Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!maverick.ksu.ksu.edu!unmvax!nmt.edu!john From: john@nmt.edu (John Shipman) Newsgroups: rec.birds Subject: Re: Hawks flying Summary: Broad-winged Hawks occur in California (and NM) Message-ID: <1990Sep15.003436.28024@nmt.edu> Date: 15 Sep 90 00:34:36 GMT References: <1990Sep13.164049.4435@portia.Stanford.EDU> <6933@dog.ee.lbl.gov> Distribution: usa Organization: Zoological Data Processing Lines: 20 Tom Ostrand (tjo@edsel.siemens.edu) writes: +-- | What are broad-wings doing in California? I thought that, | apart from an occasional stray, they stay east of the Rockies. +-- One day at the aforementioned Hill 129 near the Golden Gate, I saw four broad-wings, and two of them (an adult and an immature) came through together. They are strays all right, but they're regular strays. I neglected to mention the hawk-watching sites for central New Mexico. In the spring, there is a site in the Sandias, and this time of year another site in the Manzanos is good. If anybody would like to help count hawks in New Mexico, write me for directions. Broad-wings have been spotted here, too. -- John Shipman/Zoological Data Processing/Socorro, NM/john@jupiter.nmt.edu ``Let's go outside and commiserate with nature.'' --Dave Farber