Subject: [Tweeters] Magnuson park-Blue-winged Teal
Date: Feb 27 18:37:05 2017
From: Matthew Dufort - matt.dufort at gmail.com


One bird that can easily be confused with Blue-winged Teal is young male
Northern Shoveler. They have a dark bluish head with a white crescent in
front of the eye.

Matt Dufort


On Mon, Feb 27, 2017 at 18:24 B B <birder4184 at yahoo.com> wrote:

> Isn't there a better chance that it is a Barrow's Goldeneye with a
> crescent between eye and bill? When I first read the post that is what I
> was expecting.
>
> Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
> <https://overview.mail.yahoo.com/mobile/?.src=Android>
>
> On Mon, Feb 27, 2017 at 6:01 PM, Scott Ramos
> <lsr at ramoslink.info> wrote:
> That would in fact be quite an unusual sighting. According to eBird, there
> has been only a single Blue-winged Teal observed in the entire Puget Sound
> area between December and March: at the end of March last year in Mill
> Creek. At Magnuson Park, again on eBird, there have been only a dozen
> reports in the last 6 years and all of them in May or early June.
>
> Scott Ramos
> Seattle
>
>
> On Feb 27, 2017, at 3:28 PM, Wayne Palsson <wpalsson at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I have been birding Magnuson Park a couple of times per week for the past
> 4 years. Blue-wings are rather uncommon--I've seen one and another birder I
> know has seen one. The park checklist (now many years old) has them at one
> or two records, so sounds like you were pretty lucky!
>
> There was a Say's Phoebe in the park last Friday (2/24), the second one
> I've seen in the park.
>
> Wayne
>
> Message: 9
> Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2017 09:10:00 -0800
> From: Margaret Sandelin <msand47 at earthlink.net>
> Subject: [Tweeters] Magnuson park
> To: tweeters at u.washington.edu
> Message-ID: <58B45D68.7080900 at earthlink. net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>
> As a tyro birder I went to Magnuson park last Wednesday to look for the
> Cedar Waxwings as I have not seen them before, but it turned out to
> cloud over with a cold wind off the lake and I did not dress warmly
> enough and did not have a hat. I parked at the south end by the boat
> ramp. Only a couple crows inland but several birds on the water -
> without my book could ID mallards of course and a male Bufflehead. But
> saw a distinctively marked fowl I did not know with a white crescent
> behind the bill and in front of its eyes making me pull my book out of
> my backpack and IDed a male Blue-winged Teal. Don't know if he was an
> unusual or common visitor but thought I would mention it. Walking back
> to my car saw one of the crows on the ground working on a rat carcass.
> Margaret Sandelin
> Seattle
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