Minnesota Statewide RBA

Statewide RBA phone number: 763-780-8890 or 1-800-657-3700

Previous reports: February 26 , March 4 12 18 25 , April 1 8 14 17 21 .
Other Hotlines: Minnesota Duluth/North Shore | Detroit Lakes


-RBA
*Minnesota
*Minnesota Statewide
*April 28, 2004
*MNST0404.28

-Birds mentioned
-Transcript

Hotline: Minnesota Statewide
Date: April 28, 2004
Sponsor: Minnesota Ornithologists' Union (MOU) http://biosci.umn.edu/~mou/
Reports: (763) 780-8890
Compiler: Anthony Hertzel
Transcriber: Anthony Hertzel (ahertzel@sihope.com)

This is the Minnesota Birding Report for Wednesday April 28th.

A WHITE-FACED IBIS was on the west side of Lake Osakis in Douglas County on the 25th and it was still being reported from there as recently as yesterday. It is on the west side of Douglas County Road 10 about one and a quarter miles northeast of Douglas County Road 3. Just under a mile south of this location a CATTLE EGRET was reported on the 22nd, and a CLARK'S GREBE has been reported from this lake as well near the Todd County line. Check the public access in the town of Osakis.

A SNOWY EGRET was seen in central Otter Tail County on the 28th. The location is across from a Waterfowl Production Area, one and a quarter miles east of the town of Underwood on Otter Tail County Road 122. Three Snowy Egrets were on the east side of Thielke Lake in Big Stone County on the same day.

Interesting was the ROSS'S GOOSE at Wood Lake Nature Center in Richfield, Hennepin County. It was seen there on the 25th. What may have been the same bird was on a ball field at Normandale Community College in Bloomington on the 22nd. And a GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE was on Snelling Lake at Fort Snelling State Park in Hennepin County on the 24th.

LOUISIANA WATERTHRUSH have returned to several of their traditional breeding grounds in southeastern Minnesota, including the Whitewater Wildlife Management Area in Wabasha and Winona counties. Two pair were along the Trout Run Trail on the 21st. Others have been heard at Beaver Creek Valley State Park in Houston County.

The list of other recent arrivals reported in the past week is to long to mention all of them here, but include AMERICAN BITTERN, GREEN HERON, SORA, SEMIPALMATED PLOVER, HUDSONIAN GODWIT, WILLET, SOLITARY SANDPIPER, WILSON'S PHALAROPE, CHIMNEY SWIFT, WARBLING VIREO, MARSH WREN, SEDGE WREN, BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHER, ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER, PALM WARBLER, PINE WARBLER, and CLAY-COLORED SPARROW.

This state-wide birding report is brought to you and financially supported by the Minnesota Ornithologists' Union (MOU). The MOU is Minnesota's oldest and largest bird club.

The report is composed from observations generously submitted by MOU members and other birders throughout the state. You can support this weekly update by submitting your bird reports to Anthony Hertzel at axhertzel@sihope.com or by calling the hotline directly at 763-780-8890 and leaving a detailed message.

MOU members receive this report directly on MOU-net, the club's free e-mail listservice, which is available to anyone interested. For information contact David Cahlander at .

MOU members receive the organization's quarterly journal "The Loon" and the bimonthly magazine, "Minnesota Birding". For membership information, send an e-mail message to our membership secretary at moumembers@yahoo.com.

In cooperation with the Minnesota Office of Tourism, highlights of this hotline can be now heard at a toll free number which is available to callers outside the Twin Cities area. The number is 1-800-657-3700.

The MOU is pleased to offer this service. Thank you, and good birding.

The next scheduled update of this tape is Thursday, May 6th.

Send your rare and unusual Minnesota sightings to our electronic hotline: MOU-net@biosci.umn.edu. To learn more, send a message (the message being these two words: info mou-net) to majordomo@biosci.umn.edu.




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