September 15 & 16
Barbara & I
decided to join Jane, Connie, Sami & Lynne to bird Prince
Edward County
on Tuesday and Presqu-ile Park
on Wednesday with an overnight in Brighton. If only!
We drove down early going through Kingston
for a stop at Invista Ponds. This was a
bust because of the poor light and general lack of birds. We made a brief stop at the Amherst Island ferry terminal. There were very few birds, but at least a flock of Common Loons far out on the lake.
We departed for the ferry at Aldolphustown and arrived with
15 minutes to spare. Apparently, half
hour service does not mean on the half hour!
Once across in Glenora, we drove slowly via
Chuckeryhill
Rd back to Route 7 where a perched Merlin got our
attention. We jumped out and got lots of
photos, since the bird did not spook.
Can you guess which image is digiscoped?
We got back in our cars and Sami drove off leaving us behind
with a car that would not turn over. We
got Sami on the walkie talkie, and he quickly returned to give us a boost. Thanks for the push, Jane. No joy on the boost.
It was wisely decided that the other four carry on birding while we
waited for the CAA.
The wait was not too long, but gave us ample time to photograph
the Merlin. When the Merlin did leave, a
Cooper's Hawk soared overhead. The
CAA
guy could not get our car to turn over either, so he towed us into Picton to
Stormy's, where it was confirmed that we needed a new starter. Of course they did not have one and had to
order it from
Toronto.
The service advisor, Terry, tried in vain to get us a rental
car from Bellville. He then called
around to find us a B&B, which was very difficult - lots of no
vacancies. The receptionist, Amy, took
over and finally found us one called La Vita E Bella
(Italian motif), while we cancelled our Brighton
reservation. Amy even arranged for one
of the staff to drive us to the B&B with a side trip to Birdhouse
City!
We were hot and frustrated, but a call to Connie told us that
we were not missing much. So we looked
at the little tourist pamphlet map and decided to go for a walk to a park to
try for birds. Well we got a feeling for
Picton as we walked around the harbour, but did not see any birds except gulls and cormorants. Heading back, we followed a
little stream to a pond across the road where we witnessed an amazing battle
between two large Snapping Turtles.
We found a decent restaurant and called Connie - they were
just getting to the Point! We walked
back to our B&B and retired early.
The breakfast was at 9 am
and we dined with two other couples from Ottawa.
Stormy's called to say our car was ready, so
we hiked over, which took 25 minutes.
After thanking Amy and Terry, we drove back to the B&B to get our
luggage. By then it was 10:30, and we decided that, since it was our
first visit to the county, that we would spend the rest of the morning there
and join the others at Presqu'ile after lunch.
We checked out Bradley Crossroad, since Connie had said it
was their best birding of the day. We
walked a bit up and down the road and
Barbara found some warblers. We
photographed what turned out to be a Magnolia Warbler. We had a lot of trouble identifying the
warblers and mostly relied on our photos afterwards.
With time fleeting, we headed for the Point. We hiked to the Lighthouse without seeing
much. But on the return hike, we got a Northern
Parula.
We went to the banding station to use their bench for our
lunch and were surprised that the banders were just coming in from their last
pass of the nets for the day. What a
treat to see the beautiful little creatures up close - a Red-eyed and a Blue-headed Vireo, a Chestnut-sided Warbler and a Blue Jay!
While finishing our lunch, we made the decision to stay in
the county and not join the others at Presqu'ile. It only made sense, since it would have been
a mad dash to get there shortly before they were going to leave. Instead, we hiked the trails around the
banding station, and found the woods alive with vireos and warblers. We had made a good decision. We got three kinds of vireos and a similar
number of warblers.
We finally tore ourselves away but decided to drop into the
Little Bluff Conservation Area. Here our
good luck continued with more vireos, warblers, including a Palm, and a Ruby-crowned Kinglet.
Finally, we headed for home.
As a final treat, we saw two Bonaparte Gulls from the ferry.
Bird List
- American
Crow
- Canada
Goose
- American
Robin
- Blue
Jay
- Ring-billed
Gull
- Red-winged
Blackbird
- Mourning
Dove
- European
Starling
- Mallard
- Rock
Pigeon
- Double-crested
Cormorant
- Song
Sparrow
- Belted
Kingfisher
- American
Coot
- Blue-winged
Teal
- Common
Loon
- Turkey
Vulture
- Merlin
- Northern
Flicker
- Cooper's
Hawk
- House
Sparrow
- Magnolia
Warbler
- Herring
Gull
- Northern
Parula
- Red-eyed
Vireo
- Chestnut-sided
Warbler
- Blue-headed
Vireo
- Eastern
Phoebe
- Philadelphia
Vireo
- Palm
Warbler
- Yellow-rumped
Warbler
- Ruby-crowned
Kinglet
- Cedar
Waxwing
- Bonaparte
Gull