Author: David La Puma

  • Migrants hit North Woods behind front

    Migrants hit North Woods behind front

    Migration intensity continues to build across the U.S. with the heaviest migration occurring across the southern half of the country, as well as the Upper Midwest and Southern Canada.

  • BirdsEye HOTSPOTS is LIVE (and DIRECT)

    BirdsEye HOTSPOTS is LIVE (and DIRECT)

    The newest app by the folks who brought you BirdsEye and BirdLog promises to make your birding life easier and more efficient. Read about it in my latest review here…

  • Late May riders on the storm

    Late May riders on the storm

    Migration activity was highest across the northern tier of states from the Great Lakes to New England last night, while birds were still on the move from South Texas up through the Central U.S. along the latest frontal boundary. Fallout conditions are possible along the frontal boundary, especially along the Lake Michigan shoreline of Wisconsin this morning. Lighter migration was also evident up through the Desert Southwest, along the Central Valley of California, and up into the Pacific Northwest.

  • Woodcreeper.com off the grid

    Woodcreeper.com off the grid

    I’ll be scouting for our Great Wisconsin Birdathon Big Day for the rest of the week, so I’ll only had intermittent internet and will likely not be able to post the radar until after the weekend. In the meantime, you can get the real-time radar at the following link: http://weather.rap.ucar.edu/radar/ and you can view the […]

  • More birds and heavy precipitation moved north into the Upper Midwest

    More birds and heavy precipitation moved north into the Upper Midwest

    More trans-Gulf migrants made landfall yesterday morning along the Texas and Louisiana coasts, while sunset triggered another night of moderate to heavy migration across the U.S. Migration was heaviest over the Northeast and New England as well as the Upper Midwest although heavy precipitation broke things up a bit across the latter region. Birds continued to push up the western half of the U.S. with the only exception being the Rockies where northerly flow precluded any major movement.

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