Date: 10/6/25 7:11 am
From: Nick Bolgiano <nickbolgiano...>
Subject: Cape May Warblers at the Stone Mt hawk watch
Several weeks ago, I wrote about an influx of Bay-breasted Warblers. There
must have been a huge number in our PA forests.

At the Stone Mt hawk watch, there has been an influx of Cape May Warblers,
another of the spruce budworm warblers. This is the best place that I have
encountered for seeing Cape May Warblers in the fall and this has been a
good year for them. I suspect that they are comfortable in that setting.
One place where they frequent is the American Mountain Ash bush behind the
platform, where they glean bugs off the berries (you can see that in one
picture). I sometimes see them in the American Chestnut saplings that grow
from old rootstocks and then die (the 3 Oct 5 pictures have chestnut leaves
as backgrounds.) (In contrast, we see relatively few Bay-breasted Warblers
there, as they prefer a thicker woods.) If there is a warbler flock near
the platform, Pedro Miranda and I (the Sunday-Tuesday watch team) pish them
out.

Yellow-rumped Warblers also seem to like the setting at the Stone Mt hawk
watch. I include one picture from the Mountain Ash of a Yellow rump. Where
Cape May and Yellow-rumped Warblers breed in the boreal forest of Canada,
American Mountain Ash is a common bush. In central PA, mountain ash berries
remain until late in the season, apparently because they are not especially
delectable. But in the boreal forest, some birds, especially Pine
Grosbeaks, seek them out.

I have also seen a fair number of Tennessee Warblers this fall, the 3rd of
the spruce budworm warblers. This seemingly speaks to the effect of the
ongoing spruce budworm infestation in eastern Quebec. A special aspect of
the first half of the hawk watch season at Stone Mt is getting there by 900
and looking for warblers. About half of the Cape May Warblers are bright
yellow, as in these pictures, and the other half grayish-green (the young
ones).

Nick Bolgiano

 
Join us on Facebook!