Archive for Corey

Author ImageCorey is a lifelong upstate New Yorker who recently took the plunge and moved to the city. He's only been birding since 2005 but has garnered a respectable life list and broke the magical 300 barrier in New York State in 2007 by birding whenever he wasn't working as a union representative. He lives near Forest Park in Queens with Daisy and their two indoor cats, Hunter and B.B.

Public Service Announcement

By Corey September 20, 2008 No comments yet

Don’t let their cuteness fool you!  Roving gangs of ducklings have turned to a life of crime to supply their bread crumb habit…

Tricky (Molting) Icterid

By Corey September 19, 2008 10 comments

Sometimes an easy bird can become difficult to identify.  Such was the case with the molting bird below, a species that has crossed my path hundreds of times.  It is an icterid, a family that includes blackbirds, grackles, orioles, cowbirds and meadowlarks, but beyond that I was temporarily stumped.  My birding partner for the day, [...]

Review of Corvus: A Life With Birds

By Corey September 18, 2008 8 comments

Living in a house with uncaged birds is not for everyone and that goes double for those brave enough to live with corvids.  Usually ranked up there as among the smartest of birds, corvids, which include jays, crows, magpies, and ravens, are fascinating creatures that have been mythologized, persecuted, deified, and hunted throughout human history.  [...]

Relying on the Kindness of Birders (and Reflecting on the Muckrace)

By Corey September 16, 2008 3 comments

Though Mike has already put up a post about our Montezuma Muckrace experience so much happened during the loooong day of birding that there is plenty more to post.  It was a great day and Will, Jory and Mike were tenacious teammates: it’s unusual for four people, much less birders, to be in a somewhat [...]

The Blue-collar Birder

By Corey September 15, 2008 No comments yet

is a new bird blog written by my friend Tom, the birder who got me on more life birds than anyone else by taking the time to show me the ropes when I was a novice birder.  He has some great shots of fall migrants moving through western Albany County.  Check The Blue-collar Birder out!

I Miss Turkey Vultures

By Corey September 13, 2008 10 comments

and bluebirds.  The birds I can see around New York City are great but it’s a real bummer that those birds are virtually not findable in New York City.  And Pileated Woodpeckers?  The closest I’ll ever come to a Lord God Bird aren’t available to the avid birder in New York City either.  Where am [...]

Reporting a Rare Bird in New York State

By Corey September 10, 2008 7 comments

Finding a rare bird is fun.  Chasing a rare bird is fun.  Twitching a rare bird is fun.  Reporting a rare bird?  Not so fun, which is why I have been so very negligent in filling out the form to report the Yellow-headed Blackbird that I saw last summer at Jones Beach to the to [...]

Muckrace Reminder

By Corey September 9, 2008 No comments yet

Just in case you’ve forgotten, we at 10,000 Birds are entering the Montezuma Muckrace this coming weekend.  Our team, the Butcher Birders, hope to raise scads of money for conservation.  Want to help?  Contact us with your pledge (flat amounts or on a per bird basis).

Magnificent! (Frigatebird in New York)

By Corey September 7, 2008 19 comments

When I posted a short blurb a couple of days ago about my plans to scour the south shore of Long Island in the wake of Tropical Storm Hanna I had anticipated maybe finding a good tern or perhaps a shearwater near the shore.  But after an hour or so of searching Jones Beach frustration [...]

The Candidates for Vice President on the Environment

By Corey September 7, 2008 8 comments

We here at 10,000 Birds tend not to wear our politics on our sleeves, preferring to focus on birds, bugs, nature and conservation.  But the current election for President of the United States is critical: after eight years of the Bush Administration gutting environmental regulations and being almost completely inactive on global warming (when not [...]

Swarovski Digiscoping Contest

By Corey September 5, 2008 2 comments

Do you want to win some Swarovski optics?  Of course you do!  Just enter Swarovski Optik’s Digiscoper of the Year competition by September 30 for your chance to win.

Hanna Bringing Birds?

By Corey September 5, 2008 6 comments

Though I feel for those who might be effected by the wind or rain of Tropical Storm Hanna, I can’t help but notice that the storm has a track that brings her up the east coast (past New York on Saturday night), possibly pushing southern seabirds north.  I know where I’ll be Sunday morning!

10,000 Birds Entering The Montezuma Muckrace

By Corey September 4, 2008 17 comments

That’s right, for the first time ever 10,000 Birds will field a team in a birding competition!  The annual Montezuma Muckrace, scheduled for the end of next week, will be our inaugural event.  We can’t wait!  Our squad, composed of four guys hoping not to make fools of ourselves of the finest birders in New York [...]

Bathing Birds Video

By Corey September 2, 2008 No comments yet

No, it’s not an adult movie for birds, it’s a wonderful montage of birds (including hummingbirds) bathing, set to music, at El Polin Spring, near San Francisco.  Prasad, of Birds of Bayarea, made the gorgeous video (it’s at the end of this post). Enjoy!

Answers to the Diabolical Confusing Fall Warbler ID Quiz

By Corey September 2, 2008 3 comments

This quiz might have been too hard.  My father even mentioned that he agreed with Jack, the first guesser in this near-impossible-to-answer quiz when Jack typed “The challenge here is not to ID the first bird, but to find it!”  So those who guessed incorrectly should feel good despite their wrongness that they managed to [...]

10,000 Birds Month in Review: August 2008

By Corey August 31, 2008 No comments yet

August in the Northern Hemisphere, as the days shorten and the first chilly nights occur, is a transitional month.  The beginning of August is still summer with shorebirds being the only birds on the move and any birding expedition is slowed by heat and biting bugs.  At the end of the month kids enjoy the last [...]

Diabolical Confusing Fall Warbler ID Quiz

By Corey August 30, 2008 4 comments

I’m going to pretend for a bit that the identification of drably-plumaged, migrating fall warblers moving through treetops, hiding behind leaves, and using the sun against the birder isn’t hard enough.  You know, because finding and identifying warblers with sometimes-cryptic field marks while trying to avoid the pain of warbler neck is simply too easy.  [...]

Opposable Chums: Guts and Glory at the World Series of Birding

By Corey August 28, 2008 12 comments

I just watched Opposable Chums: Guts and Glory at the World Series of Birding and it was a heck of a documentary.  Some of birding’s brightest stars provide commentary and the filmmaker, Jason Kessler, manages to capture the essence, not just of the World Series of Birding, but of birding more generally, in his 65-minute [...]

Fall Migration in Full Swing

By Corey August 26, 2008 4 comments

I haven’t had any major birding expeditions over the last week and a half but I have had several small ones.  Now that fall migration has picked up a bit I am hitting Forest Park often again, savoring every last warbler, vireo, and flycatcher that I can spot, knowing that each time I see a [...]

The Beginning of a Magpie Tattoo

By Corey August 24, 2008 8 comments

Daisy recently decided to get a tattoo.  And not just any tattoo, but a tattoo of a magpie, drawn by her, and turned into a tattoo by Daisy’s sister’s boyfriend, Sean, who has done a tattoo featured here before.  So, once again I photographed the tattoo process so all you loyal 10,000 Birds readers can [...]