April 25, 2023
Birding Report by Jane Burgess
Well the outing started earlier for
some than others. I had mistakenly indicated to Barbara and Bill we
would meet up at 6:30, while Barb C and I were thinking 7:30. Bill and
Barbara were very good and did not throw anything at me. Sorry for the
big error.
We drove directly to Panmure,
Barbara said she saw an Eastern Bluebird, we did not stop. We wanted to
see one of our target birds--Upland Sandpiper. As we were parking
Barbara, who claims she is not a birder, says I see an Upland
Sandpiper directly in front of us. We all get out of the vehicle and
spot the Sandpiper, great that the target bird is found, like it was
absolutely no problem finding it. Seven had been reported in the area,
but one never knows if they will be there because a friend of mine told
me years ago Birds have Wings, they fly!!! The Eastern Meadowlarks
(target bird #2) were singing "Spring of the Year", so many of them, a
wonderful sign of spring. Barb C went for a short walk and noted lots
of Savannah Sparrows. I then went for a walk and when I returned told
them I had spotted another Upland Sandpiper, this time a bit closer than
the first. After that we decided we would take the turn to the left
and see if there were any Eastern Meadowlarks closer and more
photographable. Another Upland Sandpiper was spotted. Great, we got
three of them. Okay we got our two target birds within the first hour
of birding.
Driving a bit further down
Panmure, we stopped to hear a familiar song, but could not place it.
Merlin indicated Warbling Vireo, my, my goodness, has it been that long
since I heard it last. We heard House Finch singing. We saw Bluebird
boxes and saw the second of I think four sightings of Eastern
Bluebirds. A Kestrel was spotted on the hydro line and of course as
soon as we stopped it flew just a bit further. I think we saw 5
Kestrels during the day. While we were stopped Bill said he heard a
Field Sparrow, oh they come in when called. So we called it in, and we
heard many Field Sparrows during the day. While we were out of the
vehicle two Chipping Sparrows were chasing each other, the two became
three and then four and at one point all four were on the road no more
than a foot ahead of me. Courtship behaviour, if there was mating, I
must have blinked my eyes. While we were driving, Barbara spotted a
large bird in the sky that was not a Great Blue Heron but it was a
Sandhill Crane. A bonus bird. We turn down a road that backs onto
the Burnt Lands and we see three more Sandhill Cranes.
This
was a car birding day, so again in the vehicle while we were driving we
saw a female Northern Harrier (we saw 2 or 3). The morning was just
hopping, so many birds everywhere. Where to next?
In
the early afternoon we did a lot of driving, but we were too early for
the birds (they have not returned yet, I think we want it to be May not
April), so it was an unproductive drive. Barb suggests the lagoons, so
we actually get out of the vehicle and walk to the lagoons. There we
see Common Goldeneye, Ring-necked Duck, Lesser Scaup, Pied-billed Grebe,
Canada Geese, and Bufflehead. While scanning the lagoon Barb says I
see something over there that is black. First we thought it was a
beaver, I got my scope on it and it was eating a waterfowl of some
type. Do Beavers eat mea? No we didn't think so, we scoped it again
and this time it was getting out of the water, seeing the tail,
indicated River Otter.
Off we went again to
check out the Burnt Lands, we heard in the distance a Clay-colored
Sparrow. And we saw a Kestrel at the top of a tree, but it was a very
quiet place. We drove Burnt Land Road and we had stopped and Bill said
Broadwing Hawk flyover the road. Come on guys we need to get our
numbers up, birding had slowed down in the afternoon, just the opposite
to what we experienced in the morning. Luckily Bill and Barbara saw a
Mallard in the ditch. Lets go and see the baby Common Raven in the nest
at Canadian Tire Place. Yes, 4 little heads were showing nicely. Just
for interest's sake Ravens start building their nest in late February,
incubation is three weeks and nestlings leave the nest about six weeks
later. While driving back to the 417, we see a Great Egret in a pond.
Well
we won't make 50, we will just look at Bill and Barbara's backyard
feeders. No birds there, then all of a sudden this bird flew low and
fast through the backyard. What was that, Merlin, last bird of the day
and a good bird to get. We almost made it to 50.
A good day, getting our target birds within the first hour.
Thank you Bill for the frog song identification -- Chorus and Springer Peepers.
Thank you Bill, Barbara and Barb for the photos.
Species Noted
- Northern Cardinal
- Canada Goose
- Eastern Bluebird
- European Starling
- Tree Swallow
- Savannah Sparrow
- Eastern Meadowlark
- Upland Sandpiper (3)
- Red-winged Blackbird
- American Crow
- Great Blue Heron
- Common Grackle
- Ring-billed Gull
- Dark-eyed Junco
- House Finch (h)
- White-throated Sparrow
- Chipping Sparrow
- Mourning Dove
- American Goldfinch
- Warbling Vireo
- Eastern Phoebe
- Purple Finch
- Turkey Vulture
- Kestrel
- Northern Flicker
- Brown Thrasher
- Cedar Waxwing
- Song Sparrow
- Blue Jay
- White-crowned Sparrow
- Black-capped Chickadee
- white-breasted Nuthatch
- Sandhill Crane (4)
- Northern Harrier
- Wild Turkey
- Wood Duck
- Common Goldeneye
- Ring-necked Duck
- Lesser Scaup
- Pied-billed Grebe
- Bufflehead
- Clay-coloured Sparrow (h)
- Broad-winged Hawk
- Mallard
- Common Raven
- Rock Pigeon
- Great Egret
- Melin
Critters Noted
- painted turtle
- chorus frog
- spring peeper
- groundhog
- river otter
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