Date: 3/23/26 10:16 am
From: Dave Nutter (via CAYUGABIRDS-L list) <CAYUGABIRDS-L...>
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Re: Regional central NYS Osprey overview
I should've read all the emails before writing the last one. On 22 March
both Suan Yong and Garrett Taylor saw an Osprey on the nest west of
the green suspension bridge over Fall Creek on the east side of Newman
Golf Course, suggesting, along with multiple sightings of a single
bird in various places, that there may already be 2 Ospreys at the
south end of Cayuga Lake.
- - Dave Nutter

On Mar 23, 2026, at 1:02 PM, Dave Nutter <nutter.dave...>
wrote:



Looking at the eBird map of Osprey reports in central NYS, it is clear
we are still in the very early stage of their return, but there were
several additional sightings on 22 March. Here's a summary from south
to north of the swath of NYS from the Southern Tier adjacent to the
Finger Lakes to Lake Ontario.
In Chemung County on 14 March Jill Rogan photographed the first 2026
eBird Osprey record in Elmira along the Chemung River. On 22 March she
reported an Osprey perched over a pond several miles to the west.
As Dave Nicosia reported, on 22 March he found the first Broome County
eBird Osprey along the Otselic River at the north end of the reservoir
in Upper Lisle, and this bird was reported a couple more times.
In Ithaca on 22 March there were more reports of a single Osprey at
the south end of Cayuga Lake, first by Kevin Packard, who photographed
one eating a fish while perched in a tree on the west side of
Taughannock Blvd (NYS-89) near the nest platform north of the
maintenance building on the west side of AH Treman State Marine Park.
Later an Osprey was anonymously reported perched on that same nest
platform. This is the first Ithaca report I've seen of an Osprey at a
nest. Last year this nest was the first to be occupied of the several
nests around AH Treman, Cass Park, and the NW corner of Newman Golf
Course.
In Canandaigua in Ontario County on 22 March, Kyle Gage photographed
an Osprey perched on a light pole along Airport Rd, the first eBird
report in a several county area.
In Waterloo on 22 March, 6 people in a group of 14 reported to eBird
an Osprey apparently at or near the Seneca Meadows trash landfill,
without any comment as to what it was doing.
As I mentioned, on 22 March Dave Kennedy photographed an Osprey on a
nest along NYS-5/US-20 near the Montezuma NWR entrance. Presumably
this same bird was reported several times later in the day either
along the highway or from the refuge Visitor Center area.
In Wayne County on 22 March Carmen Gumina made the first 2 eBird
reports east of the Village of Savannah in the Montezuma Wetlands
Complex, each of a single Osprey, first at the DEC's Railroad Rd
marshes, and later at the Montezuma NWR Sandhill Crane Unit along the
SE end of Van Dyne Spoor Rd. He did not say whether he thought they
were likely the same or different birds at these fairly close
locations, nor whether they were associated with particular nests.
The first Onondaga County eBird record was a few days earlier on 18
March, photographed by Andrew Mosher at Onondaga Lake Park "flying
towards the nest". Presumably the same Osprey was photographed again
on the 21st perched on what looks like a communications antenna tower
(perhaps the nest site?) by Thomas McKay, and reported without comment
on 2 other checklists.
Farther north on 19 March Kayla & Robert Fisk reported to eBird an
Osprey, without comment, along the Oneida River east of Phoenix.
Still farther north in Oswego County at the Derby Hill Hawk Watch, the
official counter, David Brown, photographed the first Osprey of the
year on 22 March, the only raptor he saw migrating that mostly rainy
day. This is the only eBird report of Osprey along Lake Ontario's
south shore as of this writing.
That leave a whole lot of nests yet to be occupied in the Cayuga Basin
and beyond, and a whole lot of migrants to pass through.
This wraps up the area which I tend to look at in eBird. There are a
few eBird Osprey reports in western NYS and nearby southern Ontario
Province, some along the Hudson Valley, and a ton along the Atlantic
coast.

- - Dave Nutter--
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