Week 13 & 14 Finally! some birds!

Week 13 & 14 Finally! some birds!

Week 13

I found out late Sunday night that a rare Barnacle Goose had been reported in Quebec, just over the Ontario border. A crucial mistake on my part. I have been getting a daily list rather than an hourly needs list from Quebec. Had I set up hourly reports I would have seen it around 10 and we could have driven the 5.5 hrs to get it. I was frustrated with myself because I had thought about changing the setting a week back and with everything going on I just did not do it. So Monday morning we got up and I connected to the Quebec Discord group and a few Ottawa birders to find out any information if the goose was still there. We packed bags so we were ready to go and waited patiently. I had changed my needs alert so I was getting hourly ebird reports and I had sent a message in French and English to the Discord chat. I do not speak French but like most Canadians can usually figure out some of what is being said and we all have google translate to make it even easier. The hours ticked by 9, 10, 11 and no ebird reports and no one replied on Discord. We went back and forth about should we just take a chance and go, that maybe no one was looking for it and we could head into Quebec for a few more days for more birds we need. Then before noon someone responded that the 5,000 Canadian geese that had been there yesterday had almost all left and there was no Barnacle Goose either. Sigh, grrrrrr, but hopefully a Barnacle Goose will find its way into Ontario over the next few weeks or another one in Quebec.

Because of the morning delays we did not get out to bird until late afternoon and had the joy of birding through snow, rain, sleet, high winds and cool temps, just your typical spring birding day LOL. We managed to track down 3 Blue-winged Teals that had been reported earlier in Brant and added Cedar Waxwing to the year list as well. We then stopped at the Paris Stormpond on our way home and added a number of species for our Brant County list.

Blue-winged Teal

I had hoped we could get out often this week to bird but showings at the condo and then car issues took up the week. The mechanics were not sure if they had “fixed” anything and suggested we spend the weekend checking the car on cold starts to see if we were having the same problem so a planned trip on Saturday to Pelee was shelved as neither of us felt comfortable driving that distance with a continual problem. The forecast for Pelee on Saturday was a balmy 16-17C while the rest of Southern Ontario dealt with rain and a major ice storm. On Saturday around 4:30 a Barnacle Goose was seen in Ottawa and flew away 20 mins later. Sunday was the ice storm so I imagine no one got out to re-find it and nothing was found on Monday either. I sure would like another chance at a Barnacle. And so the week passed with just 2 birds added and me still itching to make significant gains with the list. The car performed well on the weekend tests and so the adjustments they made hopefully solved the problem and we were ready to bird Monday.

Week 13 2 species added 175 J&E

Monday we headed to Rondeau to just bird. We were not chasing anything specific but assumed we would find some new spring migrants. It was so nice to be out, relaxed and just enjoying all the happy bird song along the trails and the signs of spring. It was a lovely day!

It’s happening!!!

Merlin picked up a Rusty Blackbird near the Visitor Center but I scanned all the blackbirds and could not see one. The call never repeated and we did not hear it so as per our rules it was not added. At one point we were entering a side trail when we heard the tapping of a woodpecker and so turned back to see what kind it was. We saw a bird fly up into a tree and it was our first Yellow-bellied Sapsucker of the year. It was not the bird that was tapping, we could still hear that, but the decision to turn around got us a bird we might have otherwise missed. I love when those things happen. We ended up adding 5 species for the year. Some pics from the day.

On the way home I looked down to see the first tick of the season climbing up my pant leg. A black-legged tick. Guess it is time to start the tick regime that accompanies most of our birding in Southern Ontario now.

Tuesday we had to go to Hamilton but spent some time birding locally first and added a Field Sparrow for the year. On the way back from Hamilton we drove the routes close to home for Lapland Longspur. We have a limited chance for these birds as they briefly stop on their migration route and lucky for us most years they stop about 10 minutes from home. But it requires multiple drives through the vast fields hoping to see a flock or hearing a group in the corn fields. We have made about 5-6 drives over the last week and had nothing but it is early. The peak time is over the next few weeks so we hope to catch up with some of them soon. In the meantime, we keep driving past…

Field Sparrow

Wednesday a Black-headed Gull was found down Niagara way and when the alert came in we just went into “we have to leave” mode and were in the car driving before I realized that we will almost, for sure, get a Black-headed Gull in Newfoundland in the fall. We had a laugh and turned around. It had started to snow and with freezing rain and heavy rain forecast it made our decision easier. If it had been a nice day then we would have tried for it and then gone on to bird in Niagara for the Black Vulture we still need but it just made sense to come home when we don’t “need” it for Ontario. It is funny how that reflex to just go for any rarity posted is still there from last year.

Thursday we did the drive past for Laplands before our weekly yoga class and then spent the afternoon with friends in Eden Mills. A few minutes after we left a report came in of a BARNACLE GOOSE in Stoney Creek! IT HAPPENED! ANOTHER CHANCE! We quickly tried to figure out where we had to go, tried to get new directions started with limited service and then took a wrong turn that added 15 mins to our drive. It was, of course, 5pm and so we ended up in rush hour traffic that was not exactly rushing. LOL We arrived at 6 and there were plenty of people there, all parked along Highway 20 and out on the shoulder of the road while heavy traffic flew by. The goose had moved quite far back so we used Dave’s truck bed to get up to see the goose. Thanks Dave! Later it flew closer to us so Jerry got some pictures of it. If you remember last year, Barnacle Geese need to go to the Records Committee for acceptance as a wild bird. This bird is within the migration window but it was with only 2 Canada Geese and generally they are found in large migrating flocks of hundreds or thousands of geese. There are known farms around Smithville/Lincoln that have Barnacle Geese as pets/food so it could be an escapee. Lots of pictures were taken and reports will be submitted but the results will not be available until summer 2026 so for now it is counted on our year as bird #182. If another Barnacle Goose shows up in a large flock in Ottawa we will likely have to try for it to make sure we keep it on our list.

Barnacle Goose – wild, we hope!

Friday we did a loop for Lapland Longspurs again and then headed to some flooded fields south of Brantford where Lesser Black-backed Gulls had been reported. There were 3 there but they were very far back in the field, as they were last year. It turns out that our only picture of a Lesser Black-backed Gull last year was from this same field and about the same sad quality. No fault of Jerry, just a crazy distance and bad lighting. Our scope view is a bit better than the camera view but it gives you an idea of what we are looking for – 200-250 gulls to scan through looking for the one that has a darker gray back.

Lesser Black-backed Gull

Saturday the weather was pretty rainy which made watching our grandson’s hockey tournament an easy choice (which they won!). We also sold some more items from the condo and we finalized renting it so after a 19 year gap we are once again landlords. Unfortunately, the engine light along with the stuttering of the motor in the car started again and so it obviously was not fixed by the dealer last week.

Sunday instead of heading to Niagara and Long Point as we had hoped, we stayed local because of the car issue. We spent a couple of hours driving the cornfields once again hoping a flock of Lapland Longspurs had arrived but no joy. We did find 4 Vesper Sparrows which was another year bird for us.

Vesper Sparrow

Next we checked our local Osprey nest in Paris and one of the Osprey’s was sitting on the tower adding another year bird. to the list. It has been a good week!

Osprey

We continued on to the Storm pond to try for some more swallows but only added a Barn Swallow as an Ontario species. Northern Rough-winged and Bank had both been reported there but with 200 Tree Swallows zipping around the pond it was difficult to find the one or two brown swallows in the mix. While I am concentrating on my Canada list there are birds that we will be adding to the Ontario list and our Brant County list too. We (ebird) keeps track of all of those lists so its easy to check where you stand.

After a visit to Babi, our final stop of the day was the fields where we had the Lesser Black-backed Gull the other day. A Long-billed Dowitcher had been seen there and that would be a first time bird for Brant County. It was just as far as the Gulls were so no pic opportunities but we saw this species out in BC and got pictures then.

Last week we added 2 species, this week we added 10 new species for the Canada list, 13 species for our Ontario list and 16 species to the Brant County year list. Spring migration is building. Things are ramping up! Lots of species showing up, we just need to track them down…

Week 14 10 new species added 185 J&E

Week 12 A Lifer!

Late Sunday night a post came in that 2 Barnacle Geese had been photographed a day or two before in Bowmanville. Birders were prepared to head out at first light to see if they were still in the same marsh. I was hesitant to take the drive knowing that in the past Barnacle Geese are one-day wonders and they are not always accepted as wild because there are farms that keep Barnacle’s. BUT, it would be a super get for us, a Lifer, and a rare European vagrant. I opted to not leave first thing and instead I was awake early and ready to should there be a ding on Discord saying the geese were still there. No ding! Just updates that a number of birders were looking. By 11:30 I resigned myself that they were gone and we made the decision to head to our planned lunch with birding friends in London. And then they were found! We quickly changed direction (our birding friends were understanding thankfully!) and headed down the 401 hoping that traffic would not be crazy (it wasn’t) and at 2:00 I was looking at two Barnacle Geese, a lifer, rarity #14 and bird #157.

Sightings of this Goose have to go to the Ontario Birds Record Committee who will ultimately decide, when they meet in February 2025, if they are accepted as a wild record. Evidence in favour of them being accepted is the date – it is bang on for migration dates from previous records, two, they were in the company of Canada Geese and three, they were not re-found the next day suggesting they had continued on their migrating journey. If they are not accepted as a wild record then I will have no choice but to remove them from my list this year. In the meantime I am going to enjoy a great lifer and addition to the list.

The rest of the week was a mix of bad weather, family commitments and very few new birds arriving. We still checked local ponds and flooded fields when we were out for other things but there was nothing new to add. We put a checklist in every day even if it is just a checklist from the backyard with the same birds as I do want to try and maintain putting in a list every day of this year. We also want to make sure we bird every county in Ontario this year and we currently have only 3 counties left without a checklist, Parry Sound, Grey and Kenora. Those will be summer trips. We are missing pictures for only 13 birds currently and Jerry is working hard to get better pictures of other species as well. Don’t forget to check the 2024 Gallery and click on each picture to view it enlarged. While some are not great, Jerry has managed to get some nice shots of some of the birds we have seen. We are almost a quarter of the way through and I am very happy with how it is going except we still have to get out of the car more! In my mind I assumed that I would be birding most days of this big year and out in the woods but the reality of winter birding is driving past fields and water, driving to chase rarities, driving to a spot and getting out for 10-15 mins. And many days with nothing to go after. I know this will change in the coming weeks as the forest birds start to return and by May we will be walking 15-20Km a day, every day. It cannot come soon enough LOL, we are itching to start adding birds in big numbers. I am sticking to my plan of not chasing common birds I know I will see in abundance later just because they keep showing up on my Needs Alert every hour mocking me! LOL. I’m talking about you, Winter Wren and Gray Catbird!!! I am also resisting the need to be number 1 on the top 100 birders in Ontario list, Jerry and I are currently #2. The only number that matters is on December 31 and it was never an intention to be the top birder. If it happens, great but my personal goal is what is important to me. I’ve been saying at the end of each post for 3 weeks now that next week it will start to get birdier and then it doesn’t, but maybe, just maybe, the tide will turn next week as the temperatures move up and we get some sun and south winds. Shorebirds come on!

Week 12 1 new species #14 rarities seen 157 species J&E