This morning Ed Hack and I looked for birds in southeastern Windsor County, VT. Some highlights follow. Following on Kyle Jones's finding of a Virginia Rail along Hunt Road in the town of Windsor, we were able to see and hear that species there. Among other birds in that location were a Wilson's Snipe, a singing Savannah Sparrow, and a silent male Scarlet Tanager momentarily in a habitat somewhat unusual for that woodland species in the nesting season: in a roadside tree row bordered by open country on both sides of the row. Shortly thereafter, we stopped south of the Corrections Farm along Marton Road in Windsor and heard both Eastern Towhee and Field Sparrow repeatedly vocalizing. Later, soon after stopping along Ferry Road in Weathersfield Bow, we were greeted by extended calling of a Yellow-billed Cuckoo, which we saw and heard repeatedly calling as it moved about in the deciduous canopy. Also of special note at the Bow were an undetermined number of Bank Swallows, nesting holes of which were seen in a earthen bank on the New Hampshire shoreline of the Connecticut River. Continuing southward on Route 5 south of Ferry Road into a Bow area with open fields, we saw a Brown Thrasher fly away from the roadside. Then still farther southward, but to the north of the curve where Route 5 provides an overview of the Connecticut River, we pulled over to listen to a repeatedly singing Eastern Meadowlark on the west side of Route 5. In late morning, in a well vegetated area along on Route 5 just to the south of the Black River, we flushed an American Woodcock with its distinctive wing noise on take-off. George Clark Norwich, VT **************************************************************** To post messages, send e-mail to: [log in to unmask] Set your e-mail application to PLAIN TEXT ONLY to post messages. To contact the list owner: [log in to unmask] ---------------------------------------------------------------- Web based archives and subscription management are available at: http://listserv.dartmouth.edu/Archives/uv-birders.html ****************************************************************