Week 37 Whew! What a week!

Monday we headed to Fort Erie because the wind was NW and Sabine’s Gulls had been reported on Sunday. We didn’t get there until afternoon because we needed to finally get an oil change done on our car in the morning. Fort Erie is at the east end of Lake Erie and the river entrance is a good spot to view gulls when the winds are from the NW. Buffalo is directly across the river but most of the water is on the Canadian side at that point. Barb and Jean were near the parking lot and having a great time following the Sabine’s and Little Gulls flying into the headwinds again and again. We got our scope on them and had distant but easily identifiable views of Sabine’s Gull for bird #318. While we had nice views with the scope, getting a picture was much more difficult. It was overcast, the gulls move quickly, they are quite a distance away but Jerry managed to get something that is identifiable as Sabine’s. The “M” pattern across the wings and back with the wide black on the wings is a text book juvenile Sabine’s Gull.

Sabine’s Gull

Here is the video view we had looking across to Buffalo and watching gulls flying into the winds. As you can see Jerry had a challenge getting that picture. You cannot even see the gulls flying above the water with the naked eye.

We also had some Little Gulls come in very close so we had lovely views as they played in the wind. These were the best looks we have had of Little Gulls and their distinct jet black underwings.

Little Gull

Jean and Barb have both been a huge help this year, sharing information and cheering us on. Jean is an expert on shorebirds and gulls and we have her Shorebird ID book in the car all the time. I’m not sure how many years she has birded but she still is always enthusiastic and thrilled to watch any and every bird she comes across. I hope I can retain that same joy for many years to come. Barb, an excellent birder too, regales us with stories of past chases and fantastic rarities we dream about seeing. It is always a lovely, fun time birding with these two!

We watched the show for a few hours until heavy back clouds appeared and it started to rain. As we headed home tornado warnings came up on our phones for the Niagara area but we managed to navigate our way out of the worst of the rain and heavy winds.

On Tuesday we caught up with some household tasks and late afternoon I got an ebird report that a Goshawk had been seen in Cambridge 20 minutes from us. Jerry was out getting groceries and I texted him to hurry home as this hawk might be chaseable. I didn’t really expect it to still be there but hawks do tend to rest for long periods after they have had a successful hunt so we had to give it a try. This was the closest report we have had that wasn’t a flyover and from a reliable birder. We arrived at Shades Mill Conservation Area at 6:10 and spent a few minutes driving around, having not been there for many years and trying to figure out the location of the main building. The hawk had been sitting in a tree behind the building at 4:15. We found the building and slowly walked up the road and then stood in front of the building and suddenly a hawk burst up from behind the building flew up almost over top of me and then higher over a large tree and then was gone. I had a good look as it flew over but Jerry had been looking the other way so only got on it about halfway. We don’t have much experience with American Goshawk having only seen it a few times but I have been studying pictures and the fact that it came from the exact spot the birder reported it made for a pretty definitive ID. Unfortunately, no picture. BUT bird #319! Two new birds two days in a row! things were looking up!

Wednesday morning we headed back up to Shade Mills with Jude and Margaret to see if we could refind the American Goshawk and get some pictures. We spent an hour checking the main building again and the area around it but could not find the hawk. We did have some nice warbler activity that kept us amused. We headed down to the Lake for a bit of a watch in the afternoon even though the winds were fairly weak from the SE. The good birders will tell you that sometimes these winds can still bring in rarities, so we sat. Birders had had Sabine’s the day before late in the afternoon but we did not see anything close enough for us to identify. To be honest, it was more social than watching. We chatted with each other and people who walk along the Waterfront Trail and are curious as to what we are looking for. Birds is not always the first guess by the way, we have had aircraft, whales (yes, whales), boats etc. We educate and point them to the large signs complete with pictures of the birds we are looking for.

That night a report on Discord detailed a possible Curlew Sandpiper (a Eurasian species) that had been seen around 5 at the Exeter Sewage Lagoons. It was a fairly detailed report but the birder was not sure about the ID. We decided with nothing else to work on we would go and see if we could refind the bird and maybe get a huge rarity. Thursday was my birthday and what better way to spend it than walking around a sewage lagoon!

Exeter Sewage Lagoon

There were many shorebirds to go through and we tried to be slow and methodical so we did not miss anything that might be close to what we were looking for. We have never seen a Curlew Sandpiper so we were relying on pictures from ebird and that Barb sent us to help with our search. We were looking for a bird with a long down-curved bill so we could eliminate any bird with a straight bill. We never found the bird but we did have great fun looking at all the shorebirds fairly close to us. Jerry had fun taking lots of pictures even getting down on his belly in the grass so he didn’t spook the birds. In the process of getting up his phone dropped out but thankfully he noticed it missing just a few minutes later and a quick look on my phone of “his” location guided us back to it easily enough. Whew!

Late Thursday a report came in that the American Goshawk was back in the same tree behind the building but just briefly so we still might have a chance at a picture. Then a report of a possible juvenile Yellow-crowned Night Heron in Hamilton came in and I was very happy. I had missed one in the spring because it was up in Thunder Bay so we were excited that there might be one in Hamilton. The description sounded accurate but they are similar to a juvenile Black-crowned Night Heron and the bird was quite a distance from the birder who posted it. Below you can see the difference in shape, posture, bills and head shape. There are also differences in plumage if you are close enough.

We were in Hamilton around 9:00 with Grandkids, who had a PD day, and Margaret had been watching a Heron for about an hour with Angela and Michael. It was across the small bay at Princess Point and there was no way to get closer to the bird so scoping and poor camera pictures was all we had. The posture of the bird seemed right – tall upright, long neck and it walked quite upright. It flew minutes after we got there so we only had those bried looks through the scope and the pictures Margaret had taken. We sent a couple of back of camera pictures to “What’s this Bird” on our Discord channel and got back a pretty quick reply that it looked good for Yellow-crowned! I got another positive for Yellow-crowned from another birder too. We were super excited, high 5’s exchanged, pictures taken. We had bird #320! BUT, I felt a bit concerned and wanted better looks and, of course, pictures. I also got a couple of skeptical texts a bit later that confirmed that I needed to see that bird again. We decided to stay around Princess Point trying to refind the bird for better looks. Another report came in an hour later that the bird was seen by a very good birder so we felt better. At lunch time we dropped our Grandkids off and returned to Princess Point to scope the area it had been last seen. There were many juvenile Black-crowned Night Herons to go through and watch carefully for a bit to eliminate. Bob Curry joined us and with his superior knowledge we went through the herons we could see once again. There was one bird we thought had a very good chance of being THE bird, long legged and thin with what appeared to be a long neck but in the end when it came out in the open it was determined to be Black-crowned. The picture below gives you an idea of what we were dealing with in trying to determine ID’s. Our scope view was a bit better than that but it still was short what you would want to be able to ID a bird correctly. I kept wanting to zoom my scope in just a few more turns to see more detail on the birds.

The Yellow-crowned Night Heron look-a-like

Margaret had looked at her pictures on her computer late afternoon and it was apparent that the bird in the morning was also a Black-crowned Night Heron. WE DID NOT HAVE #320! I had to include the picture we took when we THOUGHT we did though because how cute and happy we all looked and the kids were super excited for us!

We left having spent a total of about 7 hours searching along with other birders and despite a couple of reports there were no confirmed pictures or a bird that others could get on and be able to confirm as a group that the bird was a Yellow-crowned Night Heron. Could there still be one around? We will keep checking and hoping. On the way home we decided to make one last quick stop at Valley Inn where a Wilson’s Phalarope was giving great photo opportunities.

When we got home I sent a public retraction to the Discord server about my morning report so that others would be aware the Yellow-crowned Night Heron was not seen by me. I’m ok with making mistakes, and making them publicly, I figure it is the best way to learn LOL. Public humiliation is a good teacher! I spoke with other birders and they also thought they had a Yellow-crowned only to realize it was Black-crowned when they viewed their pictures so in the scheme of things this was not a huge mistake. If I had not reported it and the bird was really there then people would be upset too so there is no right answer. Hopefully there is another one found and more accessible.

Saturday was supposed to be a lake watch with NE winds in Hamilton but while we were at Jerry’s mom’s in the morning for caregiving we got a complete flat tire. We tried the compressor and sealant they supply you with now (no tire or donut anymore) and it did not work so we had to call for a tow truck and waited almost 4 hours to then find out that the tire could not be repaired and they had no tires for our car until Sunday or Monday. Thankfully our best friends Marg and Lawson came to our rescue and lent us one of their cars. We owe you big time! And so no lake watch happened but we did not miss anything we needed.

Sunday was a day with family so we spent the afternoon at the pool and out for dinner with our kids and grandkids. Late afternoon a report came in of a rare Cinnamon Teal (western species) at the Grimsby Wetlands! A very nice rarity and I had to just let it go because the first rule is “family always comes first”. Hoping the Teal is still there tomorrow morning. Whew! what a week!

Week 37 2 species added #319 species E&J

Week 36 Buffy!

Last week on our first lake watch Marcus had mentioned that he thought one of the birds we had seen might have been a Long-tailed Jaeger instead of Parasitic. They are difficult birds to ID, especially as juveniles and we often see them under poor viewing conditions. We had taken plenty of pictures but they needed to be seen on a larger screen and when Marcus had a chance he asked some local experts to weigh in. On Tuesday he got responses that our first two birds we had seen were Long-tailed Jaegers! So that becomes bird #315 and then we did see Parasitic Jaegers later in the day so they become bird #316. It is fantastic that we had two Jaeger species in our first few hours of lake watching and didn’t know it for almost a week!

Winds were not favourable at either lake this week so we concentrated on that pesky Buff-breasted Sandpiper. Are you tired of hearing about this bird? I used the Buff-breasted as an example in one of my first blogs about the information available on ebird and where and when to see a particular species. Back then, I said I had a 73% chance of seeing this species in the last week of August up near Beeton so that is where I would be. Except the birds were not at Beeton this year. This week the chance dropped to 45% and next week 42% and then little chance. They have shown up at that site consistently for many, many years and for some reason this year they have not…yet. I was feeling frustrated and thinking I should have chased the one that showed up last week in Chatham. People were checking Beeton regularly and on Wednesday after north winds in the night we drove up hoping they would have arrived but no joy for us. Other birders checked Thursday and Friday. We had been checking our local sod farms all week as well and had no birds there.

Finally, on Saturday September 7 a Buff-breasted Sandpiper was found at Beeton Sod Farms. Hallelujah!! Of course we were looking after our grandkids for the day so I gnawed my knuckles all day and hoped it remained until Sunday. We headed up early Sunday and Margaret posted 15 mins before we arrived that there were now 2 at the same spot. We arrived and celebrated seeing both quite close to the road before they flew further back. Bird #317 for us and bird #300 for Margaret! It was only about 8C with gusty north winds so we were cold! but we stuck around for an hour or so talking to other birders and getting better looks at the birds now and again. Sadly, they apparently flew off just after we left and were not seen again but hopefully more show up across the province and many others get a chance to see them. So, ebird does work, the dates are not always for sure, but the birds do eventually come.

Buff-breasted Sandpiper

I have 7 more expected species to still get: Pomarine Jaeger, Sabine’s Gull, Black-legged Kittiwake, Brant, Purple Sandpiper, American Goshawk and Nelson’s Sparrow. I’ve made extensive notes on all of them as to where and when to see them. IF I get all of them that would get me to 324 species. I am still trying for Boreal Owl before year end and a few other rarer species. That will just leave any other rarities that show up and are chaseable to the end of the year. At 317 we remain in the top spot in Ontario having seen 88% of the 359 species reported so far. Ideally, I would like to end up seeing 90% or better.

I face the daily dilemma now of whether to stay local where I am in the middle of the province so when a rarity is found I can head in either direction or get out to bird known spots as much as possible on the chance of finding something ourselves. Our caregiving duties have also ramped up to every second day lately so we have less time available to actively get out to bird. Four of the seven remaining birds are on the lake so lake watches will remain a priority when the winds are favourable. Still lots to do and see and birding spots to cover.

Week 36 One new species added #317 for E&J

Week 33 A Blurb instead of a Blog

As I said in my previous post, we had our 4 Grandkids for most of the week for our annual “camp” so no birding happened. We did see the Ripley’s Aquarium with them, they ran their own Olympics, multiple games of hide and seek were played and there was an over consumption of sugar treats and late nights. We loved every minute of it.

Saturday we headed to Blenheim because there had been reports of Baird’s Sandpipers the last two days and it seemed like one of the few spots not forecasting lots of rain. We scoped the edges of the lagoons and once again thought we had a Baird’s but Steve C. arrived and quickly dashed our hopes declaring it a Semipalmated Sandpiper. Will we ever get this right? We walked down towards some other shorebirds and Steve found us a beautiful Baird’s within minutes. Thanks once again! It was very obviously a Baird’s once we saw it. But will the lesson stick with us until next year when we have to once again hunt for a Baird’s?

Baird’s Sandpiper (definitely NOT a Semipalmated Sandpiper)

Jerry managed to get better pictures of a Wilson’s Phalarope although not in breeding plumage. Google it to see it in breeding plumage – they are such pretty birds! He has also added a number of better pictures to our Gallery so make sure you check that out again.

Wilson’s Phalarope

Next week another sandpiper species should start to arrive, the Buff-breasted Sandpiper. They hang out in sod farms instead of lagoons so a change of destination will be happening. We also will start to do some Lake Watches if the winds co-operate. Stay tuned…

Week 33 1 new species added 314 species seen J&E

Week 32 Hit and Miss

Most of this week we birded locally, stopping at shorebird habitat on our way back and forth to Hamilton for care giving. There were a few more reports of Baird’s but we were still not able to confirm one. The juveniles will be coming through over the next few weeks and so we will just have to be patient and wait until the numbers increase our chances of seeing one and getting a decent picture. It is hard to be patient when I get those hourly pings that means somewhere in the province someone has seen one. Reports of American Goshawk have started up again. Reports are hidden during the breeding season because of potential falconers stealing from their nests so we have not had the opportunity to chase this hawk much, and of course, it is not always easy to chase these birds, they have wide territories. We may try to get up north a bit over the next few weeks and see if we can encounter one so that we do not have to count on fall hawk migration to find one.

Late Thursday a report came in of a Lark Bunting up in Sault St. Marie seven-eight hours away. It would be a great bird to have on our list but would it stay? We had a discussion. Could we get up there and back before our care giving commitments on Saturday? A 16 hr round trip plus finding the bird? It would be a long way to drive if the bird was not re-found but the only way we might be able to do it would be to leave before the bird would be confirmed there the next day. Jerry felt it was just too far for one bird and not a lifer. I was torn, I thought we should risk it but I also recognized that we might not get back in time on Saturday for his Mom. We also knew that there would not be another chance to go for it because of commitments we had from Sunday and through next week. We opted not to try, it was hard to say no to going for it and I knew there would be regret from not trying for it. Of course it was re-found the next day and continues to still be there today (Sunday) but our window has closed and we have Grandkids with us for the next week now. Will it still be there next weekend?

On Saturday I decided not to write a blog this week as nothing much had happened but of course, like clockwork, a rarity report came in late Saturday. Happily, we had just got home from Hamilton and were only an hour away from a Marbled Godwit! This was a species that I had expected to get up in Rainy River in June but there were only a couple of reports of them this year and we searched every day we were there without seeing one. We arrived at the Alymer Sewage Lagoons (yes, the best birds always seem to be in those lagoons) and Michele, who had found the bird, was on it as we walked up. Thank you Michele! A Willet was with the Marbled Godwit and a Glossy Ibis had flown before we got there. The Godwit was feeding in the lagoon so it appeared to have a bright green bill and legs before it washed off to show its true colours.

We hung around as we knew other birders, Jude, Jason and Jenny, were on their way and I wanted to make sure we knew where the bird was in case it moved around. It stayed in the same general area and everyone that came got to see the Godwit. Shorebirds continued to arrive until we had a plethora of great shorebirds in the lagoon.

Can you see why Birders love sewage lagoons?

As well as the shorebirds a Juvenile Black Tern arrived to catch dinner and an Eared Grebe was found further out in the lagoon to complete a great late afternoon birding experience. It did not quite make up for the disappointment of not going for the Lark Bunting but it was a good bird to add to our list. The 4 Grandkids arrive for their traditional week with us so I’m hoping for a slight pause to any rarities this coming week until we can get back to birding next weekend.

WEEK 32 1 new species added 313 for J&E

Week 31 Misses

As we closed out July the birding was quiet under very hot conditions and south winds. Baird’s Sandpipers started to show up in five or six places around southern Ontario and we decided to twitch (chase) some local sightings on Friday. The first place we checked was a large sod farm in Kitchener where Baird’s had been seen by a few people on Thursday but there were no birds visible Friday morning. The next stop was Flamborough Downs. Jude had reported one a few days before and after scoping for a bit I thought I had a Baird’s in my scope. Sandpipers are a very difficult group to tell apart and while we are improving we still are not fully confident. We use Jean Iron’s shorebird book and that has helped a great deal. Baird’s are a bit larger than a Least and smaller than a Pectoral, with wings that are longer than the tail, shorter legs and a thick black bill with a bit of a down curve. They generally have a more grey tone back when we see them in the fall. The bird I had in the scope seemed to fit with those characteristics. We took pictures and put it in our checklist as a Baird’s Sandpiper. Jerry added our pictures at home and I started getting a bit worried when I looked at the picture. It did not show all the characteristics that I felt I saw in the field. Bob Curry, birder extraordinaire from Hamilton, sent us a note shortly after seeing the pics and suggested he was not convinced it was a Baird’s and that it was more likely a Semipalmated Sandpiper. So bird #313 went on the list and off the list LOL. We should have just had someone check the pictures before putting in the checklist but we got a bit overconfident and sometimes you just feel bad always asking for assistance. Bottom line is, as good as we are at identifying birds we are still nowhere near being “great” and there is still lots more to learn.

Saturday, we patiently waited at home, itching to bird, but not wanting to make a move in one direction or another. At 10:30 a text from Discord announced a rare Western Kingbird 2.5 hrs west of us and we were in the car by 10:45 heading to the spot between Rondeau and Pelee. We had missed Western Kingbird up in Rainy River where they are most often seen in the summer months so I had been hoping one might end up closer to home. When we arrived, Rick and Mike from Pelee had been looking for a few hours without re-finding the bird. That was not good news. It was hot, humid and Jerry had forgotten his hat in the rush to leave. I gave him mine (he has had skin cancer a few times and needs to keep his face covered) and we looped the short 2km trail a few times hoping to see the bird. As the heat increased I started hanging back in the shade while Jerry, in the hat, moved further along the path. Suddenly a text from him, “I got it”. I ran along the path realizing as I ran that I went the long way to where he was and arrived gasping for breath and tried to get my bins on a bird he was pointing out. The bird was in trees, partially obscured. It had the yellow belly, a grayish head. It looked good. I sent a quick text that we had found it and then we got clearer looks at the bird and realized it was a Great Crested Flycatcher not the Western Kingbird. UGGGGH!

Another mis-identification. So frustrating. I try to tell myself that with each mistake you learn and you are less likely to make the same mistake again so it is forward movement although at the time it always feels like backward, rookie mistakes. In the end we stayed for almost 2 hours hoping to find the Kingbird but it was not to be and was not re-found the next day either.

Being so close to Leamington we decided to drive some roads outside of the town in the hopes of spotting a Eurasian-collared Dove that we still need on our list and when that failed we stopped at our favourite Mexican restaurant, Salsa Caliente to cheer us up. The freshest guacamole I have ever tasted! On the way home we stopped at a few sewage lagoons to see if we could turn up a Baird’s Sandpiper to redeem the day but it also, was not to be. And to top off a kinda lousy birding day, Jerry ignored GoogleMaps attempt to take us off the highway to avoid an accident and we ended up sitting for 2 hours because they closed the 401 further along and we eventually had to exit the highway onto narrow country roads with hundreds of other travellers. We got home at 10pm. Sigh!

Undaunted by a bad birding day, early Sunday morning we headed to Rattray Marsh in hopes a Baird’s Sandpiper would still be there. It was a beautiful drive in with no traffic or accidents LOL! It was lovely and cool standing at the shady marsh edge talking with Margaret and the other birders while we waited to see if the Baird’s would return. An Osprey catching snacks kept us amused and we had great scope views of the ducks and shorebirds close by.

Osprey

The Baird’s did not return so we headed off to Colonel Sam Smith Park where the wintering Western Grebe had been sighted close to shore. It seems likely that this is the same Grebe that we first saw back on January 7 at LaSalle Park. A Grebe was reported on and off from January until April 30 at LaSalle and then May 1 was the first report from Colonel Sam Park and it has been sighted there and at Rattray on and off from then until today. I found the Grebe quickly off of West Point but it was closer to the farther shore so we decided to walk over to the other side. It was a bit of a hike and in the punishing heat it felt longer but in the end it was worth it to get better views and picture. I think you would agree too…

We then headed up to Davos Pond where a Neotropic Cormorant had been hanging out, again, for better pictures. This was one of those perfect birding moments where we parked our car, walked across the street and the Neotropic Cormorant was sitting in a pond a short distance away. We were there for 6 minutes. We are appreciative of these easy gets after all the tough ones. Again, Jerry was happy to get better pictures then the ones we got at Pelee in May.

We also got our first checklist of the year in York County. Only 6 more counties in Ontario to get checklists in for the year. So we added no new birds this week but I’m trying to keep a positive slant on things – we did manage better pictures of some birds and got another county completed so still moving ahead with our challenges.

And we can hope that maybe our mis-identifications are finally behind us…

Week 31 no new birds 312 species for J&E