did you choose to park RIGHT NEXT to

my car?  You are SO STRANGE."  Brrrr.

 

IT'S CUP TIME: This month, Cuppers got ripped off not once (see TICKED OFF,

above) but twice.  The T-shirt committee no sooner finalized decisions about

the David Cup T-shirt design when we get word from our inside sources that

the Stanley Cup has crashed our creativity.  "It's Cup Time"--the very

slogan that graces the David Cup T is now being plastered all over the bube

tube.  If only we'd known!  This blatant plagiarism wouldn't be so bad if it

were being used to promote a toe-twistin', nail-gnawin', brain bashin',

rootin'-tootin' free-for-all--in short, an event as exciting and dangerous

as the David Cup.  But the Stanley Cup?  Ho-hum.  Rumors are flying that the

NHL will be selling T-shirts, too.  What's next, Stanley Cup pencils?

 

MIRA, MIRA: A watch dog group has been monitoring The Cup and filed a

complaint against the David Cup committee with the SPCA.  They claim that

our failure to formally invite animals into the David Cup is nothing short

of cruelty.  To prove that we are in fact PC, we invited Larry Springsteen's

dog Mira to submit her totals for the David Cup and McIlroy races.  As of

April 30, here are Mira's totals: 53 David Cup, 21 McIlroy.  Although not a

bird dog per say, should anyone doubt Mira's birding abilities, Larry offers

this proof: "To test Mira, I randomly opened the field guide and stuck my

finger on one of the plates.  I happened to hit the bottom of a sandpiper

page.  She said, 'Ruff.'  I turned the guide so I could see it and she was

right!  She can't read, so I know she didn't cheat.  The second example is

from one Sunday morning at my Gramma's in St. Lawrence County.  While

walking, we flushed a pair of grouse.  I asked, 'Did you see that partridge,

Mira?' As a native northern New Yorker, I grew up with that name, but it's

unfamiliar to Mira.  She gave me a strange look and 'corrected' me.  She

said, "Ruffed," and I'm satisfied she knows her birds."

 

UNO'S WHAT TO DO?: What is a Cupper to do when attempts to beckon John James

Audubon, Arthur Allen and other avian guides from the immaterial world to

help you win the David Cup/McIlroy competitions never, shall we say, flesh

out?  Drown your sorrows in a pot of tea?  Wallow the hours away to thumpin'

blues at The Haunt?  Not if you're James Barry.  James has taken to

immersing himself in marathon rounds of UNO, at the expense of classes,

sleep, and--gasp!--birding.  If he suddenly begins posting sightings of

Swallow-tailed Kites and Lark Sparrows (noting that they can be easily seen

from his dorm window), don't go running.  It's just his way of luring

Cuppers away from the competitions--and into the fiery hell of his UNO

addiction.

 

BIRD CUP BLUES: "We didn't give a damn who liked what we were doing.  We

were just having a good time playing together."  Karl David thumbing his

nose at bird listing debates taking place on the Internet?  Not a bad guess,

but in fact these are the words of Mr. Slowhand himself, Eric Clapton (who,

as evidenced by his association with a group called The Yardbirds, would

certainly be a Cupper if he lived in the Basin.)  Clapton is, of course,

referring here to his experience with Cream, famous for their take on the

Robert Johnson classic, "Crossroads".  You see, the PBS blues special that

aired in April (during which that irresistible quote was made) was the

closest the editors (and all other Cuppers?) came to an honest-to-goodness

blues-night-out this month.  So when Jimi Hendrix's manager had this to say

about the man who could take you from the Mississippi Delta to Venus, we

could only imagine it was Ann talking about her beloved Ken and his bins:

"First thing he did in the morning was put on his guitar (binoculars).  He'd

be frying an egg with his guitar (binoculars) around his neck.  He took his

(binoculars) everywhere with him, he even took it (them) with him to the

loo."

 

:>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>  :>

:> Ralph Paonessa windsurfing off Myer's Point for Black Tern.  Kevin

McGowan swinging tree to tree high over Ithaca in his harness (or was that a

saddle?) in a desperate attempt to see one more McIlroy bird.  These are

only a few of the highlights seen this past month--oh.  They're telling me

this is supposed to be a Basin BIRD Highlights column, not a Basin BIRD

BRAIN Highlights column.  Forgive me, I'm new at this.  And with my

full-time staff, including trendmaster Steve Kelling himself scudding the

Basin...anyway, here I go.

                                                     

                        BASIN BIRD HIGHLIGHTS

                                by

                 Steve Kelling, ah, make that Allison Wells

 

Although we've all been anxious to say goodbye to winter, we weren't against

keeping our winter "guests" on a while longer, and they were apparently

happy to stay.   Common Redpolls remained with us until almost mid-month,

and Pine Siskins were still being reported late in April.  A Northern Shrike

joined Steve Kelling and his son Sam for breakfast (albeit it stayed outside

their kitchen window) on April 10th, making it the last report for the

species of the season.  Evening Grosbeaks, like the redpolls, were more

plentiful than usual this year and at this writing remain in strong numbers,

feeding in Box Elders around Diane Tessaglia's yard in Etna.  As for

rarities, a Eurasion Wigeon was found by Steve Kelling at the north end of

Cayuga Lake; it or another individual showed up a few days later at

Montezuma, and good looks were had by many Cuppers.  Karl David made a few

lucky Cuppers happy by finding a Little Gull on the morning of April 24th;

that evening, it was relocated by Scott Mardis at the north end of the lake

amid 1500 or so Bonaparte's Gulls. It was still in the area five days later,

when Steve Kelling found it in Varick.  For much of the month, Dryden Lake

was the place to be, with White-winged Scoters, Red-necked and Horned

Grebes, Oldsquaw, and Ruddy Ducks taking advantage of the open water to rest

before continuing north.  The last few days of April dizzied many Cuppers

with a generous gift of warblers.  City Cemetery hosted a number of species,

including Prairie. In short, April's scale of wintery birds in the beginning

of the month tipped to spring in the end.

 

(Allison Childs Wells is a writer and editor, and has been a Lecturer in

Writing at Cornell University.  She coedits The Cup in her "free time"

because her dreams of editing a magazine on the life cycle of the sand flea

have yet to be realized.) 

 

 

100      100      100      100      100      100       100       100

                                100 CLUB

     100      100       100       100       100       100     100

 

We, the editors of The Cup, have found that as Cuppers see more and more

birds in the Cayuga Lake Basin, they need some way to mark the occasion, a

way of saying, "Yeehaww!"  To that end The Cup has instituted the 100 CLUB,

our (and Club members') way of congratulating Cuppers at an important

milestone in their David Cup life.  May 1 finds many more Cuppers with a

foot through the clubhouse door.  But they're not officially in until they

tell us:

 

HOW DOES IT FEEL TO BE IN THE 100 CLUB?

 

John Bower: "It is a great honor to share this club with some of the biggest

bird brains in the business!"  Bird 100: I don't know!

 

Martha Fischer: "I feel behind."  Bird 100: Black-throated Green Warbler

 

Meena Haribal: (Refused to respond to questionnaire) Bird 100:  Northern

flicker.

 

Chris Hymes: (Refused to respond to questionnaire) Bird 100: Either Ruddy

Duck, Oldsquaw, or White-winged Scoter

 

Scott Mardis: "There's a club?  Why didn't anyone tell me?  How many

meetings

have I missed?"  Bird 100: Osprey

 

Jay McGowan: "No difference." (Kevin: "I think he's saving his excitement

for the 200 Club." Bird 100: Common Moorhen

 

Kevin McGowan: "Wonderful, like I've finally made it into the top group at

last.  (Or was

that just gas?)" Bird 100: Tree Swallow

 

Ralph Paonessa: "Good."  Bird 100: Hmmm.

 

Bard Prentiss: "I haven't thought about how it feels but I'll let you know

when I do."  Bird 100: Common Raven 

 

Pixie Senesac: "I have made it into the David 100 Club, but I am ashamed to

say I cannot be

exact in the identification of my 100th winged warrior. It was either a

Greater Yellowlegs or a Barn Swallow. Now, of course, the Yellowlegs has

more glamour, but my bread & butter (or soon to be) is with the swallow

family."

 

Larry Springsteen: "Okay, I guess.  Was I supposed to celebrate in some

fashion?"

 

Casey Sutton: "It is a great honor to be a member of this prestigious club."

Bird 100: Common Raven

 

 <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<  PILGRIMS' PROGRESS >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

 

What follows is a lie.  You'd never know it to look at this list, but Kevin

McGowan is no longer a threat.  Ken Rosenberg?  Bumped off the stage.  Steve

Kelling?  A has-been.  Jeff Wells? Washed up.  And all because of some

perfectly legitimate, wildly successful fundraiser for the Cornell

Laboratory of Ornithology.  Maybe, just maybe they'll put in some serious

overtime and claw their way back to the top of the pack.  More than likely,

next month they'll all be admiring the soles of your hiking boots.  But for

now, their moment of glory...

 

1996 DAVID CUP APRIL TOTALS             1996 DAVID CUP MARCH TOTALS

 

153 Scott Mardis                           106 Tom Nix

153 Kevin McGowan                          105 Karl David

152 Tom Nix                                101 Steve Kelling

151 Ken Rosenberg                          100 Jeff Wells

149 Allison Wells                           99 Chris Hymes

148 Steve Kelling                           99 Bard Prentiss

146 Bard Prentiss                           96 Allison Wells

145 Karl David                              95 Ralph Paonessa

143 Jeff Wells                              94 Scott Mardis

140 Chris Hymes                             92 Ken Rosenberg

129 Jay McGowan                             89 Kevin McGowan

119 Meena Haribal                           84 Meena Haribal

115 John Bower                              81 Martha Fischer

114 Pixie Senesac                           77 John Bower

112 Ralph Paonessa                          75 Kurt Fox

112 Casey Sutton                            73 Rob Scott

110 Martha Fischer                          70 Casey Sutton

107 Larry Springsteen                       69 Jay McGowan

94 Rob Scott                               68 Larry Springsteen

88 Diane Tessaglia                         65 Diane Tessaglia

86 Michael Runge                           64 Carol Bloomgarden

80 Jim Lowe                                57 Jim Lowe

80 Matt Medler                             51 Michael Runge

71 James Barry                             50 James Barry

63 Dan Scheiman                            45 Matt Medler

49 Tom Lathrop                             30 Dan Scheiman

24 Tom Lathrop                  

 

1996 McILROY AWARD APRIL TOTALS               MARCH TOTALS

 

126 Kevin McGowan                          73 Allison Wells

124 Allison Wells                          73 Jeff Wells

119 Jeff Wells                             69 Kevin McGowan

111 Ken Rosenberg                          64 John Bower

109 Scott Mardis                           60 Larry Springsteen

97 Jay McGowan                            58 Martha Fischer

95 John Bower                             58 Ken Rosenberg

93 Larry Springsteen                      58 Rob Scott

91 Tom Nix                                57 Scott Mardis

88 Martha Fischer                         49 Chris Hymes

84 Casey Sutton                           49 Jim Lowe

78 Chris Hymes                            47 Tom Nix

74 Rob Scott                              46 Karl David

72 Jim Lowe                               44 Casey Sutton

70 Karl David                             40 Jay McGowan

56 Michael Runge                          39 Ralph Paonessa

42 Matt Medler                            36 Carol Bloomgarden

28 Diane Tessaglia                        34 Michael Runge

                                          24 Matt Medler

                                          21 Diane Tessaglia

 

LEADER'S LIST  LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL

 

Kevin and Scott weren't against sharing...

 

Common Loon , Pied-billed Grebe, Horned Grebe, Red-necked Grebe,

Double-crested Cormorant, Great Blue Heron, Green Heron, Mute Swan, Snow

Goose, Ross's Goose, Canada Goose, Wood Duck, Green-winged Teal, American

Black Duck, Mallard, Northern Pintail, Blue-winged Teal, Northern Shoveler,

Gadwall, American Wigeon, Canvasback, Redhead, Ring-necked Duck, Greater

Scaup, Lesser Scaup, Oldsquaw, Surf Scoter, White-winged Scoter, Common

Goldeneye, Bufflehead, Hooded Merganser, Common Merganser, Red-breasted

Merganser, Ruddy Duck, Turkey Vulture, Osprey, Bald Eagle, Northern Harrier,

Sharp-shinned Hawk, Cooper's Hawk, Northern Goshawk, Red-shouldered Hawk,

Broad-winged Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk, Rough-legged Hawk, Golden Eagle,

American Kestrel,  Ruffed Grouse, Wild Turkey, American Coot, Killdeer,

Greater Yellowlegs, Solitary Sandpiper, Spotted Sandpiper, Common Snipe,

American Woodcock, Bonaparte's Gull, Ring-billed Gull, Herring Gull, Iceland

Gull, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Great Black-backed Gull, Caspian Tern, Rock

Dove, Mourning Dove, Eastern Screech-Owl, Short-eared Owl, Northern

Saw-whet

Owl, Chimney Swift, Belted Kingfisher, Red-bellied Woodpecker,

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Downy Woodpecker, Hairy Woodpecker, Northern

Flicker, Pileated Woodpecker, Eastern Phoebe, Horned Lark, Purple Martin,

Tree Swallow, Northern Rough-winged Swallow, Barn Swallow, Blue Jay,

American Crow, Fish Crow, Black-capped Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse,

Red-breasted

Nuthatch, White-breasted Nuthatch, Brown Creeper, House Wren,

Golden-crowned Kinglet, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Eastern

Bluebird, American Robin, Northern Mockingbird,  Bohemian Waxwing, Cedar

Waxwing, Northern Shrike, European Starling, Solitary Vireo, Nashville

Warbler, Yellow Warbler, Yellow-rumped Warbler,  Black-throated Green

Warbler, Blackburnian Warbler, Pine Warbler, Palm Warbler, Black-and-white

Warbler, Northern Waterthrush, Louisiana Waterthrush,  Northern Cardinal,

Eastern

Towhee, American Tree Sparrow,  Chipping Sparrow, Field Sparrow, Vesper

Sparrow,

Savannah Sparrow,  Fox Sparrow, Song Sparrow, Swamp Sparrow, White-throated

Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, Lapland Longspur, Snow Bunting, Red-winged

Blackbird,

Eastern Meadowlark, Rusty Blackbird, Common Grackle, Brown-headed Cowbird,

Purple Finch, House Finch, Red Crossbill, Common Redpoll, Pine Siskin,

 

American Goldfinch, Evening Grosbeak, House Sparrow

 

But Kevin drew the line at...

 

Merlin, Ring-necked Pheasant, Common Moorhen, Greater Yellowlegs, Glaucous

Gull, Caspian Tern, Forster's Tern, Carolina Wren, Gray Catbird, Brown

Thrasher, American Pipit, Yellow-throated Vireo, Northern Parula,

Chestnut-sided Warbler, Baltimore Oriole

 

But Scott rallied to a tie with...

 

American Bittern, Tundra Swan, Eurasian Wigeon, Little Gull, Great Horned

Owl, Least Flycatcher, Bank Swallow, Cliff Swallow, Winter Wren, Hermit

Thrush, Wood Thrush, Blue-winged Warbler, Black-throated Blue Warbler,

Prairie Warbler, Common Yellowthroat

 

Both leaders had: 153 species

 

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

COMPOSITE DEPOSIT

 

Add to Kevin and Scott's lists (above) the following species and you'll have

the entire list of birds seen in January, February, March, and April:

 

Black Tern, Barred Owl, Eastern Kingbird, Common Raven, American Redstart,

Ovenbird, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, White-crowned Sparrow, Yellow-headed

Blackbird, Pine Grosbeak, Hoary Redpoll

 

Total: 179

 

                              !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                              !   KICKIN' TAIL!  !

                              !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

What better way to quiet speculation about whether or not you're a serious

David Cup competitor than by being featured in an interview exclusively for

The Cup?  KICKIN' TAIL brings well-deserved honor and recognition to the

Cupper who has glassed, scoped, scanned, driven, climbed, dug, parasailed,

and otherwise made his/her way to the top of the David Cup list.

 

Now, you'd think that with my spouse out of town for 11 days, Cuppers would

take it easy on me, especially since you're all well aware that I rely on

him as Errand Boy, Rigging Gaffer, (see masthead, previous issues of The

Cup), and now as Key Grip as well.  He also likes to think of himself as

Coeditor.  But all that's up in the air because of the blasted World Series

of Birding--he's useless to me now, and Kevin McGowan and Scott Mardis have

gone and made things worse by ticking in with a tie for April's David Cup

leadership position.  Juggling two Kickin' Tail interviews is not for the

tired and true, so I don't mind saying I'm particularly proud of the

remarkable patience and objectivity I've shown in order to showcase the

insights of our awe-inspiring leaders (the miserable little...)

 

THE CUP:  Congratulations!  But tell us, is it a little--just a tad,

maybe?--less satisfying to have to share the prestigious Kickin' Tail title?

 

McGOWAN:  I'm just happy to be here.  Scott has been a crazy man lately,

running all over the Basin.  Sure, it might have been more satisfying to

have seen one more bird, but I'm happy to be sharing with him.

 

MARDIS: First of all, it's an honor to share it with someone as good as

Kevin. Plus, if you focus on who you're tied with, you miss the important

part which is that Steve, Tom, Bard, Karl, Allison, Jeff, Chris, Ralph,

Meena, Ken, etc. all ended the month with fewer birds.  That is hardly

something to be whining in your beer about.  And since I don't expect I'll

be getting this interview a second time, I think I'll savor it as though I

weren't sharing it with Kevin.

 

THE CUP: Is it true that Tom Nix bribed you to haul tail because, like the

cast of

Friends, he's worried that overexposure will cause a Nix backlash?

 

MARDIS:  Why are you picking on Tom?

 

THE CUP: Aaah, quit being such a goody-goody.  This isn't Ladies Home

Journal you're interviewing with, it's The Cup.  We pick on everybody.

 

MARDIS: He's a great benefactor (oops, I mean friend). Actually, looking at

the leader board, I'd say if I didn't have a chance of winning, I'd root for

Tom.  The top 10 is packed with professional ornithologists which we can't

root for (it's like rooting for professionals at the Olympics).  Karl,

already has the Cup named after him--can't root for him.  Steve is on The

Sapsuckers and has accepted binoculars--clearly a violation of the well

known code of ethics for amateur birders-- can't root for him.  Certainly

of those who have held the top spot, Tom has got to be the home-town

favorite.

He represents America.

 

THE CUP: Can you confirm the rumors, then, Kevin?

 

McGOWAN: Well, he always is pushing this rugalaca stuff.  No, no, Tom is

much too much the sportsman ever to play games with the games.

 

THE CUP: Yes, an exemplary Cupper indeed.  What was the most spectacular

bird you saw in April?

 

McGOWAN:  Okay, my bias is going to show a bit here, but the most

spectacular bird I saw was a crow's egg that turned into a baby crow in my

hands (80 feet up).

 

THE CUP: Wow!  What an experience.  And a timely one, too.  [see Egghead,

Dear Tick, this issue.] But as the renowned Crow Man of Ithaca, hasn't this

happened to you before?

 

McGOWAN:  I've never actually seen a crow hatch before; I'm always there

while the egg is pipping or after they're out.

 

THE CUP: Interesting.

 

McGOWAN: Now, if you're after more mundane kinds of spectacular, then I'd

have to go with  Golden Eagle.  I've waited a long time to see a Golden in

the Basin.

 

THE CUP: Scott, how about you?

 

MARDIS:  The Golden Eagle I saw from my deck.

 

THE CUP: Both your totals are respectable, but they're more than a little

shy of the 200-by-May 1 Steve Kelling was shooting for back in February.

Do you think he was totally off his rocker with those kinds of expectations?

 

McGOWAN:  No, not really.  Adam Byrne had 200 species by the first of May

the year he and Ned set their record, so that was what Steve was after.  I

think that must have been a special year; we were nowhere near getting

those

kind of numbers.  Despite what Ken keeps saying, things are behind for a lot

of birds this year.

 

MARDIS: Yes, it is rumored that Adam Byrne accomplished just such a thing a

couple of years ago so I suppose it is possible.  But maybe only by using

something like year-end accounting procedures where January sales are

accounted in December to get year-end sales up.  Independently I would have

to say, yes, Steve is off his rocker (but it is a very nice rocker).

 

THE CUP: Allison joyously sent Jeff and Ken into momentary spasms with fresh

claims of a second Hoary Redpoll, this one at her and Jeff's feeder.  Did

you pull off any good April Fool's Day bird scams yourselves?

 

McGOWAN: No, I spent most of 1 April on airplanes and in airports, so I

didn't get much chance to do anything.  (And, I might add, that it was

probably because I was gone that last week in March that you got the better

of me for the McIlroy lead last month.)

 

THE CUP: Nah, that was too sizable a lead.  And besides, we spent a few days

out of town, too (though on the day of our return we picked up three or

four--yes, exactly four, ha, ha--new birds at Dryden Lake.)  Scott, how

about it, are you a funny man?

 

MARDIS: I don't like April Fool's Day jokes.  Last year, Steve nearly sent

me into a painful depression with his long, tall tale about finding

Dickcissel, Brewer's Blackbird, Yellow-headed Blackbird, Little Gull, and a

blue phase Ross' Goose all on the same day.  And no, I don't like

Halloween either.

 

THE CUP: But wasn't that you who came to our door last October 31 in a

Sapsucker costume?  Oh, no, that was Rob Scott. By the way, speaking of

scams, are you aware that angry Cuppers are uniting to have you thrown out

of the David Cup/McIlroy races?  Apparently, they've caught wind that your

wife, also a birder, has been tipping you off about McIlroy thrashers and so

forth.  Is there any chance you could lure her into signing up?  That might

save you from expulsion.

 

MARDIS: Expel me?  Hey, that thrasher information was freely shared.  And if

my wife signed up, I'd have to worry about losing to her (so would you).

 

THE CUP: Ooh, you are a cut-throat.  No wonder you're Kickin' Tail this

month.

 

MARDIS: And there would also be all sorts of familial strife.  We don't have

to remind the editors of The Cup about that, do we?

 

THE CUP: Oh, er, well, um, er...Let's move along, shall we? What were the

key factors that pushed you to the top?

 

MARDIS: I saw lots of birds.  That helped.  What was more important was that

there were lots of different kinds. Actually, the two most important things

were 1) luck and 2) the shameless chasing of all the birds everyone else was

finding.

 

McGOWAN: I spend a lot of time in the field working with crows at this time

of the year, so I can get a lot of the common things as they arrive.  Also

important is Jay's current enthusiasm for birding and Perri's (my

4-year-old) tolerance for occasional weekend road trips to Montezuma.

 

THE CUP: It angers me just thinking about this, Kevin, but our readers want

to know. It's circulating that when Jay (for those of you who may not know,

Kevin's son Jay is nine years old)  begs you to take him birding, you take

him to places like the Wegman's parking lot, so he won't catch his Big Daddy

in the David Cup/McIlroy races.  I don't suppose you'd admit to this in

public?

 

McGOWAN: Hey, we've seen some great birds at Wegmans!

 

THE CUP: Riiiiight.  What's your favorite color?

 

McGOWAN: Purple, like the beautiful iridescence on the back of a Fish Crow

in the sunlight.

 

THE CUP: I should have known. And yours, Scott?

 

MARDIS: The chiffon yellow on the breast of a Philadelphia Vireo.

 

THE CUP: How poetic.  If you could own only one nonbird-related CD for the

rest of your life, what would it be?

 

MARDIS: Arthur Rubinstein's recording of Chopin's Ballades and Scherzos.

 

THE CUP: Yeah, I like that steamy salsa sound, too.  And those thumping bass

lines, and that sexy Spanish wail--oh.  I thought you said Ruben Blades.

Kevin?

 

McGOWAN: Hard to say.  Perhaps an Alligator Records compilation of

house-rockin' blues.

 

THE CUP: A true Cupper!  What bird(s) are you most looking forward to seeing

over the next month?

 

McGOWAN: A couple of things:  Bobolinks because they mean "May" to me and I

think they're pretty neat birds; Blackpoll Warbler because it always comes

back on my birthday (the 18th).

 

THE CUP: Cuppers, take note!

 

McGOWAN: And Mourning Warbler because they come at the end of the month and

are my favorite warbler.

 

THE CUP: Scott?

 

MARDIS: The one I can't predict ahead of time.  Of those that I can at least

hope for I would have said Cape May Warbler, but I already saw that.

Eliminating that, I'll say Sora.  I've never seen one and I hope to.

 

THE CUP: Kevin, back in January you placed 14th and your words, "I'm not

worried" (The Cup

1.1, Coach's Corner) sent a glimmer of hope throughout Cupland.  Any words

of advice for those Cuppers who still only half-believe themselves when they

meditate on that famous mantra, "I THINK I can, I THINK I can"?

 

McGOWAN: Keep working at it.  We've got lots of birds yet to see.  It's just

a statistical blip that I'm in first at this point.  I've been outside a lot

this last month and a lot of things are arriving every day.  There's a long

way to go until the end.  At this juncture it's almost impossible to tell

who's really in the best position to win.

 

THE CUP: Thanks, Kevin.

 

McGOWAN:  I'm doing okay, but I'm missing some important birds.  As I

pointed out in the first issue of The Cup, the winner is going to emerge in

December.

 

THE CUP: Hey, let's not go too far--

 

McGOWAN: There's plenty of time to get Common Yellowthroat.

 

THE CUP: Really, we don't want to be too encouraging--

 

McGOWAN: I'm not worrying about any birds of difficulty code 1 or 2 (see my

offer for difficulty rankings in The Cup 1.1), but only 3's, 4's, and 5's.

So far, I've missed 3 of 4 "5's" (poor), seen 3 of 5 "4's" (not bad), but

have been successful in finding 21 of 24 "3's" (good).

I figure you've got to see all the 1's and 2's and 95% of the 3's, and the

difference will be in the 4's and 5's.

 

THE CUP: Come on, now, we can't afford to be TOO helpful--

 

McGOWAN:  Only about 8 species are irretrievably gone at this point in

the game.

 

THE CUP: You just had to throw that in, didn't you. Well, nonetheless, thank

you for gracing the pages of The Cup.

 

McGOWAN: Thanks, it's a pleasure to be able to participate in at least one

of these

fascinating and scintillating interviews (even if it's only to pull down the

average quality).

 

THE CUP: Thanks to you, too, Scott.

 

MARDIS: For what it's worth...

 

 

????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

?????????????????????????????????    PIONEER PRIZE

????????????????????????????????

????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

?????

 

The editors of The Cup, through statistically significant birding polls, and

by running bird-song-encoded information through the Lab of O's

sophisticated computer program CANARY, have determined that recognition is

in order for the Cupper who has braved wind, rain, ice, and snow in a quest

for new David Cup

birds for us all to enjoy.  Equally weighty in this award category is prompt

notification to other Cuppers of said sightings, be it via e-mail, phone

line, dramatic hand signals, or tears of joy.

 

We, the editors of The Cup, hereby bestow April's PIONEER PRIZE upon Karl

David, finder of a Little Gull. True, Steve Kelling certainly deserves

recognition for locating a beautiful Eurasian Wigeon.  And Scott Mardis wins

applause for relocating Karl's gull.  But that's kind of like regurgitating

into the gizzards of hungry Cuppers.  And Steve broke curfew and left the

Basin during key

migration (just think of what we all missed because he wasn't here

pioneering

for us.)  Most importantly, Karl had to get up early to find that Little

Gull,

and he didn't even have any coffee.  So to you, Karl David, a personalized,

shiny new teal-green David Cup Pencil!

 

""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""

                              SCRAWL OF FAME

""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""

                              Split Decision

 

                             (by Casey Sutton)

 

It makes me mad that the committee who decides on bird names changed the

name of Rufous-sided Towhee to Eastern Towhee.  I know that they changed the

name

because Rufous-sided Towhee is two different species now.  But why do the

birders in the west get a nice descriptive name for their towhee, Spotted

Towhee, when we get stuck with the name Eastern Towhee.  It doesn't say

anything about what the bird looks like at all, the way Spotted Towhee does.

I think they

should leave our towhee name Rufous-sided Towhee, and they could still call

the other one Spotted Towhee.  If I didn't know that Eastern Towhee is such

a pretty bird, I sure wouldn't be dying to get out and see one.  It sounds

like a boring bird.  I think changing the name like that, especially to

something so boring,

is like stealing from the bird.  I think the committee should change our

towhee's name back to Rufous-sided Towhee.

 

(Casey Sutton is a sixth grader at DeWitt Middle School.  He's been a

serious birder for about a year now, and he knows all the starting centers

in the NBA.  Casey is eagle-eyed when it comes to finding the best gas

prices in town.)

 

(If you have an opinion about the art, science, and/or esthetics of birding

or birding-related topics, write it up for consideration for Scrawl of

Fame.)

                   

                       <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

                     <  COACH'S CORNER        <

                    <           <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

                    <           < 

                     <         <

                       < < < <

                     

 

With so many Basin Big Wigs out of the Basin during production of The

Cup 1.4,

I thought about throwing the Coach's Corner out the window this month to

lighten my load enough to catch the latest episode of Seinfeld, but with the

threat of birder rebellion hovering on the horizon I thought better of it.

Upon his return from the Garden State, I gave Jeff an ultimatum: write the

column or I strip your name off the film credits.  Knowing that being fired

as Coeditor of The Cup could destroy future job prospects--not to mention

his marriage--Jeff took pen in hand.  I can only trust that his aim is true.

Should you feel that his advice here was purposely misguiding (say, to throw

you off while he plays catch-up with the rest of the Sapsuckers), please,

let me know

and I'll file for divorce.

 

COACH'S CORNER: The month of May always conjures up images of warblers

dripping from newly-leaved trees.  And rippling alongside them are vireos,

flycatchers, sparrows, and many other birds.  Fortunately, those of us in

the Basin are

blessed with a great diversity of breeding species, and the majority of

migrants that arrive in May can also be found all summer.  So in the

unlikely event that you didn't get down to City Cemetery on the last day of

April to see Black-throated Blue Warbler and Blue-winged Warbler, you don't

need to start sweating yet.  They'll be around for a while.

 

There is, however, a subset of migrants that you need to think more about.

These are the species that breed to our north and pass briefly through the

Basin.  The fall may bring another opportunity for seeing most of these

northern breeders, but if you wait until then you'll miss their beautiful

breeding

plumages and songs.  This list includes Bay-breasted, Cape May, Blackpoll,

and Wilson's Warblers, Philadelphia Vireo, Olive-sided and Yellow-bellied

Flycatchers, Swainson's and Gray-cheeked Thrush, and Lincoln's Sparrow.

 

The first and most obvious piece of advice for finding these species is to

learn their songs.  Blackpoll Warbler and Olive-sided Flycatcher songs are

easy to

learn and hard to confuse with other species.  Bay-breasted and Cape May

Warbler songs are quite similar to each other and can be described as higher

versions

of a Black-and-white Warbler-type song.  Wilson's Warbler is a

not-too-striking loose two-parted trill.  Listen carefully for the "killick"

call of the Yellow-bellied Flycatcher or for its soft "chuwee,"--a bit like

the call of a Semipalmated Plover for you sound aficionados.  You're

unlikely to hear

migrating thrushes singing but listen in particular for the "whit" note of

the Swainson's Thrush.  Finally, when looking through sparrow flocks, keep

your ears tuned for the buzzy call notes of Lincoln's Sparrow.

 

A second category of migratory song birds to look for in May are the

southern overshoots.  By that I mean species that breed primarily south of

the Basin but annually or almost annually appear here in the spring.  This

would include s

pecies like White-eyed Vireo, Yellow-throated Warbler, Kentucky Warbler,

Yellow-breasted Chat, Summer Tanager, and Blue Grosbeak.  The only ways to

increase your very small odds of seeing any of these species is to spend

a lot

of time in the best spots for migrants and to learn their songs.  Of

course,

we'll all hope that someone else will find one and we'll all be able to run

over and see it immediately.  Places like Mundy Wildflower Garden, Sapsucker

Woods, Dryden Lake, and Monkey Run are all good spots to look.  There are

also a number of species that we think of as more southerly that breed in

small numbers in the Basin.  These species include Prothonotary Warbler,

Worm-eating Warbler, Hooded Warbler, and Orchard Oriole.  Since they do

breed here I'll leave them to next month's coach.

 

Coach Brinkley gave the sage advice in an earlier column to spend as

much time

as possible scoping the lake on foul weather days.  This same advice holds

true well into May, when terns, gulls, shorebirds, and even sea ducks like

scoters

are still moving north.  Who knows what you might find?  At the time of this

writing a number of interesting species have been found including Laughing

Gull and Forster's Tern.  Watch for Franklin's Gull and in the shorebird

category Piping Plover, American Avocet, and Willet.  Ruddy Turnstones,

though not rare, may be easier seen in spring than in fall.  The difficulty

of May is that under certain bad weather conditions you can also have

"fall-outs" of landbirds, so

you have to decide whether to scope the lake or walk the woods.  Landbird

fall-outs usually happen when it is clear with southerly winds to the

south and

a frontline is stalled over our area.  The birds migrate north but are

stopped

and "fall-out" at the front line.  Such a fall-out can be especially

dramatic

when migrants have been prevented from moving north because of weather

conditions for an extended period of time.

 

I'll finish by mentioning one last category of southerly overshoots:

Although

May is an ideal month for seeing the bitterns and herons that breed in the

Basin, it is also an excellent time to look for southern herons.  These

include Snowy Egret, Little Blue Heron, Tricolored Heron, Cattle Egret, and

though not a heron, Glossy Ibis.  Last year a Tricolored Heron showed up at

Myer's Point in mid-May.  Montezuema is another obvious spot to keep your

eyes open for these species.

 

Finally, as other coach's have reminded us all: time in the field.

That's the

key to a great month, and May is one of the best!

 

(Jeff Wells is New York State Important Bird Areas Coordinator for the

National Audubon Society and is housed at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

When he dances the jitterbug, he hardly ever trips his partner.)

 

                            mmmmm

     mmmmmmmmmmmmmm    McILROY MUSINGS   mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

                            mmmmm

 

After the big blow-up Jeff and I had last month--and in public, no less!--I

really thought the McIlroy victory was all mine this month.  I was sure

that

after the dozen roses Jeff sent me, and the romantic dinner he prepared for

me, and love songs he serenaded me with from the parking lot, that he'd

lovingly

place the McIlroy ring on my finger as well.  But I guess while we were busy

making up, Kevin McGowan was doing a little making up of his own.

 

THE CUP: I won't lie, I'm still smarting from you snatching my projected

victory away from me.

 

McGOWAN: Yeah, I guess, what with a perfunctory e-mail interview, even

though we

share a building part of the week.  Afraid to look me in the eye?

 

THE CUP: It's for your own safety that I'm using the e-mail.  This way,

you'll still have your eyes--I spared them only because of your

important crow

research.  Research, I want everyone to know, that got you an awful lot of

McIlroy birds.  By the way, that's cheating, isn't it?

 

McGOWAN:  No more so than having feeders outside your office window or

working

part-time and going birding during the day.  Hey, you have to pay attention

wherever you are.

 

THE CUP: Yeah, you're right, you're all a bunch of cheaters.  The least

you can

do now is share the spoils.  Where was your most productive McIlroy

territory (i.e., where is your favorite crow nest)?

 

McGOWAN:  Cayuga Heights has been pretty good to me.  I've gotten a lot of

good things

there while scouting crow nests.  Stewart Park and the Newman Golf Course

(American AND Fish Crow nests) are vital, of course.

 

THE CUP: What McIlroy bird are you most proud of?

 

McGOWAN: Oh, Forster's Tern, I guess.  I've only gotten a handful of

difficult city birds, like Snow Bunting and American Pipit.  Nothing as good

as your

alleged Common Raven.

 

THE CUP: Yeow!  And I thought I was smarting--you're a real lemon tart!

Aside from my precious (and obviously much coveted) raven, what do you

foresee as

being the toughest McIlroy birds to get?

 

McGOWAN:  Shorebirds.  The town of Ithaca has the lakeside, lots of woods

and ravines,

and even some open fields, but almost no shorebird habitat.

 

THE CUP: It just so happens I got a tip from another Cupper about a pretty

reliable location where McIlroy racers can pick up a few.  But after that

little nasty, don't ask me to share it with you! Speaking of nasties, any

words for

those Cuppers who aren't birder enough to sign up for both competitions?

(Please, no profanity--your son may be reading this.)

 

McGOWAN:  Slackers.  How much extra effort does it take to keep track?

They're just afraid of losing face by not being on top.  SOMEBODY has to

make up the middle and the bottom.  I've always admired people who aren't

afraid to look foolish now and then.

 

THE CUP: How does it feel to be leading both races?  What are the

chances of

this  happening next month?  (Be assured that this question is asked

solely as

a chance for the rest of us to cackle--we all know you're skipping out of

the Basin for the Big Day!)

 

McGOWAN:  Big Day, big deal.  Unless you can come up with a Ruff or

something again that won't stay put, I'm not scared of you.  Remember, this

is a distance race, not a sprint.

 

THE CUP: How 'bout Laughing Gull?  Whoops!  That belongs in next month's

issue.  You were saying?

 

McGOWAN:  It feels just marvelous to be on top, even if it's just for this

month.  Steve has already promised me a good posterior view for the rest of

the year in the David Cup, and he'll probably be good to his word.

 

THE CUP: I seem to recall a similar warning--oh, but that was to Jeff.

Obviously Steve's well aware that he's no match for Jeff's better half.

But

you, on the other hand, I don't like these crow research/McIlroy birding

expeditions, not one bit.

 

McGOWAN:  I've got a couple of other out of town trips planned, and I don't

think I can keep up the momentum for the whole race. 

 

THE CUP: Good to hear you finally admit it.

 

McGOWAN: But I'll be there playing anyway.

 

THE CUP: On the other hand, is it true that if you win, it's McGowan's

home-brewed brewskies for all McIlroy participants?

 

McGOWAN: If I can find a supplier for ingredients (Summer Meadow

closed), and

if I can spare some birding time in the fall to brew, maybe.

 

THE CUP: Did you hear that, Cuppers?  I can attest that Kevin's home brew is

great--almost worth throwing the competition for.  In the mean time (really,

no pun intended--really) thanks a lot for rubbing it in, ah, that is,

sharing your insights with us.

 

McGOWAN: The pleasure is all mine.  (Isn't it?)

 

     ======================================================

                       BIRD BRAIN OF THE MONTH             

     ======================================================

 

He's not just a Cayuga Bird Club member, he's also the president!

 

Yes, our Bird Brain this month is Rob Scott.  Rob comes to us care of The

Haunt and the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, where he recently began

working as corporate and foundation fundraiser, with a smidgin of world wide

web authoring thrown in.  You see, Rob is one of those rare, multifaceted

individuals.  In addition to his work at the Lab, Rob can grind with the

best of 'em down at The Haunt.  And then there's Rob Scott, poet-at-large,

who puts Robert Frost to

shame with quotes like this...

 

"It is their beauty, their aloofness, and their sheer other-worldliness,"

says Rob, when asked what it is about birds that motivates him to take to

the field.  "These small creatures travel great distances under their own

power, navigate by the stars and the earth's magnetic field, and have

impeccable solar calendars.  I'm in awe of them, and they help me find a

connection to the

world I don't get through my computer terminal."

 

Rob's earliest  introduction to the miracle of flight, however, was not as a

birdwatcher but as an Air Force brat in Grand Forks, North Dakota.  "I

learned,

at an early age, to identify the various 'gashawks' that SAC flew out of

bases in North Dakota, Illinois, and Ohio."

 

Rob was a student at Cornell when he first became interested in birds. "My

golf game had become very frustrating.  I was looking for a way to spend

time

outdoors without tension and teeth-gnashing. Since I hadn't seen an

eagle or

even a birdie on the course in a while, I thought I'd better find

another way

to reach those goals."  With greens fees and having to buy a dozen

Titleists

every week taking its toll on him, Rob turned in his clubs and took up a

pair of binoculars. "A friend took me to Ferd's Bog," he recalls.  "I saw an

Olive-sided Flycatcher catch a dragonfly, and I was hooked!"

 

Most of Rob's birding is relegated to Saturday mornings.  "My

less-than-die-hard birding schedule is reflected in my pathetic Cup

standing," says Rob morosely, although, like a good Cupper, he admits to

trying to squeeze in a few hours here and there during the week, which

includes what he calls "car-birding."   "This

is good for honing gizz identifications.  Besides, you get such short

views at

60 mph that you don't have time to second-guess your id's.  It's much less

stressful that way."

 

Although he may not spend as much time in the field as some of our other

Bird Brains, Rob has a fine treasure chest of birding memories, and a good

many of these have been close to home.  In addition to the aforementioned

Olive-sided Flycatcher, he says, "I remember a particular day in Montour

Falls when I had close-up looks at Golden- and Blue-winged Warblers; good

warbler days in Letchworth State Park; an Indigo Bunting framed in sunlight

near Ithaca Falls."  And, he points out, when traveling, there's always the

joy of finding new birds

on his own--a family of Florida Scrub Jays near Jupiter, Florida, and a

Prairie Falcon soaring at eye-level at Crater Lake National Park.  The image

of his

first Merlin is also sharp in his mind ("a bullet cruising the brush at

Assateague.") "And," he adds, "I've had very good birding on trips to the

Pacific Northwest and Hawaii, where Palila was my 'best bird, but Fairy

Tern

was my favorite."

 

Rob's been birding around the Basin since 1987.  In 1994, he moved from Lodi

to Ithaca (we suspect, upon hearing early whispers of an impending David

Cup) and

now can bird around his home without being outside of the Basin.  He says it

was by "accident," though, that he became involved with the Cayuga Bird

Club.

"Cupper extraordinaire Steve Kelling and I 'met' through the computer list,

BIRDCHAT, and did a presentation to the club on birding on the internet.

When Karl wanted to step down as president, my arm was twisted to become

president, a decision which was made in haste with the assurance that I

would merely be a figurehead!" Although such assurances have apparently

fallen through, Rob admits that there are rewards, among them, "free parking

spaces at the Lab, access to

the executive washroom, a good health plan with dental insurance, and the

admiration of my peers.  Ahhh, but seriously, the real reward is in the

snacks

at the end of each meeting. Yum!"

 

Among Rob's other distinguishable contributions to local birding is

Cayugabirds-L,  which keeps on-line birders abreast of recent sightings and

bird-related events.  "Steve Kelling and I hashed out the original idea. We

thought, why correspond with a bunch of birdhead yahoos across the country

[BIRDCHAT] when we've got a critical mass of birdheads right here in our own

backyard?  Plus, I thought the mailing list would be a good place to exhibit

my birding prowess and encyclopedic knowledge of things avian.  Boy, was I

wrong."

 

Having become an employee of the Lab of Ornithology has greatly helped Rob

boost his standings in the David Cup/McIlroy competitions.  "While I am not

allowed to go birding and be paid for it, I do sneak some in on the side

here and there.

The Lab buys sunflower seed for a big feeder outside my window, so when

I am

busy 'composing a letter' I can rack up birds for *both* my David Cup and

McIlroy Award lists."

 

Although most of Rob's time at the Lab is spent  raising money for the Lab's

programs, he recently put in considerable effort behind-the-scenes for the

Sapsuckers and their World Series of Birding success.   In a last minute

show of audacity (or perhaps to pat himself on the back as a successful

fundraiser?) Rob offers this little multiple choice quiz:  "I am glad to see

that you made a generous pledge to the event, Allison.  I can only assume

one of the following:  a. You don't think Jeff's a very good birder, and

thus you won't have to pony up too much after the event, or b. You are

trying to give Jeff extra encouragement

to stay in New Jersey while you pick up Cape May, Bay-breasted,

Golden-winged

and Prairie Warblers, solidifying your lead over him in the cup/award

races."

 

Do I  really need to answer to that?

 

 

                         @#$$%#%$^!(*$)%^@>(#?@<$&%^@(

                                           DEAR TICK

                         @#%$^!)$(%*&^>$*%?<!>*%^#*%(*&

 

Because birders suffer so many unique trials and tribulations--and with the

added strain of intense competition brought on by the David Cup/McIlroy

Award-

-The Cup has graciously provided Cuppers with a kind, sensitive and

intuitive columnist, Dear Tick, to answer even the most profound questions,

like these...

 

DEAR TICK:

 

In basketball, points can be awarded even if the ball doesn't go into the

basket.  It's called offensive interference, or goaltending.  If a Cupper

uses subterfuge to keep another Cupper from seeing a bird, shouldn't the

victim be allowed to count it?  Let me give you an example: At 7:56am on a

fine, spring morning with southerly breezes, a leading Cup competitor--let's

call him Tim Knox--is walking up the steps of Ithaca City Hall when he spots

a Golden Eagle flying over, headed northeast.  He remembers that one of his

competitors (me) still needs Golden Eagle and is planning to spend the

morning at Mt. Pleasant.  Saying that reporting to work on time can wait

until tomorrow, Knox turns

around, gets in his car and races to Mt. Pleasant, setting up his scope just

in time to identify a speck approaching from the southwest.  When I ask him

what

he has he says "Oh, nothing, just a red-tail."  After I give him my

"every bird

is a good bird" lecture, he proceeds to engage me in a protracted

conversation concerning the recent AOU splits.  Our conversation grows quite

spirited as we wonder, for example, if we'll have to put an asterisk next to

a new record by virtue of the recent split, like Bicknell's Thrush...deep

stuff like that.  Meanwhile, Knox has surreptitiously snuck a look at the

sky while I was expostulating, and he sees his bird--which is in truth a

Golden Eagle--pass by directly overhead.  By the time we're done, the bird

is gone.  Shouldn't I be awarded the bird because of Knox' foul play?

 

                                                   --Eagle-eyed in Aurora

Dear Eagle-eyed.:

 

I've reviewed the tape in slo-mo and see no evidence of foul play here.

Now, if you had had the bird in your scope and Knox shoved his hand in front

of it, that would be goaltending.  As it is, I think Knox's clever Cup

strategy deserves a Swallow-tailed Kite.

 

DEAR TICK:

 

Can you be standing in the Basin and see a bird outside of the Basin and

count

it?  After all, high-flying birds might not really be considered IN the

Basin.  What about if you're standing outside the Ithaca town line and see a

bird flying inside the town line?  Can you count it for the McIlroy?  Is it

birds seen from within the boundaries or birds seen that are inside the

boundaries?  I mean, I don't think we have to go very far here to think

about where Ken Rosenberg is seeing things for "The Bowl" now, do we?  And

speaking of that, can you flush birds into the Basin to count them?  What

about seeing footprints of birds?

You know the bird passed by recently, so therefore are confirmed

"occurrences."  How about if you shoot a bird outside the Basin then bring

it in while it's

still breathing?  Is mouth-to-mouth until you get inside the boundaries

considered sporting?

                                                                           

                                                    --Serious Competitor

and Son

Dear Serious and Son:

 

What Cuppers won't do to eek out a tick!  I hate to say it--I'd rather dock

you for being greedy--but while the bird MUST be within the territory in

question,

the Cupper him/herself does not.  On the other hand, if you are in the

territory in question but the bird is not, you're out of luck.  However,

it's my understanding that some particularly desperate Cuppers meet

regularly each week

to devise ways to entice birds into the two boundaries.  It sounds like you

could use this support group; contact Eagle-eyed in Aurora.  As for

footprints, let's say you find what you think are Ruffed Grouse tracks.  In

fact, they could be the trappings of, for instance, a crow.  They're wiley

critters, and it wouldn't surprise me at all if they were out to exact

revenge by misleading a certain Cupper who likes to play Crow Sheriff by

"deputizing" the poor birds

with little colored "badges."  Now, by "shooting" I assume you mean

photographing the birds.  Photos of birds don't count, whether you're in

the

Basin or on the moon.  Finally, giving mouth-to-mouth will do nothing for

your list, and probably little for the bird, but would surely make you a

Bird Brain.

 

DEAR TICK:

 

Are you aware that this contest discriminates against canine Cuppers?

Too many

of the really good birding spots are off limits to dogs!  Somehow, this

has to

be your fault.

                                                  --Ticked Off at Mundy

Dear Ticked Off:

 

Sit down, relax, take a deep breath, and channel your aggression where it

belongs--back at your Great Aunt Sora for cutting you out of her

will--rather

than at me.

 

There.  Now let's talk.

 

I assure you that Dear Tick would like nothing better than to open Sapsucker

Woods, Mundy Wild Flower Gardens, and Stewart Park to our dog-eared

compatriots.  After all, what's more important, humans being able to see

spectacular congregations of gorgeous warblers and rare migrants, or our

furry friends

having the freedom to leave their mark, shall we say, wherever they darn

well please?  I'm on your side, Ticked Off (with a name like that, you can't

be all bad), but if I pull strings and let you take your dog into hot David

Cup/McIlroy tick-it outlets, Steve Kelling will be whining for me to let him

bird Mundy on

the back of his elephant to alleviate "warbler neck."   Can you imagine the

crap I'd have to put up with if I let him do that?  So, I'll have to keep

the bars on the doors that keep your dog out.  Too bad.  She coulda been a

contenda.

 

DEAR TICK:

 

An astute Cupper recently published an article in a birding magazine,

pondering the question of whether or not a birder should be able to tick off

a bird

species if they didn't in fact see the bird itself but rather only the egg,

sitting in a nest easily recognizable.  His article raised more

questions than

it answered--he wimped out and said we should start an "egg list."  Since

this could have serious repercussions for the David Cup, I'm hoping that

you, Dear Tick, will set the record straight on the issue of counting eggs

as birds.

                                                                          

                                                             --Egghead

in Ithaca

Dear Egghead:

 

How many times have you gone into a restaurant, other than JB's BBQ Chicken

and Other Birds (see Cup Quotes, this issue), and ordered two House

Sparrows, sunny side up?  When was the last time Betty Crocker instructed

you to combine sugar, vanilla, and a Brown-headed Cowbird, slightly

scrambled?  The day that old

debate, "Which came first, the eagle or the egg?" is put asunder is the day

I'll give the cracked idea of counting eggs for the David Cup/McIlroy lists

any yolk.

 

DEAR TICK:

 

This "McIlroy boundary is a state of mind" stuff just confuses the heck out

of me.  I need some practical answers.  Does the bird need to be within the

boundaries or do I when I see it?  Or do we both have to be?  Suppose I'm at

Myer's Point doing the loon watch in November and I see a Red-throated Loon

flying south.  If I keep watching it until it's a small speck in the

distance that crosses into the McIlroy area, then will it "count"?  Do the

birds on display in Fernow Hall count?  They don't look too healthy, but...

Finally, should I not worry about all this since the race is rigged anyway?

--In Need of Answers in Ithaca

Dear In Need:

 

You're "McIlroy boundary is a state of mind" reference is taken from the

on-Internet dispute that tried to disguise itself as serious Cup

conversation

(see Cup Quotes, this issue).  Well, if you read between the lines you'll

realize that this little debate had nothing whatever to do with David

Cup/McIlroy boundary issues.  In fact, it becomes rather obvious that the

quarrelsome duo are in fact siblings separated at birth, vying for their

mother's attention.  Ignore their pleas for a Mommy's soothing voice.

Concerning the stuffed birds in Fernow Hall, I'd say go ahead and count

them if

it weren't for City Cemetery this past month.  That place has given

birding a

bad rap.  Birders should be out beating the bushes, stumbling into

quicksand, collapsing under the ruthless weight of thirst and exhaustion.

That's what birding's all about.  Adventure!  Not lounging around in a

cemetery, oohing and ahhing over birds that might as well be wearing

sandwich boards saying, "HERE I AM!"  If you'd all been out birding the way

birding was intended, then I'd say give yourself a break, there's a lovely

Common Tern in Fernow Hall.  Instead, I strongly suggest you set the example

for these sissy-pants Cuppers: Throw on your backpack, buy yourself an

inflatable rubber mattress, and paddle yourself into the cold waters of true

Cup competition.

 

DEAR TICK:

 

I keep reading posts from people who want to know the McIlroy boundaries

and

those complaining about where they are.  I personally had figured that the

McIlroy territory would (and should) be pretty flexible.  I assume that by

the time of the Loon Watch it will include Taughanock Park--how else will

the Red-throated Loons and other exciting year-end birds be able to be

counted for both the David Cup and McIlroy races?  To be perfectly honest, I

expect the McIlroy area to be sort of like "The Blob" and consume most of

the Cayuga Lake Basin--excluding key areas like Montezuma and Dryden Lake so

those who spend an inordinate amount of time there will be shut out of the

McIlroy competition.  My question, Tick, is, will the birds I've already

seen in David Cup territory that eventually becomes McIlroy territory be

"grandfathered" in as McIlroy birds?

                                                                          

                                        --Fingers Crossed and Pen Ready in

Ithaca

 

Dear Fingers:

 

You're fired.

And by the way, that's Dear Tick to you.

 

DEAR TICK:

 

Yesterday I was walking down the street when I felt something wet hit my

head.  I looked up, but it was a cloudy day, so I didn't see anything.  I

carefully

removed the sticky goo from my hair and had it analyzed by a lab.  They

determined that it was Golden Eagle droppings.  Can I count Golden Eagle?

                                                                          

                                                  --Still Eagle-eyed in

Aurora

 

Dear Eagle-eyed:

 

I've checked with my sources and they're telling me that this

happened--you may

or may not recall--on April Fool's Day, and you, my friend, are the fool.

Apparently, this Tim Knox fellow of whom you earlier spoke not only had a

magnificent view of a "passing" Golden Eagle, he was able to catch its

air-mail delivery as well--on the tip of his tongue, no less!  I'm told that

he climbed

on top of the building (or was it a tree?) under which you were walking and

flung

the goo right on top of your unsuspecting pate.  Really, though, you should

consider yourself lucky.  Although this mess was over your head, at least

Knox isn't rubbing your face in it...

 

(Send your questions for Dear Tick to The Cup, care of Jeff's e-mail.)

 

                """""""""       CUP QUOTES      """"""""

 

"This afternoon, at the Canoga Bait ponds on the west side of Cayuga Lake

I had the rare pleasure of seeing all 6 swallows in one place at one time:

1 Cliff, 1 Bank, and 3 Purple Martins plus numerous Barn, Rough-winged, and

Tree Swallows. As an added bonus, kind of a super-swallow, one Black Tern

was also skimming the ponds."

                                                      --Tom Nix

 

"Congratulations on another fine issue of The Cup!  You have

demonstrated, once

again, insight not only into birding, but into the vexatious lives of

birders...

I indeed was about to finish (i.e., start) my income taxes today.

Instead, I

find myself scouring the lists for birds I missed, devouring Herr

Rosenberg's exhortative treatise, and polishing the objective of my new

Swarovski while wondering still if I can write it off on my returns (perhaps

Form 6765, "Credit for Increasing Research Activities"?).  Your only

oversight was not including in The Cup a copy of Form 4868, "Application for

Extension of Time to File."  But I assume I can pick one up at Montezuma (it

IS, after all, a*National* Wildlife Refuge).

--Ralph Paonessa

 

"[We saw] our famous Eastern Screech-owl in the Wood Duck box at Union

Springs pond."

                                                     --Meena Haribal

 

"Tim [Dillon] was very forthcoming (like a good Cupper should be even

though I

am not sure if he is [a Cupper]) and started to tell me he saw a

Black-throated Green Warbler. So I asked him where.  At this point Martha

[Fischer] started yelling 'Don't tell him! Don't tell him!' and then started

singing Wagner Opera..."

--Steve Kelling

 

"Seeing the [Canada Goose] on the nest was interesting, if not enchanting."

 

                                                    --Casey Sutton

 

"For those who are listing for the McIlroy Award (can we call them

MacAws?),

there's a perky pair of Pied-billed Grebes on the inlet at Stewart Park.

                                                                           

                                                          --J. Caissa

Willmer

 

"My David Cup total for the year is 49.  Not too impressive, except that one

of the species is Eurasian Wigeon. So I don't feel too bad."

--Tom Lathrop

 

"Scott and I observed not two but four Vesper Sparrows  behind the airport

in Ithaca. They were with the flock of Savannah Sparrows and were

congregating in the mud along the road side. Our best views were when they

flocked in front of the barn door next to the equine research center.  None

of our field guide pictures do these birds justice!"

                                                    --Heather Mardis

 "Thanks for the sparrows."

                                                    --Bard Prentiss

 

"Friday, 18:00 at the new shorebird habitat south of 13 at the airport

runway, I found one of Scott's Solitary Sandpipers and also had 3 Lesser

Yellowlegs.  Unfortunately an hour later only the solitary Solitary could be

found.  (Incidently, ...this little piece of real estate is "officially" in

the McIlroy area.)

--Kevin McGowan

 

"I've been studying birder behavior a bit and have concluded that the

McIlroy boundary is a state of mind...This principle also seems to apply to

the David

Cup: the boundary was extended ever so slightly to include the house of one

good birder in the area."

                                                   --Dave Mellinger

 

"I take great exception to Dave Mellinger's insinuation that the McIlroy

boundary 'slid' up the hill from the actual town line to, and past, my

house.  I am well aware that the town line exists within 100 feet of my

house (lower taxes in Enfield) and I am happy to report that my dog Tucker

and I always have taken

great care to chase (throwing rocks at them if necessary) birds we see

on our

side of the line to the other side before counting them on my McIlroy Cup

list...If Dr. Mellinger can not refrain from making such false  accusations

I shall be forced to tell everyone that he once invited attendees at a

lecture to throw dead song sparrows at the speaker if the talk was not to

their liking."

                                                

                                                  --John Bower

 

"Yes, and I now broaden the invitation from those attendees to all birders

in the Cayuga Lake Basin.  I know a great supply of dead Song Sparrows,

along with dead Bald Eagles, dead Merlins, dead American Pipits, and so on.

For some reason,  they all look like they've been hit by rocks and chewed by

a dog.  Just take a look out there by the Ithaca-Enfield line, right next to

"JB's Barbecued Chicken and Other Birds."

                                                 --Dave Mellinger

 

"Are there no bounds to Dr. Mellinger's shame?  I set the record

straight one

last time: I never killed them, only stunned them. Then, Tucker would carry

them across the creek and gently place them on a branch of the ecologically

appropriate species of tree or bush and point at them till I could get a

good

 look and make my McIlroy identification. While Dr. Mellinger's wild

accusations fall far from the mark, he does make a good point that all

Cuppers are invited

to my house for a JB's town line BYOB (bring your own bird) BBQ party.  Date

will be announced later."            

                                                 --John Bower

 

"When I arrived at 1 pm, the sunny skies, warm temps, and southerly winds

held promise.  However, Karl David, the only other birder there, mentioned

he hadn't seen much.  Karl's probably still there."

                                                                          

                                                      --David McDermitt 

 

"Two Pine Siskins joined the finch parade at our feeders."

                                                                           

                                                      --Ken Rosenberg

 

"I'm embarrassed to say I still haven't seen...a number of birds I have

no good

excuse for missing."

                                                --Larry Springsteen

 

"In the morning I was at Stewart Park scanning for ducks when I heard a

strange

Song Sparrow singing behind me from the infield.  It was in fact a Vesper

Sparrow,

one of the relatively uncommon 'McIlroy' race. In the afternoon I was on

Mt.

Pleasant...I saw a little brown job fly in front of me and give a rather

phoebe-like chip as it flew to the same tree and landed.  It was another

Vesper Sparrow, but of the nominate 'David' race."

                                               -Karl David

 

"Living in downtown Ithaca, I don't get all the great siskins and redpolls

at my feeder.  However, on hot summer nights when I'm barbequing, I am

serenaded by the twitter and flutter of those cigars with wings.  That's my

vision of summer.  So it was with supreme delight that I saw my first

Chimney Swift yesterday afternoon."

--Michael Runge

 

"Yesterday, we had three Northern Waterthrushes on territory, singing,

at our

land in Brooktondale.  This morning, a Brown Thrasher is happily tossing

leaves in the yard. He (she?) will be even happier when (s)he discovers our

newly neatened up wood chips  in the gardens--a favorite pasttime last year

was tossing them onto the lawn."

--Sandy Podulka

"I propose: The McGowan Cup."

                                                                           

                                                    --Larry Springsteen

 

"I swear I didn't put Larry up to this!"

--Kevin McGowan

 

As the weather would predict, Dryden Lake was covered with waterbirds again

this morning...I counted: 2 Common Loons, 10+ Horned Grebes, 1 Red-necked

Grebe,

3 D-CR. Cormorants, 22 Oldsquaw 7 White-winged Scoters, 50+ Bufflehead, 10

Ring-necked Ducks, 2 Lesser Scaup, 4 Red-breasted Mergansers, 2 Ruddy Ducks,

2 Blue-Winged Teal, 1 Bonaparte's Gulls,  large flock of Tree and Barn

Swallows.  All this in a blinding snow shower!

--Ken Rosenberg

"I live where it is gray."

--Steve Kelling

 

"[My list] would have been higher, but ... my dog ate it!  Yeah.  My dog.

That's it. My neighbor's dog.  I don't have a dog, but my neighbor does ...

a big,

hungry dog.  Yeah ..."

                                             --Ralph Paonessa

"Last one to Dryden Lake is a rotten egg!"

--Scott Mardis

 

May Your Cup Runneth Over,

 

Allison and Jeff

 

 

Faithful Readers,

 

An egregious error of ommission occurred in the last issue of THE CUP.

Namely, the Scrawl of Fame column that I slaved over long into the night was

left out.  Of course, since it was I myself that committed this sad sin (I

almost lost my editorship), then it is I who must also rectify it.  And

Ralph, sorry for making you feel guilty for not remembering what my Scrawl

of Fame column was about and

thanks for rereading THE CUP to look for it and point out that it wasn't

there.

 

Here, in its entirety, is the missing Scrawl of Fame (for you collectors of

THE CUP, this column should appear between Casey's Call and Coach's Corner).

 

                               Jeff

 

P.S. If you want a new clean corrected copy of THE CUP let us know or do a

cut-and-paste job and send it back to yourself.

 

 

 

""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""

                             SCRAWL OF FAME

""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""

 

On a recent trip to Montezuma, Allison and I stopped yet again at the Nite

N' Day convenience store in Union Springs for gasoline, drinks, and this

time, sandwiches, too.  As we pulled out and continued on, we remarked at

what a staple that store has become on our Montezuma excursions.  We

couldn't help wondering how much money had we spent in the little town of

Union Springs in the last year, and the year before that and the year before

that, going back to our arrival in Ithaca in 1988.  Hundreds?  No, we had

probably deposited thousands of dollars there and in other towns, in the

name of Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge. Our ponderings continued:  how

much money do birders as a whole who travel to Montezuma from everywhere

spend in various nearby communities during the course of a year?  We

resolved to at least find out our total; since then we have been asking for

receipts every time we spend money during a trip to the refuge.  At the end

of the year, we will tally them up and send this tally along to all

interested parties.  By that I mean the politicians who influence what

happens with Montezuma, and the business owners who influence the

politicians.  We regret that we did not start doing this years ago.

 

For some reason, birders, unlike hunters and other groups, have been slow in

recognizing the fact that we can and do wield economic power.  If businesses

gain a reasonable economic benefit from having a national wildlife refuge

(or other special natural area) nearby, business owners will be supportive

of issues that benefit the refuge.  We as a birding community are incredibly

fortunate that this large wetland complex, Montezuma NWR, has become part of

the public domain to be managed for wildlife.  Refuge and state biologists

estimate that over ½ million waterfowl pass through the Montezuma complex

every fall and that Cerulean Warbler (a species of Special Concern) pairs

number in the hundreds on the refuge and on nearby state Department of

Environmental Conservation lands.  Steve Kelling has shown that Montezuma is

almost unrivaled in upstate New York for its abundance and diversity of

shorebirds.  The fact that the area has continued to support such massive

abundance and diversity of birds is testament to the ongoing work of a large

number of people including employees of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,

the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, Ducks Unlimited, The

Nature Conservancy, and many others.  These groups have joined into a

cooperative project called the Northern Montezuma Wetlands Project.  The

project hopes to one day have as many as 30,000+ acres in the area managed

for wetland- associated birds and other wildlife.

 

Unfortunately there are many in the local communities that oppose these

plans, specifically because they fear the loss of tax revenues and the

specter of increased local tax rates.  If, on the other hand, local

businesses were to see real or potential economic gain from encouraging the

protection and management of their lands for wildlife, they would certainly

be far more likely to become supportive.

 

That's how we Cuppers can help.  First, if you are planning on making a

purchase of gas, food, etc., on your next Montezuma trip, make those

purchases in the small towns nearby whenever possible.  When you make your

purchases, let them know that you are a birder by wearing your binoculars

into the establishment, perhaps even make some small-talk about the great

birds you've been seeing.  Second, wherever you make a purchase on your next

Montezuma foray, get a receipt and keep track of how much money you spend.

Later in the year (maybe December), we'll ask you to send in your tally

(anonymously, if you prefer).  We will send a summary to  U.S. Fish and

Wildlife Service personnel at the refuge as well as to the area businesses

as a way to show the real and potential economic benefits of protecting the

wildlife resources in and around Montezuma. Thanks, in advance.

 

(Jeff Wells, Ph.D., is the New York State Important Bird Area Coordinator

for National Audubon and is stationed at the Lab of Ornithology.  His

favorite  purchase at the Union Springs Nice n' Easy convenience store is

Lemon Iced Tea Snapple, plus or minus a tuna sub, hold the onions.  Please.)

 

If you have an opinion about the art, science, and/or esthetics of

birding or

birding-related topics, write it up for the Scrawl of Fame.