November 28, 2024
Thursday, November 28, 2024
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Presqu'ile Park Search for Purple Sandpipers with Jon Ruddy & JC Birding
November 24, 2024
Birding Report by Jane Burgess
Bill and Barbara met Eleanor and I
had my place at 5:45 (so early). We were joining Jon Ruddy's group at
Presqu'ile Park at 9:00. The traffic was very light on the 416 and 401,
no big trucks at all. On the way Bill was telling us that he put his
rubber boots into the back of his SUV on Friday, but on Saturday he was
putting something into the back and noticed one of his boots had a crack
in it so he took it out and glued it back together. I had to buy new
rubber boots because I did not think my existing boots were high enough,
I just did not want to get my feet wet. Bill and I also brought along
walking sticks, neither of us were interested in falling down in cold
water. We all brought winter coats and rain pants. Barbara came along
but she just was not interested in going to Gull Island, last time she
went, the water got over her boots and she had cold wet feet, so she
decided to walk around the area and take photos.
We
arrived early around 8:30. Jon arrived next and the two other
participants shortly thereafter. We had changed into our warm clothes,
around the water it could be just darn cold. Jon suggested that we leave
our wind pants outside of our boots, I opted not to because my rubber
boots could be tightened at the knee, no water was getting into my
boots.
We walked to the point and the first
bird we saw was a juvenile Herring Gull, then a couple of Red-breasted
Mergansers, one with a broken bill. Someone asked about hunting -- Monday, Wednesday, Friday
and Saturday are set aside for hunting. Good no one will be shooting. I
had asked Jon if I could use his arm as we crossed the water, the water
was not deep and there wasn't much of a water crossing -- a couple of
minutes of walking at the most. Once on land we scanned the lake --
Long-tail Ducks far away. Walked some more and looked through the
scope to see a Snowy Owl on a small island far away, but we would see
much better views as we moved further onto the island. We saw a small
flock of Mute Swans which Jon later changed to Tundra Swans.
At this point Bill indicated his boot had a malfunction, the other boot had started to leak. Must have been cold on his feet.
Jon
decided to check out the east side first. We saw several Rough-legged
Hawks, Red-tail Hawk and Cooper's Hawk on the next island, High Bluff.
As we walked further down the island Rosanne, one of the participants,
spotted some shorebirds. Jon said "Dunlin", they were among the
Ring-billed Gulls. Eleanor took a look through the scope and she
muttered to herself looks like a Sanderling to me. It turned out there
were two shorebirds, Jon had not seen the Sanderling initially. In the
distance we saw a small flock of Snow Buntings, then minutes later we
saw a huge flock of them.
Time to check out the
other side of the island, Jon did not cross the island because of the
potential for ticks. As we walked to the other side I asked John why so
many dead birds -- Gull, Cormorant and Terns' remains were all over the
place. There was no smell to them, it was late in the season and
they had washed ashore was the answer. The middle of the island had a
lot of mallow growing, we came along a tomato plant with many little red
tomatoes as well we saw flowering wild asters. On a sandbar we saw a
Great Black-backed Gull amongst the Herring Gulls. There was also
another Dunlin spotted. From where we were we had good views of the
Snowy Owl. We also saw White-winged Scoter, Common Goldeneye, Horned
Grebe and Bufflehead.
Walking back Jon spotted
a Peregrine Falcon and lucky for us it landed on the beach, then it
flew and came back to the same spot on the beach. We met up with
Barbara who was waiting for us in a duck blind. We checked out the
beach but just Canada Geese. On the walk back to the vehicles we did
see a small mixed flock of Black-capped Chickadees and Golden-crowned
Kinglets. A bit further down the trail, Jon had spotted a Wood Frog.
Now these frogs are different. They have adapted to cold climates by
freezing, over the winter. During this time they stop breathing and
their heart stops beating. The bodies produce a special antifreeze
substance that prevents ice from freezing within their cells. Nature is
simply amazing. Oh another interesting factoid about this frog, it
quacks like a mallard duck!!! Back at the vehicles, we decided it was
time for lunch, since we did have quite an early start. We drove a short way down Lighthouse Lane to a picnic spot with a view of the lake. Imagine, an outdoor picnic at the end of November!
So we were hoping for Purple Sandpiper sadly no Purple Sandpiper for this outing.
After
lunch we drove to the lighthouse, no new water fowl, but we did see
more Chickadees, a Brown Creeper, Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers,
White-breasted Nuthatch and American Goldfinch. We walked over to Fred
Helleiner's place and there we saw Mourning Dove and we spoke to Fred briefly.
Good to see him. Back at the vehicles, for one more stop at Beach 1 with no new species noted. Jon indicated the day trip was
over with him. We took off our warm clothes for the trip back to Ottawa
. Before Jon left we got the coordinates of Mac Johnson Wildlife Area
in Brockville.
We got to Mac Johnson around
4ish, we were hoping to see the Eurasian Wigeon. When we got out of the
vehicle, the weather had gotten a bit colder and windier. Eleanor set
up the scope and she found American Wigeon (lots of them), Northern
Pintail, Northern Shoveler, Hooded Merganser and a Muskrat. We did not
stay very long, the lighting was poor. We decided that the next outing
would be back to the area, for a more concentrated search of the
Eurasian Wigeon with more scopes. The couple that had joined us at
Presqu'ile told us it took them 1 1/2 hours to find the one Eurasian
Wigeon.
It was getting dark, time to head home.
37 species, not bad for end of November birding.
Species Noted
- Rough-legged Hawk
- Red-tailed Hawk
- Cooper's hawk
- Peregrine Falcon
- Herring Gull
- Ring-billed Gull
- Greater Black-backed Gull
- Long-tailed Duck
- Sanderling
- Dunlin
- Snow Buntings
- Common Goldeneye
- Bufflehead
- White-wing Scoter
- Horned Grebe
- Red-breasted Merganser
- Canada Goose
- Mallard
- Black Duck
- Snowy Owl
- Black-capped Chickadee
- Golden-crowned Kinglet
- Tundra Swan
- American Crow
- Greater Scaup
- Downy Woodpecker
- Hairy Woodpecker
- Brown Creeper
- White-breastrd Nuthatch
- American Goldfinch
- Mourning Dove
- European Starling
- Rock Pigeon
- American Wigeon
- Northern Pintail
- Northern Shoveler
- Hooded Merganser
Critters Noted
- Wood Frog
- Eastern Gray Squirrel
- Muskrat
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Fletcher to Shirley's Bay and Beyond with JC Birding
November 19, 2024
Birding Report by Jane Burgess
I met Barbara and Bill at their
place and we arrived at 8:20 at Fletcher Garden. Would you believe it,
it took almost an hour to get to Fletchers, the traffic down Baseline
was crazy busy and then there was construction on Prince of Wales. When
we got there Carole, Alan and Eleanor reported that they had seen the
Barred Owl, Northern Cardinal, Dark-eyed Junco, Downy Woodpecker,
White-breasted Nuthatch and Black-capped Chickadee.
kljkldjlfdjipafsdjiopfs darn traffic. Oh yes and Eleanor heard a
Cackling Goose. We wandered over to the wildlife garden and checked the
trees, and Eleanor found the Barred Owl high up in one of the
evergreens. We walked over to the back feeder, splitting up because
Carole and Eleanor were worried about getting a parking ticket. My
group saw a couple of American Goldfinch and Black-capped Chickadees and
the other group saw House Finch.
We drove over
to the Experimental Farm parking lot, got out our scopes and walked to
Dows Lake. It was a good idea to go there - Barrow's Goldeneye, Common
Goldeneye, Hooded Merganser, Common Merganser, Black Duck and Mallard.
Eleanor checked discord and she said a Yellow-throated Warbler is at
Dick Bell. Rare bird. We should pack up and go and so we did.
We
parked at Dick Bell and it was super easy to find the bird -- a whole
lot of people on the north side of the park leading to the lighthouse.
It was a new bird for Eleanor and she was already checking out the bird
when we arrived, The Yellow-throated Warbler was on the water side of
the pathway, it was foraging very low, almost ground level. Then it
would disappear and reappear but always stay pretty low. To me, it looks
pretty similar to an Audubon's Yellow-rumped Warbler. It is found in the US. A
Yellow-throated Warbler last seen in Ottawa was in the 2005. So we were
pretty lucky to see it. It stuck around until 11:00 flew west and was
not relocated.
While we were a Dick Bell,
someone mentioned a Snowy Owl and I looked through a scope to see a
white dot. So we drove over to Shirley's Bay. We could see it easily
seei its head move and we could see that it was a juvenile. Yes we saw
the Snowy, but it was far far near the tip of Innes Point. We also saw
Bufflehead, Common Loon and a Great Black-backed Gull.
We
double-backed to Andrew Haydon, of course Canada Geese, one Common
Merganser, a mixed flock of Lesser and Greater Scaup. In the Pond were
about 10 or 12 American Wigeons. Carole thought the Merganser was
Red-breasted but then changed her mind. Bill thought the same thing but
when he got home and had a better look, yes Red-breasted Merganser.
After
lunch we drove to Carleton Place Storm Pond, more Canada Geese and a
small flock of Green-winged Teal. There were two of them swimming
amongst the Canada Geese, the Teal looked so tiny compared to the
Geese. We checked out the boat launch where we saw more Bufflehead,
Mallards and Canada Geese. We drove west to check out the water there
and saw nothing on the water.
Driving to
Almonte Lagoons, we saw a Blue Jay and at the lagoons, we saw 1000s of
Canada Geese. Walking down the path to the hide, there was some snow
dumped to the left of the path, strange, I am assuming the hockey rink
people put it there. When we got to the hide, Bill said surely there
must be Teal, we looked and looked and nothing but Canadas. Bill
thought he saw a Cackling Goose, Eleanor had left us and we needed her
sharp eye. Then a duck swam out from the reeds and took off flying, we
followed it with our bins and when it landed put the scopes on it --
Green-wing Teal. Just outside the hide, two Blue Jays made their
presence known and we saw a single Black-capped Chickadee.
Time
to go home. We felt very good about the day, getting some good birds
and getting one fantastic bird and the day was just beautiful for
November.
Species Seen
- Wild Turkey
- American Crow
- Rock Pigeon
- European Starling
- Ring-billed Gull
- Canada Goose
- Barred Owl
- Northern Cardinal
- Cackling Goose
- Dark-eyed Junco
- Downy Woodpecker
- White-breasted Nuthatch
- Black-capped Chickadee
- House Finch
- American Goldfinch
- Common Raven
- Barrow's Goldeneye
- Common Goldeneye
- Hooded Merganser
- Common Merganser
- Mallard
- Black Duck
- Yellow-throated Warbler
- Snowy Owl
- Bufflehead
- Great Black-backed Gull
- Common Loon
- Lesser Scaup
- Greater Scaup
- Red-breasted Merganser
- American Wigeon
- Green-winged Teal
- Blue Jay
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