We started the week with a drive into Middlesex (west of London) searching for a Golden Eagle that has been reported a number of times but had no luck, I am pretty sure I will see one during migration but its nice to get as many birds on the list now. We then headed down to Rondeau Provincial Park and searched the bay for a group of Greater White-fronted Geese that was reported the day before. The view was horrible, they were on the other side of the bay but using our scope we could identify the orange/pink bill and when the lighting was right the white patch around the bill. With the naked eye the geese were not visible at all. The first picture shows the geese from Jerry’s camera at full zoom. The second pic is a digiscope picture (our iphone held up to the scope view) where you can kind of see the orange bill with white around it on the goose in the red circle. In this situation, without a clear view you determine first they are bigger than the ducks around them so they are geese, they are not Canada Geese, no black heads, they are not Snow Geese (all white) and Greater White-Fronted were reported yesterday with a similar number so they are likely the GWFG. But we still scoped until we saw that identifying orange bill to clinch the identification. Bird #134. Hopefully we find another one and get a better picture. I’ve added a picture from 2017 so you can see what they look like.
After birding Rondeau for a bit we only added one more new bird, a White-crowned Sparrow and then headed over to Long Point Provincial Park. We found some Sandhill Cranes along the way, expected, as this is a wintering area for them. We have Sandhill Cranes nesting in our community and we often have them in our backyard so not a bird I needed to add to the list but hey, I’ll take them anyway.
Sandhill Cranes
We birded locally for a bit on Tuesday but did not see anything new and on Wednesday made a quick stop in Dundas on our way to Jerry’s mom and picked up a Pied-billed Grebe in the Desjardins Canal. Grebes legs are attached so far to the back of their bodies that it is impossible for them to walk so they remain in the water all the time. If they do land by accident on land they require human help to get back to the water. First picture is Jerry’s picture and the second I found that shows how far back the feet are. Crazy huh!
Pied-billed Grebe
I get daily alerts for what birds I need for my Ontario list that are being seen somewhere in the province and that list is now below 20 with only about 4 being birds that are rare enough to consider chasing. A Prairie Falcon was found twice and would be a fantastic bird to add to the list but it is over 6 hours back up north, as is a Gray-crowned Rosy finch, where I was a week ago so I made the decision not to chase it. The 10 rarities I already have gives me the ability to make those decisions. If I was trying for the record then of course I would have had to go for them. The other 16-18 birds on the alerts are more common birds that have arrived early or over-wintered and I will get them in the coming months so I’m not going to chase down a Common Grackle or Wood Duck. Both will show up in my backyard soon enough.
We took a few days off from birding but it was the Global Big Backyard Bird Count weekend (Feb 16-19) so we had to participate. Saturday we birded some trails locally just to get out into sunshine and for exercise. We found an overwintering, drab Hermit Thrush for bird #138.
Hermit Thrush
Sunday Jerry had to do some things for his Mom so we didn’t get out again as we had planned. I spent the time looking at Canada birds for our Canada 400 year. I’ve already got quite a bit done and am monitoring what birds are around in the winter in neighbouring provinces that we might visit next year. This will be an ongoing process that I have to fit in around this big year so that we are ready for next year. Have to take advantage while things are quiet.
Week 7 10 rarities 5 species added 138 species for the year
We arrived home from our North trip late Monday so I included that day as part of the North Trip rather than day 1 of week 6. A Slaty-back Gull was found in Welland on the Sunday and then seen at the same location on Monday so early Tuesday morning we headed back out on the road for Welland. We arrived around 10 and the bird had been seen around 9 so I was worried it would not be there but a group of people were there and had it in their scope sleeping on the ice in a group of about 70 other gulls. Whew! 132 and a very good rarity to get, giving me 10 rarities seen this year. We had time to watch the gull for a bit, waiting for it to wake and stand a bit then they all flushed and re-landed and I managed to find it again in my scope tucked behind a Herring Gull. We checked out the other gulls and took more pics and then headed into Hamilton to see Jerry’s Mom.
Slaty-backed Gull
On Wednesday we stayed at home for a well deserved rest and caught up on groceries and cleaning. In the evening we decided to try for a Northern Saw-whet Owl that had been reported calling in a neighbourhood in Cambridge. It was not the best situation as there was little room to pull over on a narrow road and the owl had called in the backyard of a home so we were reluctant to hang out front of their house for long. We parked and walked up the road and back and then drove slowly past again and finally heard the Owl with its familiar “toot-toot-toot-toot” call. It called and stopped and then called again and again over a 10 minute period giving us plenty of chances to hear and confirm the call. We now have all the 7 southern species of Owl and just the 3 northern species to see. We hope to see a Saw-whet to get a picture later this year but for now the call lets us add it to the year list as Heard Only. Below is a picture of me holding a Northern Saw-whet Owl at a banding night at Ruthven in Caledonia in 2018. It was awesome to see these little guys up close and to release it after it was banded!
Thrilled to release a Northern Saw-whet Owl in 2018
The rest of the week had temperatures hitting 17C for one day and 12C another so very crazy weather for the second week of February and we took the lull in no rarities reported to socialize with some friends, have two grandkids for a sleepover and watch another play in a hockey tournament. We got out and walked and birded a couple of days but no new birds were added as the temperatures dropped again.
WEEK 6 1 more rarity added for 10 rarities for the year, 1 more owl added, 2 new species 133 total species
We took a few days off at the beginning of the week except for a quick trip to NOTL for a Little Gull. It is a gull that is better identified in flight because it is black under the wings but it can be difficult to pick it out from the hundreds of gulls that fly up and down the Niagara River but once you can lock on one and see a few of them the challenge gets easier. Jerry even managed to get a poor picture as the bird was far away.
We are looking with bins at all the Gulls flying pastLittle Gull with black underwings
On Tuesday morning disaster struck! Jerry knocked his camera off the table and it broke on our concrete floor! The rest of the day was spent calling insurance, camera places, and in the end he shipped it to Sony to see if they could repair it. We have an extra rider on our insurance so if need be it will be covered. Thankfully we have a backup with the Coolpix 900 that I use for video so we will have to take just the one camera on the trip north.
On Thursday we headed to Cochrane to try for a Willow Ptarmigan and to pick up the rest of the boreal species we were missing. I had said that I was not going to go for a Ptarmigan because they are usually farther north around James Bay and Hudson’s Bay and involve a drive on an ice road and sleeping in cars etc., BUT this year is an irruption year for this species and so some have found their way south and a report came in from Cochrane and it was just too tempting. Mind you, it required a drive up a mining road for 170km without cell service and all I could picture was the old logging roads at North Bay that Jerry drove me around years back. I spoke with a couple of birders that went up and they alleviated my fears a bit. We had the chance to get 11 species and then the rarest possibility of a Great Gray and Boreal Owl. The weather forecast was clear and sunny for 5 days and so we booked rooms and set off. We checked 3 spots on the drive up for Northern Hawk Owl but had no luck. We quickly added Pine Grosbeak once we went north of North Bay.
Pine Grosbeak
On Friday morning I wanted to check the mining road so we went up 32 km to a burn where Black-backed and American Three-toed Woodpeckers had been reported. The road was wide and PAVED! and ice covered but sanded extremely well. There was traffic, not a lot, but enough that if you had trouble help was available. We had two trucks stop to ask if we needed help while we were pulled over birding. I was feeling much better about the 170km drive on Saturday. We quickly heard and found 6 Black-backed Woodpeckers and had spectacular views as they worked the burned trees. It took us 2 hours and a few sits in the car to warm up to find the one American Three-toed.
These two species are specialists at eating the wood-boring beetles and larvae that infiltrate burned trees. They flake the burned bark off the trees leaving the orange inner bark exposed and then use their chisel-shaped bills to bore holes to find the beetles. When you see trees like this it is a sure sign of Black-backed or Three-toed Woodpeckers.
In the afternoon we drove some areas close to town with suitable habitat for the Northern Hawk Owl but again had no luck. We checked out the ice bridge going across the Abitibi River but decided not to attempt the crossing even though it was open to light traffic. We would have had to come back across to get back to our hotel and the hills on either side seemed daunting too.
The red line is the ice bridge you drive acrossYou know you are North when your hotel looks like this!
Saturday morning we left at 7am to get as far up the road as early as we could. We tried not to stop much but a Spruce Grouse was needed for our list and a Canada Jay so we stopped for photos and looks.
Spruce Grouse
We were also looking for Ptarmigan tracks from the car so slowing down here and there. We got to the 170 km mark around 10 and got out and walked up from the car for a bit looking for tracks. We found wolf prints on the road but no Ptarmigan tracks.
When we walked down from the car a short distant I found Ptarmigan tracks just off the road. We started following the tracks down the road and Jerry went a few steps further and the birds were THERE! Three of them, all white, black eyes and beaks. They do not have a fear of humans so were content to sit and watch us while we quietly celebrated feet away. It was a LIFER, bird 128, and a fantastic bird to add to my list this year. We watched them for a bit, took lots of photos and some video and then headed back down.
Willow Ptarmigan
We stopped in the afternoon at a trail in South Porcupine and heard a Boreal Chickadee and enjoyed the only walk we had of the trip. We stayed in Timmins Saturday night and then tried for two birds the next day, Eurasian Tree Sparrows near Thessalon and another attempt at a Northern Hawk Owl on St.Joseph’s Island. It was a huge amount of driving and in hindsight we should have changed where we were staying a bit but by the time we thought of it the free cancellation time had passed. And we didn’t get either of the birds. On Monday we headed onto Manitoulin Island and quickly flushed 3 Sharp-tailed Grouse from a road that had a lot of ebird reports last year. Then we headed to the spots where Ring-necked Pheasants are often seen and nothing. We drove a wider area, scanned, nothing. We were tired, a bit discouraged, wanting to leave to head home but also wanting the bird so we wouldn’t have to come back in the summer when the island will have lots more people on it. Manitoulin Island is the only place in Ontario where you can count a Ring-necked Pheasant. I pulled up the ebird reports and we decided to head up to an area that had reports back in 2019/2021 and as we were driving up suddenly I saw a beautiful male in a field. WooHOO! Bird 131!
Ring-necked Pheasant
Time to head home! Out of the 11 birds I expected to get we saw 9. I’ll take those percentages all year! We were away 5 days, drove 2,180km and only walked 14.7km. We are looking forward to spring migration when we can ditch the car birding for the forests and fields.
Week 5 9 Rarities seen for the year 10 species added this week 131 species seen
So, the thing about birding is sometimes you travel three times and stand in freezing temps for 7 hours to get a bird, and sometimes you just have to roll out of bed at 5:30am and step out onto the porch to hear a Great Horned Owl hooting and then crawl back into your warm bed! Bird 114 Heard Only. We have had 3 days with no new birds added this week and that will start happening more as we have most of the winter birds and will have to wait until spring for fresh species to arrive. We tracked down a few Rough-legged Hawks up Kitchener way and found a Snowy Owl near Elmira. Most years we have many young Snowy Owls move down from the Arctic to winter around the Great Lakes but this year the lemming population crashed in the summer which meant that Snowy chicks did not survive in their usual numbers resulting in almost no Snowy Owls being seen down here.
At the end of the week the Eared Grebe once again appeared in Etobicoke, same park, and we decided to try for that bird again. A Red-shouldered Hawk had been reported in a park nearby so we tried for that bird first and quickly found it sitting in a tree, I like when the day starts on a good note! An hour later we were staring at a rare Eared Grebe in close to the shore at Colonel Sam Smith Park, bird number 2 for the day.
Red-shouldered HawkEared Grebe
We decided to stop at LaSalle in Burlington on the way home as we had missed two birds there a few times. A birder told us where the Tundra swan was sleeping and we had nice close views of bird number 3. We started chatting with a photographer comparing notes and places birds are seen and while we were chatting suddenly a Green-winged Teal appeared! The extra bird that Jerry got and I didn’t. Bird number 4 for the day for me!
Tundra SwanGreen-winged Teal
Another bad weather day kept us close to home so we just walked to our local woodlot yet again. Both of us were missing a bird the other had seen. In my case I had gone 27 days not seeing a Brown Creeper. A small bird that clings to the trunks of trees and moves up and around like a Nuthatch or Woodpecker. We never really search for Creepers as we see them fairly regularly, I had seen and heard 7 of them on Dec 31 and Jerry had seen one the first week in January and I was about 50 steps away and waved it off, “I’ll see a Brown Creeper” I boasted. LOL and then nothing, reports filled my email of every other birder reporting Creepers and suddenly I found myself actively searching tree trunks for the little birds. Finally, on the 28th I spied a small bird at the base of a tree and I was one bird ahead of Jerry and 15 minutes later we both saw the local Pileated Woodpecker, we were tied again. A few minutes later we saw three Brown Creepers on the same tree! A four Brown Creeper day!
Brown Creeper
Week 4 – 8 rarities seen for the year , 2 more owls added, 8 species added – 121 species seen (E&J)
We started the week going after a few common winter birds that can be tougher to find and had been reported locally. Snow Buntings are pretty prolific in the fields during the winter months and can be found in flocks of hundreds but there may only be 1-2 Lapland Longspurs around at the same time. Luckily they had both been reported 30 minutes from home and we got both species fairly quickly. We stopped at a spot know for nesting Great Horned Owls but did not see them but added a couple more common species. I added a Heard Only Pileated Woodpecker that Jerry did not hear so we were even in the count again. Next was mopping up on Duck species so we hit a few spots around Lake Ontario on Tuesday and saw Black Scoter, Lesser Scaup, and Ruddy Duck. I walked down the path and Jerry found a Green-winged Teal which I could not re-find later as the evening sun turned all the ducks to black so Jerry was once again ahead by one bird.
On Thursday we took our first trip north for the year and drove through snow squalls around Bracebridge that thankfully turned to snow flurries in Algonquin. The temperature was -9 when we arrived at noon and it made for a magical winter wonderland walking though Spruce Bog Trail. There were a few species of birds around but not as many as we had anticipated, I think the snow kept them tucked away. We both added our 100th species in algonquin – for Jerry is was Common Redpoll and for me it was Evening Grosbeak!
I had hoped to be at 100 by the end of February so I’m super happy to have hit that milestone in only week 3. I know there are still many potential birds out there to find in the next weeks. On Friday we woke up to a temperature of -24 with a windchill of -31 and warnings of frostbite. We put on extra layers and covered up as much as possible. Steamed glasses made looking through binoculars difficult and thick mitts made operating cameras a bit of a challenge. A short distance into the park we saw cars pulled off which, in Algonquin, means a moose, and sure enough a large male without antlers was munching on evergreens off the side of the road.
We added 6 of the Boreal species but sadly did not see a Canada Jay or a Pine Grosbeak. The Pine Grosbeak have stayed further north because of plentiful food so we will have to travel to Sudbury and beyond for them and we plan to be back in Algonquin in the spring and fall to hopefully get a Canada Jay too. Red Crossbills were plentiful on the roads and at the Visitor Centre and we also managed to see a couple of the rarer White-winged Crossbill. Our only boreal rarity, a Hoary Redpoll, was seen at the feeders too.
We then headed to Ottawa for another crack at the Western Tanager. Our grandson had a hockey tournament for the weekend so we decided to spend a combo weekend of birding during the day and hockey games at night. We dropped in at the Tanager site late Friday afternoon and stood in -10 for 2 1/2 hours just like the last time and did not see the bird. Early Saturday morning we headed out to the area where Gray Partridge have been seen and spent 1 1/2 hours driving slowly, sitting watching fields before deciding to give up and as we headed away I decided to pull over just around the corner thinking we could see the area and Jerry quickly spotted a covey of 11 sitting out in the field! We quickly posted to Discord so other drivers that had been looking would know where to find the birds. We spent a few minutes admiring and taking some pictures and headed to the Tanager stakeout with renewed optimism. There were may birders gathered at the spot when we arrived at 10 and the bird had not been seen at all. We walked around a bit, kept our eyes on numerous feeders, chatted with other birders and waited and waited. When we were just starting to feel like it might never show the bird flew in at 11:45! WE GOT THE WESTERN TANAGER!
The level of excitement at finally seeing this bird was over the top LOL. I couldn’t believe it had actually happened. It took three visits and 7 plus hours standing in -10 temperatures to get that bird. We enjoyed the moment, took some pictures and video and then the bird startled from the feeder into the shrubs.
We left to head to our next destination – a Barred Owl. One of the birders from the Tanager graciously offered to show us the owl location and true to his word found us the Barred owl munching on a freshly caught Red Squirrel. Thanks Bob! It was an epic moment for us having never seen an owl with prey. It was wonderful to watch as the owl went about his meal with no worries of the people standing below him.
As a bonus we also got a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker that was wintering there. The last bird for Ottawa was Bohemian Waxwing. Large flocks were reported in a neighbourhood east of Ottawa and after driving around for a few minutes we saw about 20 in a tree in a backyard but quite a distance away. We continued driving and finally found a flock of over 100 where Jerry could get a bit better pictures. FIVE birds added to our list in one day! An epic birding day where all the stars aligned. We wish they could all be like that.
Sunday morning we left at 7 so we would be at the rare Lark Sparrow location in Kingston at 9. We walked up the driveway and the bird was sitting in a shrub feet away from us. We were there a total of 7 minutes. We would have loved to enjoy the bird a bit longer but when these birds are on private property and the owner’s have given permission to view we do not overstay our welcome. We got back in our car and headed to see a Harris’s Sparrow that was coming to feeders 10 minutes from home and again got out of our car, went up the driveway and the bird was on the feeder for about a minute before flying back into the shrubs when a Merlin appeared. We stayed and chatted with other birders hoping the sparrow would reappear but it did not so we left after 30 minutes. A two rare sparrow day!
And the icing on the cake was on the way home a birder neighbour had an Eastern Screech Owl in his bird box so we stopped for a quick few minutes to enjoy the Owl snoozing and sunning while Black-capped Chickadees harassed it from branches inches from its face.
A truly great 3rd week with rarities still popping up around the province. A Slaty-backed Gull was reported in Mississauga at 4:35, a bit late for us to make it there before dark but maybe it will stick around.
Week 3 – 3 rarities added for a total of 7, 2 more owl species, 22 species added 113(E) 114(J) species seen