Week 13
The forecast for Monday was sunny and warm so we headed to Rondeau for the day and finally added 6 birds to our list! Blue-winged Teals were the last common duck species needed on the year list. We also had our first Eastern Phoebe and Field Sparrow along the Marsh Trail at Erieau. We then stopped to see the Black-billed Magpies that appear to be nesting close by. Black-billed Magpies are a beautiful bird not usually found in Southern Ontario. There is a population north of Thunder Bay that is countable on lists and they are a common bird out west but they are a non-migratory bird so any birds seen in Southern Ontario are often presumed to be escaped birds and not countable. This is another record that will be heading to the OBRC for a decision. I am not worried about this sighting as I know that I will see a Magpie up north in June that will count if this record is not accepted. Last April I was shocked to see a Black-billed Magpie on Governors Road in Dundas while driving to Jerry’s mom’s. I posted to Discord and many local birder’s came out to see that bird. We are still waiting to hear if the record is accepted. A few other Magpies were seen in the same week last year and then two nested outside of St. Thomas and had at least 2 successful young fledge from the nest. This pair near Rondeau is building a nest and it may mean this is the start to a population of Magpies in Southern Ontario!


A Red-headed Woodpecker over-wintered at Rondeau and we have missed it on each of our other visits so we took some time to again walk around the area where it has been seen. We didn’t see the bird in the morning but stopped again on our way out of the park. Minutes later I saw it fly into a tree at the corner where we got some great shots and video of this stunning bird.


We finished the day adding a Chipping Sparrow for a total of 6 new birds and hoped the trend would continue. The best part of the day was the fact that we were out walking! for 11.8km! It felt so good to be out of the car and enjoying the trails and forest.
The trend sadly did not continue for the rest of the week but we did get out and walk another 10km on Wednesday and 4km on Thursday without adding any new birds. It was a frustrating week as I read my hourly “needs alert” for Ontario each day and could see reports for Osprey, Towhees, Winter Wrens, Purple Martin, and Black-crowned Night Heron but when we went out we found none of those birds. I KNOW I will see all those birds but it is SO tempting to want to get them on my list NOW that you start to consider “chasing” them. And my mantra is not to chase common species! So I had to put up with feeling a bit of “birder envy” LOL. And Jerry has had to put up with some whining this week. I lost my “zen” a bit.
On Saturday, with renewed optimism, we headed down to Long Point hoping to catch a few more early migrants. We added Forster’s Tern at Turkey Point and then Pectoral Sandpiper at Long Point but the other species that were being seen did not show up for us, a few hours later other birders reported them again! That is the fickleness of birding, sometimes they move, fly, are quiet and what one birder sees, the next birder does not, sometimes by minutes.
On the way home we stopped at some local flooded fields where Lesser Yellowlegs were reported yesterday and yes, there were 5 in a pond way back in the field. Whew! At least the day ended on a high note. I only need to see 42 more common species out of 143 and we have started adding to my spring migrant list. While the floodgates have not opened wide there are new birds slowly trickling in. Next week is supposed to remain cool so I imagine it will still be a bit slow but the birds are coming…and I will re-find my Zen.
UPDATE: Western Tanager – the lovely Western Tanager that caused us so much grief at the beginning of the year sadly died this week after striking a window in the area it was wintering in. The bird was first found in November and has been fed by Ottawa birders since January. Sadly, window strikes kill over a million birds in Ontario each year and likely a billion in North America. The group FLAP has a bevy of volunteers whose job it is to collect all the birds at the base of buildings in Toronto during migration. Toronto is considered one of the deadliest cities for bird strikes. Check out their website for more information at flap.org.

We use Feather Friendly dots on our windows and since installation we have not had one bird die on those windows. We still have some windows not covered and we have been drawing lines with soap on those windows in spring and fall migration to prevent the birds hitting those windows. Eventually, all will have the dots. Lee Valley sells the tape with the dots and you can also buy them from their website featherfriendly.com. Please consider putting them on your windows if you have birds around.
Week 13 9 birds added 167 species seen J&E