Monday we decided to go to Pelee in the hopes we could add a substantial amount of birds in one place rather than traveling around from place to place adding 1-2 birds at a time. There was rain in the morning so we took our time and arrived at 10:30 just as the sun was coming out. We worked our way to the tip walking through Woodland trail and started adding birds – Eastern Towhee, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Green Heron. We were happy that it looked like it was going to be a good day! When we got out to the Tip there were many tourists walking out. During bird migration people are asked not to go out to the end until after 10am to allow birds time to rest and birders opportunities to see the birds. It was well after 10 so we also walked out to the end and took the obligatory selfies at the most southern point of Canada.
Southernmost point in CanadaThe Tip at Point Pelee National Park
By the time we made it back from the Tip to the Visitor Center it was after 2 and we had added 10 species. We sat to eat our lunch and Rick (Pelee ambassador extraordinaire) joined us for a chat. He commented on how relaxed we looked compared to how we looked last year while doing our Ontario Year, haha. We had to agree! This year has a totally different feel partly because of the external issues we had last year and also because I’ve made it just the 400 goal. He also told us that there were two vireos at the Tip which we had somehow missed seeing. So after our lunch we took the tram back down and walked up the east side of the beach again where there were a number of warblers moving around. Sure enough we eventually found the Blue-headed Vireo and a White-eyed Vireo. Awesome looks at both of them as they moved along the beach and Jerry got some lovely pictures. It turned out to be a 3-Vireo day.
White-eyed VireoBlue-headed VireoWarbling VireoLook at that stunning White-eye!!!
We had to leave because the last tram left at 5pm and I did not want to add another 2.5 kms of walking to our total of 13.4 km. At the end of the day we had added 16 species to our Canada and Ontario lists, had some great looks at birds and Jerry took some great pictures.
On Monday reports floated around on Discord that a very rare Burrowing Owl had been photographed on Sunday somewhere in Wellington County and apparently intrepid local birders took the day driving around trying to find it since no one was sharing where it had been seen. Late in the afternoon someone managed to find it! A few local birders got the first calls and got out to see it. I got the location a bit later but there was not enough time to get there before dark. I expect to see this owl out in the grasslands in Saskatchewan and we have seen them before in a few places so it was not a lifer but I figured it would be a good Ontario bird to get. By late evening the OBA and OFO decided since the location was being shared like wildfire that they try to at least enact some protocols for viewing. It was posted where to park, to keep quiet, to only view from a certain area away from where the owl had been seen, to be courteous with the locals and of course to bird with respect and integrity. Owl sightings are notorious for bringing out the worst in birders and photographers and most sightings seem to end up with some drama and confrontations. I have kinda stopped going to many of the major sightings because I just don’t feel good about it. I don’t like to think that I am contributing to the problems, but of course we are just by choosing to go and see the bird. Against my better judgement, I decided the Burrowing Owl was worth it. We arrived at 6:45am on Tuesday and there were maybe 20 cars with more arriving every minute. Many people were spread along the road with scopes and cameras. The wind was very strong and it was cold! Not really conducive to a small owl from the south coming out to enjoy the day I thought. We spent 30 minutes chatting quietly with birders and searching the grasses a long way away but no sign of the tiny owl. We decided to leave and return when it was sunnier and warmer later in the day, if it was seen. It was not seen again.
When we left we decided to check out the Glen Morris Pond, as we have been for the last week or so, hoping Virginia Rail and Sora had arrived. As soon as we opened our windows we could here the kid-dik, kid-dik calls of the Rail. We stopped for a bit and Jerry got out to see if he might get a picture but the Rail flew up and then back down before he could get his camera up. We heard 2 Gallinules as well but no Sora yet. As we headed home we stopped at a small wet area in a farm field and did a quick scope and found another species to add to the list, a Solitary Sandpiper.
Jerry had a dentist appointment in the afternoon so I went along and we stopped at the Desjardin Canal to add a Black-crowned Night Heron to the list. Before we left a report of a Rock Wren at Pelee had come in but again we will get that species in BC so I don’t have to rush for it as I would have had to last year. A few hours later though a report came in of a Yellow-throated Warbler at Pelee, exactly where we had our lovely vireos yesterday. Ugggh! The vagaries of this hobby! That is the second Yellow-throated Warbler I have missed and there are not that many in any given year.
Wednesday we decided to take our youngest grandchildren out of school and do a birding outing to Long Point. Yes, we wanted to be in close proximity to any potential rarities but also we wanted to spend some time with them before we leave for the west. We visited the banding centre and had a good time seeing all the birds close up. Hannah felt very sad for the birds in the net but they both were happy to follow a netted Blue-headed Vireo patiently through the banding process until it was released again.
Brown Creeper in the netFuture bird-banders?Ruby-crowned KingletBlue-headed Vireo
Thursday morning we were up at 5:30am and in Dundas by 6:30 to make our 3rd attempt at the Louisiana Waterthrush. We carefully walked the trail along the stream and after about 20 minutes we heard the familiar song! It continued for the next 20 minutes while we attempted to actually find the singing bird in the trees across the stream. It is so frustrating, It sounded like it was coming from directly in front of us but despite scanning with our bins and looking for any movement we could not find it. For the moment it will go in as a “Heard Only”. We headed back home, changed quickly and were on our yoga mats for class just after 9am. The temperature continued to rise and we opted to stay home and get our porch set up for summer with our mosquito curtains attached and the furniture all placed.
Late Thursday (they always arrive late in the day) a report came in of a Blue Grosbeak up near Lake Simcoe so we were ready in the morning to leave as soon as it was confirmed to still be there. On Friday we were on the road just after 7 and arrived at 9:30am. We met up with Margaret who had just seen it and gave us detailed instructions for viewing this skulky bird. It had been flushed many times by people, dogs and vehicles so we tried to stay back. We did manage to find it deep in the shrubs and tangles but it was quite a while before it came out onto the grass to feed and allowed everyone to get great pictures. A group of school kids on a field trip were heading to the area the bird was so I went over to explain what was happening and asked for the their cooperation in not flushing the rare bird. They were very curious and we ended up letting kids use our bins, Jean got out her scope and we had a little impromptu class on bird migration and Blue Grosbeaks!
Blue Grosbeak
We decided to head home but stop on the way for a reported Least Bittern in a park in Mississauga. Like all the rails, they tend to be heard but not always seen so I was hoping we would get a chance to see it in a small pond where it was likely very hungry from its flight over the lake. I brought out our scope and scanned all the reeds along the edges but could not see anything. Then I scanned again, and again and saw a slightly darker colour that did not fit the reed colour. It was the back of the Bittern. It moved around a bit but did not give us great views. We waited, scoped and scanned. Finally, it ventured out of the reeds for a full look at it in the scope and Jerry was able to take a picture. Within a minute or two it disappeared back into the reeds.
Least Bittern
Saturday the phone was pinging as people got out on a blustery cold Saturday with lots of good birds being found: Summer Tanager, American Avocet, Golden-winged Warbler, and Hooded Warbler. We stayed local and added a Bank Swallow on a quick stop at the Storm pond on our way to see Babi. Our plan was to head to Pelee Sunday and Monday since south winds were in the forecast for a prequel to the big two week adventure starting the following week. I wanted to prepare some food and pack but at 3:00 the “ping” was a Pink-footed Goose 2.5 hours away near Wasaga. We didn’t go for the Ottawa one as I hoped to get the species out in Newfoundland but with one that close we had to go for it. We were in the car in about 5 minutes and arrived at 5:20. It was windy, really windy, and raining. There were a few birders huddled with scopes between cars so we joined them and got our first glimpses of a Pink-footed Goose! A lifer! Henrique found the bird and stayed around helping everyone get onto the bird. Thanks so very much Henrique! It was very far back in the field and not the most satisfying looks but at one point, once I had it in my own scope, it stood up and stretched its wings and I had a lovely view of the bird for a few seconds. Unfortunately, we did not get to see its incredible pink feet! Jerry tried to take some pictures but the rain and distance made it difficult. Hopefully, we will see the Newfoundland bird and get a nice picture then, pink feet and all.
View from the road for the Pink-footed GoosePink-footed Goose LIFER!
Sunday morning we arrived at Pelee at 8 am and walked through Tilden because a road race had blocked off the Woodland Trail and the tip until noon. We were hoping to refind a Kentucky Warbler and get a picture of a Louisiana Waterthrush. We did a few loops and heard Louisiana as well as Northern Waterthrush. There are subtle differences between the two and there is often controversy over what species people are seeing. We had it on good authority that there was a Northern and Louisiana showing together in a wet area but by the time we got there only the Northern could be seen. Jerry got pictures and then we waited patiently until we saw another small brown warbler with very white underparts. Unfortunately, it was a quick look and no picture just like last year. We will try many times over the coming weeks to see if we can get a picture. We ended up seeing 4 White-eyed Vireos, a bird we added on Monday’s trip to Pelee. Jerry managed great pictures again.
We headed back to the visitor centre and passed a birder we spent lots of time with at the tip last year and he let us know that a Chat had been found. We had to work around the closed area for the race, found the footpath and waited with another group of birders for another skulky bird to show itself. It only took about 10 mins and the Yellow-breasted Chat popped up. Jerry was down the path and there was a second where I thought, “do I call him?” Of course I would never! So I whisper-shouted immediately and he got back in time to see it and to get some pictures. We will get Chats out in BC but they are sometimes hard to find out there too so anything I can do to limit what I have to find in the heat of June/July is good. A report then came in that the Kentucky Warbler had been re-found in a spot we had walked by twice today so we headed back to that spot and waited again, patiently. After about 10 minutes it popped up a bit further away but everyone waiting got on it and we saw it multiple times as it worked its way across in front of us. Two very good, tough birds to get, and we had them – it was a good day! And Jerry got pictures!
Yellow-breasted ChatKentucky Warbler
After that things got quiet. We walked 13.8km total for the day. We headed to our hotel around 4 and went out for some yummy Mexican food at our favourite spot in Leamington (Salsa Caliente) with Jude, who also got the Chat and Kentucky for his Big Year. South winds predicted for tonight so hope we start week 18 off with a bang!
We left early Saturday and drove to Wawa with a couple of birding stops along the way. In Thessalon we looked for Eurasian Tree Sparrows that we had tried for twice in the winter. Its been a few weeks since they were reported and we found nothing at the two known spots. Wawa is a fav spot to stop on our way west and the Mystic Isle Motel does not disappoint. We birded the Wawa sewage lagoons and Magpie Falls.
Mystic Isle MotelMagpie Falls
At the Falls the woods were full of warblers and we spent some time getting close eye level views of Black-throated Green, Blackburnian, Magnolia, Northern Parula and Redstarts. We also heard Northern Waterthrush, Tennessee and Black-and-white Warblers. It was lovely to have these views that we missed at Pelee this year.
Black-throated Green WarblerMagnolia Warbler
Sunday we only drove 5 hrs to Thunder Bay but birded a number of spots along the way hoping to turn up a rarity. We started the day in fog as seems to happen at this time of year along Lake Superior and as we hit some clearer areas we managed to see 1 moose and then further along 2 more moose and then a beautiful Cross fox (a melanistic red fox with black stripes across its shoulders and back).
A lucky start to the day, would it result in being lucky with the birds? I spent the time scanning the sides of the road ever hopeful for an Owl. We stopped at Terrace Bay, Rossport, Hurkett Dock and then we visited the McKellar island Bird Observatory in Thunder Bay and stopped in at Chippewa Park. The birding was hit and miss and we found nothing to add to our list. We visited Kakabeka Falls in the evening but didn’t bird the trails.
Kakabeka Falls
Monday we left early and because of gaining an hour we were in Rainy River by 10am. Along the way I spotted a Black Bear but it ran into the bush before we could get a photo. We stopped first at Spruce Island PP, the area where Connecticut Warblers nest and started a slow drive stopping often to hear warblers singing. The selection was great but most birds were only heard because of the thick forest. We used our car window screens that I made in 2022 for our car so we could listen but keep the hundreds of mosquitoes at bay.
Window Screens attach with magnets!
We could hear a Mourning Warbler close to the road and got out to find it singing gustily on an open branch on the edge of the road. Jerry was happy to take many pictures and I managed some video too. It was lovely to have such fantastic views of this often secretive bird.
Mourning Warbler
A bit further along we finally heard a Connecticut Warbler. We have yet to see this warbler and it remains on our life list as a heard only bird. We are hoping this trip that will change. Despite walking the road and hanging around listening to it sing we never got it to come closer or managed to see it. We moved on anxious to add more birds to our list and checked out fields where Marbled Godwits often rest but we did not see any. Then we headed to Wilson Creek Road, the known spot for Yellow Rail, Sedge Wrens and LeConte’s Sparrows. We have Yellow Rail already but will try for an early morning to get a recording for our blog and we added Sedge Wren and LeConte’s quite quickly. No photo of the Sparrow as they are another species that is notoriously skulky. We took an afternoon break, had an early dinner and headed back out in the evening to check out the sewage lagoons. I forgot about spraying for ticks and as we walked we could see them jumping on our pants. I must have pulled off 10-20 from myself and Jerry had just as many. We used our lint roller when we got back to the car and it worked quite well. For the next 3 hours we were pulling ticks off of ourselves, my neck, Jerry’s legs, our clothing all while we continued to bird. I cannot forget to spray before we get near any grass out here!
Wood (dog) TicksLint Rollers are awesome for getting them off your clothes!
To end the evening we did a dusk watch again on Wilson Creek Road hoping to hear an Eastern Whip-poor-will. As the sun set we were treated to calls and songs from American Bittern, American Woodcock, the wrens and sparrows. We also heard the hundreds of mosquitoes at our window screens trying desperately to get to us. A few made it in but for the most part it was enjoyable to sit and listen without the whine and bites from mosquitoes. And no I was not drunk but couldn’t get the the right angle for my phone LOL – A videographer I am not!
Just as it got dark we finally heard a far off Whip. We drove down the road and made it to a spot where the song was very loud. We listened and enjoyed it for many minutes before starting the drive home.
I was driving on a narrow gravel road, using high beams and we saw a couple of Whips flying up and around the roads. I was watching for animals coming out, birds on the road and other traffic and suddenly I noticed a small lump on the road. I braked hard, it went into the air, and the car hit it and I knew it was an Eastern Whip-poor-will! I was devastated. We checked on it but it was dead. I felt horrible. We went from the high of adding 5 birds during the day to the low of being responsible for a bird to die because of me being out there enjoying the birds.
We got back to the hotel past 10pm and needed to shower and de-tick ourselves. No way was I wanting any ticks in our bed! We fell in to a deep sleep at 11:30 and the alarm went off at 4:30 so we could get to the Sharp-tailed Grouse Lek in hope of getting some pictures.
When we arrived at the Lek in the morning there were no Grouse around. Perhaps we were too late as it was light when we left our hotel and we are not sure what time they actually come into the fields. We did see a Western Meadowlark (the only place in Ontario to get this species) and Jerry got some nice photos in the morning light. We then headed up to the Connecticut Warbler spot again but again it was singing but not coming to the road. We are aware that people use pishing and playback to see and get pictures of these birds but we are not prepared to do this especially at breeding time so we will make numerous trips and hope that one day it will appear before us. We had a large bird flush from the trees and fly up the road ahead of us so we moved up the road as well. It landed in a tree quite a ways up and because of the low light (forest on both sides) it was difficult to make out and as soon as we moved the car it flew into the forest. I wondered if it was a Great Gray Owl, it seemed different from a flying hawk but we are not experts and without a pic or better look we had to let it go. It was a day with thunderstorms and rainstorms and so we moved around a bit trying to avoid the areas of rain and still look for Marbled Godwit and then we drove up to an area where you can often find a Franklin’s Gull (another Western species that shows up here). There were a few fields with Gulls but no Franklin’s. With another storm approaching we decided to head back to the hotel but stopped to check one last field. I scanned the gulls looking for the “different” one, one with a black head and smaller and suddenly, there it was in my bins. We quickly got out the scope to confirm that it was a Franklin’s Gull, not an adult but one with a black head coming in. Woohoo! I had a rarity I was hoping to get up here and bird #307. It always feels better when you find the birds yourself. As Jerry took some hurried pics the thunder and lightening started and we just got back in the car when the rain started.
Franklin’s Gull with Ring-billed Gulls
Heavy thunderstorms with tornado warnings continued and we lost power at our hotel for the next 3-4 hours so our birding day ended although Jerry got out for a quick walk later on. I was content to stay warm inside without lights but at least with a book on my phone to read and catch up on this blog.
Wednesday we started out as we had previous mornings, looking for Marbled Godwit and having no success. We had decided to head an hour further north so we could finally get a birding checklist in one of the last 2 counties in Ontario we have yet to bird. And we wanted to search for a Great Gray Owl. We drove north scanning the roads and fields for Owls and stopped at Caliper Lake PP. The usual mix of warblers were noted and recorded and we had a checklist for Kenora District leaving only one county, Grey County, left in Ontario in which we have not birded. To clarify not for the year, but for all time. Jerry suggested we head a few minutes further north to Nestor Falls and it was there we had a great encounter with a Common Loon right up against the shore allowing us fantastic pics and video.
Common LoonCommon Loon
Finding the birds is one thing but then I want Jerry to get a photo of the bird, and not just a record shot but a great photo LOL. I have a list of photos needed and “better photos needed”. I don’t say it often on this blog but I hope I say it to him enough privately, that he is doing an awesome job! He has the more difficult job, of getting out and waiting for the shot, crouching at weird angles, ignoring swarming bugs, trying to follow fast moving birds etc etc. He does not have a high end camera with a huge lens so the fact that he gets the photos he does with a point and shoot is amazing to me. The Big Year was my dream and I am forever grateful that he bought into it and has not complained (much) of the ride we are on.
Jerry sent out for another “better” photo of a Loon!
We headed back and decided to give the Connecticut Warbler another try as it was on our way before trying for pictures of the LeConte’s Sparrow.
We often talk about the craziness of timing when it comes to birding and what followed was about to be one of those instances – we made the decision to go north for that list, spend the two hours driving north and south again, Jerry suggested going to Nestor Falls, a loon close to shore allowed us great pics and video, we checked for Godwits on our way back to the 619 and we stopped twice and got out of our car to walk listening for warblers and flycatchers hoping to see some to photograph. A thunderstorm was approaching, thunder and lightening could be heard, the wind was picking up and so we returned to our car. Jerry pulled out so I could get in without touching tick infested grass and he drove only a few feet forward at 1:02 pm and a large bird flew out from the left side of the trees and landed in a tree about 40 feet from our car and IT WAS A GREAT GRAY OWL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I could not believe my eyes! My heart was pounding, my hands shaking, we could see it clearly without binoculars but through the windshield. Both of us raised our cameras (thankfully we both had them still on us) and took pics and video and I looked at it through my bins just to enjoy the shear awesomeness of it! It had actually happened! We had our Great Gray Owl! It probably was the bird that flushed yesterday in the same area perhaps nesting nearby. The rain started within seconds of us seeing the owl and within 3 minutes it was a deluge and the Owl hopped deeper into the trees. We sat there stunned and incredibly happy. A three minute encounter we had been waiting 11 years for! The euphoria, the sense of wonder at such a beautiful creature, the thankfulness that we had the opportunity to experience it…there is just something about Owls.
Great Gray Owl through the rain! LIFER #773 for me and bird #308 for the year
Because of the thunderstorms and winds we did not get back out birding again in the evening. We started discussing whether it made sense to stay until Friday or not. The forecast for Thursday was cold, rain and wind again. We had Marbled Godwit left as the bird I still wanted to add and Jerry had not got a photo of LeConte’s or the Connecticut but the chances were slim for both those birds. We decided to do an early morning drive and then decide to stay or leave. A White-winged Dove had been seen in Thunder Bay and I was waiting for an address if the homeowner wanted birders visiting.
Thursday morning we drove our usual route for Godwits but did not see any despite stopping again and scanning every possible field with our bins. It was very windy and cold and the birds for the most part were hunkered down. We opted to head home. I had done some research online for the poster of the White-winged Dove and had sent a message to the homeowner about a possible visit. I heard nothing back as we drove the 5 hours to Thunder Bay where we would have to take a different highway to the Dove. I had an address and we discussed whether we should just show up or not. It was clear the poster did not want people to just show up and I do not feel good about showing up and skulking around someone’s home looking for a bird even if I am on public property. It is a moral dilemma and so we drove on past and headed to Wawa for the night. Hours later the owner contacted me to say the bird was still around so again I probably made a “wrong” decision. It would have added 4 hours or more to a 10 hour driving day and rainstorms might have made finding the bird difficult but still…we probably should have gone for it.
Back last Sunday a Blue Grosbeak had been found in London as we headed north and surprisingly it was still being reported a week later. We decided that on Friday we would head to London first before home and try to add the bird to our list. It was an 11 hour drive through multiple rain storms but thankfully little traffic and we arrived at Komoka PP at 3:54 and had the Blue Grosbeak singing as we got our bins and cameras from the car. So nice when that happens! Bird #309. Seeing it was another story. The bird was in trees in an area behind the parking lot fence with no trail access to the public. We scanned the trees, we looked deep into the trees, we tried to align with where the singing was coming from.
Where is the Blue Grosbeak?
Just after an hour or so of scanning and walking and scanning, I finally had a quick glimpse of the bird as it chased an Indigo Bunting from an area deep in the shadows of the trees. We tracked it a bit and Jerry had a quick glimpse. We continued scanning and looking and over the next hour managed to quickly see it a few more times. Jerry snapped a few photos but was not sure that he had a pic. It was out on a dead tree branch for a bit longer and I had it in my bins but trying to tell others where to look was difficult and Jerry missed that shot. After 2 hours we had to head for home – a very long day and we still had an hour to drive.
When we got home and Jerry looked through his pics he found he had a decent record shot of the Grosbeak! He knew he had a very blurry one but this one was markedly “better” showing the whole bird.
Blue Grosbeak
Saturday and Sunday were filled with caregiving duties, laundry and housekeeping chores. For the first time this year I had no “needs alert” emails on Sunday. I have one sparrow (sensitive species) to see and there is a Laughing Gull I have been trying to catch up with along Lake Erie but other than a rarity, I will probably have to wait until August shorebird migration to add more species. I have 12 birds I expect to see in the fall/winter which will take me into the 320’s. Then it will be whatever rarities show up that determine my final numbers. Still plenty of birding left to do though not at quite the pace it has been.
Week 23 8 more species added, 1 new LIFER, 309 species seen J&E