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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 in flocks of hundreds but their may only be 1-2 Lapland Longspurs around at the same time. Luckily they had both been reported 30 mins from home and we got both species fairly quickly. We stopped at a spot known for nesting Great Horned Owls and did not see them but added a couple more common species. 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 away down the path and Jerry found a Green-wing 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 1 bird.
On Thursday we took our first trip north and drove through snow squalls at Bracebridge that turned to light fluffy flurries in Algonquin. The temperature was -9 when we arrived at noon and it made for a magical winter wonderland walking through Spruce Bog Trail. There were a few species of birds around but not as many as we had anticipated, I think the snow kept some birds tucked away. We both added our 100th birds in Algonquin - for Jerry it was Common Redpoll and for me it was Evening Grosbeak!
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
Just a quick note about the Bird List on the blog: This is my list of birds seen, Jerry and I already have a few different birds seen as we are not always joined at the hip! Hopefully, it will all work out as the year goes and we will end up with the same number unless one of those misses is a rarity. Birds with the asterisk are the rarities. HO means heard only and those will be taken off as we get other sightings where we see the bird.
I'm also working on the photo gallery for all the pics of the birds we have seen and will add better photos as we get them. White-out conditions, overcast days do not make for the best photography. I'll add that gallery in the next week or so. It's taking some time to set up.
January 8, 5:00am the alarm went off and we are out of bed and the house by 5:33. The Limpkin, a species rarely seen north of Florida was re-found in Wheatley Provincial Park after not being seen since December 26. A birder used a thermal imaging scope to find it Jan 7 late in the day and this is one of those mega-rarities that everyone wants for their Big Years. We were the first to arrive and did not see it in the creek by the road and were not sure how far to walk in - we didn't want to flush the bird, but within minutes birders arrived and Rick (from Pelee) quickly showed us where it had been when he saw it the night before and THERE IT WAS!
It looked in pretty good shape and after a few minutes to take some pics and video we left it, not wanting to over stress it. There were bound to be more birders arriving all day to see this mega rarity. A fantastic start to Week 2! The rest of the week slowed down with Jerry having some minor surgery and some nasty weather keeping us close to home for a few days. We managed to add 14 more species this week including our first two owls, a Short-eared Owl seen at dusk hunting a field in Haldimand County, and a Long-eared Owl on a private site in Brant County.Week 2 1 rarity, 2 owl species, 14 species added 91(E) 91(J) species seen
UPDATE! On Sunday January 14 a few people captured the Limpkin and took it to a Wildlife Rehab. There are mixed opinions, those birders that believe in "nature taking its course" and those birders that believe we should try to "save" everything. It was no doubt in stress with the extreme cold and its food source (snails) frozen over and would have likely perished in the next day or so but it likely faces a stressful rehab of trying to be force fed and end up having to be euthanized in care. No easy answers...I'll keep you posted if I hear more.
Finally! It has begun...The goal for the first week was to chase any and all rarities. For the last month I have been following rarities in the province and hoping that some of them would remain into the New Year. Most rarities at this time of year end up perishing when snow and cold arrive but the milder weather has meant a few have managed to stick around. We ended up deciding to start our year in Ottawa trying for a Western Tanager that has been here since Dec 15. Then try for 4 other rarities along the route home. The best twitching strategy is to be at the spot at first light. Except the bird wasn't, and after 2 1/2 hrs standing in the cold we decided to try for the rest of the rarities. The bird showed up 40 minutes later! Lesson learned - leave more time and stick it out until the bird shows or it gets dark. LOL. We also dipped (missed) our second rarity but knew of a second bird at Pelee so didn't waste too much time but by then we only had time to stop for one more before dark. At 4:30, with light fading fast and a run/walk down a 2km beach on Lake Ontario I saw a Barrow's Goldeneye in the scope. There was much frivolity! Well, a high five and a frozen smile! Did I mention it was cold?
The following day found us at the London Landfill where we played one of these things is not like the other 2,000 and really thought we had found the one Slaty-backed Gull among all those gulls. Maybe lack of sleep, covid, or just our inexperience led us to celebrate instead of grabbing a scope and really looking at the distant gull because once the ebird reviewer looked at our pics he gave us the thumbs down. Ugggg! Classic newbie mistake! We have promised each other that going forward when we think we have a rarity one of us will say the code word "Slaty" to remind ourselves to check and double check and check again.
Normally we would start the new year on Lake Ontario ticking all the wintering ducks but this year we stuck in Brant County and tried to see all the wintering birds we could. By the end of February we had 70 species, including sightings and pictures of Long-eared, Barred, and Eastern Screech Owls, all seen in an eight day period.
And to be clear, we didn't find the birds, we were told and shown where they were by other birders. You always will depend on the kindness of other birders to help you out, even if you are actively competing with each other. The birders in Brant always help each other even while we battle for those top spots.Our 100th species came on April 5, a Vesper Sparrow freshly arrived from the South to set up nesting for the summer. We took two weeks to head to Florida the end of April to mop up some birds we missed on previous trips. May is the height of migration and the birds arrive fast and furious, despite still spending some time at Pelee we managed to be at 184 by the end of May.
The birding slows in the summer, nesting birds are quieter, migration is over, the heat of July means quiet forests. We added only 6 birds in June AND July. August usually brings the shorebirds but this summer was wet and lots of rain meant the ponds that are normally almost dry for the shorebirds still had high water and so only 4 birds were added in August as the usual shorebirds passed by Brant County. Highlights from the summer were a very rare Henslow's Sparrow singing in a Conservation area close by. Only a few birders were made aware of this bird so as not to disturb it. A quick evening chase after a text from a fellow birder netted us a Black Tern, seen for only a few minutes before it faded away into the twilight.
By August I had a list of the possible species I could still get and we started to focus on those birds, a few I had missed in the spring and a few would arrive through Fall migration. We were trying to bird every day for at least a few hours. I was at 194 after the Black Tern. Only 6 to go. The first two weeks of September yielded 5 more and suddenly I was at 199. I knew there were still many more possible species I would see, but what bird would be 200? On September 27 we headed to Brant Waterworks Park, a lovely trail system that takes hours to loop the 8kms. And there it was way back off the trail but totally identifiable - Blue-headed Vireo! Number 200 and, as it happens, one of my favourite species. Jerry could not get a picture but this is a Blue-headed Vireo from another sighting.
Fifteen minutes later Jerry spotted something in the underbrush, had his camera up and he said, Gray-cheeked Thrush. It was the other bird I was hoping to get, I quickly got bins on the area and saw movement after a bit but it was a Swainson's Thrush. These two species are not an easy ID. When we first started birding we spent hours agonizing over which was which. We are much better now and more confident and Jerry is sure he had a Gray-cheeked. I spent many minutes, sifting through numerous birds, there was one that was a possibility but I could not be sure with the bird staying in the shadows. Suddenly we were back in the same situation as last year, despite being his shadow, he was ahead of me by 1 bird, AGAIN. But this time, I was not bothered(as much), I had my 200 birds!
This is where the honour system in birding plays a role. I could have just added Gray-cheeked too, I was standing right beside him, but I really didn't see it. Each birder has to decide what they are comfortable doing or allowing on their list. I want to see the bird, hopefully enough to ID what it was, or hear it and recognize the song. If I had seen the bird fly away and Jerry said that was a Gray-cheeked I would have probably added it, but not seeing which bird he had seen meant I was not going to add it. Jerry and I birding together is a double-check for most things we see. We can question each other and we still, both of us, get excited and make wrong ID's but usually with two people the chances are less.
I added another 5 birds in October and one nice rarity, a White-winged Crossbill in November moving the needle to 206 for me and 207 for Jerry. Now there were less possibilities left as November moved to December. I missed a Golden Eagle during their migration, I missed a rare Red Phalarope, kept dipping (missing) on a Northern Shrike although we checked out numerous ebird sightings of them and drove areas multiple times where we have seen them in the past. December 17 and not a bird had been added since November 5. A birding slump I hoped would not continue into the new year.
A Christmas Miracle occurred and the slump was broken when we added Red Crossbill to our lists on Christmas morning. It was our 3rd attempt to see the birds, a rarity from the boreal forests north of us. There were about 20 calling and feeding in the spruce trees at a small Conservation spot just around the corner from home so we did not even have to travel far. Exciting and the slump was over!
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Ovenbird |
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Eastern Screech Owl |
You would think that if I can get 300 in Ontario then 400 across all of Canada should be easy but the larger the geographic area the harder to physically get to the birds. Plus, the birds you need, inevitably, are seen in the other provinces at the same time so you have to make decisions about when to hit spring migration in BC without missing too much of spring migration in Ontario. I'm also not planning on getting on planes to chase a rare bird in BC only to hear of another out in Newfoundland so 400 will be a real challenge with just driving across Canada to the east and west. In Canada, 530 species are usually seen and in most years only 1-4 people manage to cross the 400 mark. Currently an astonishing new record is being set by Bruce DiLabio with 480 species seen this year and he is the only birder over 400. The previous record was 457! It's a vast territory to cover and will be the most challenging year for sure.
My previous best numbers for these three locations happened in 2022 because we travelled out west and birded along the way.
Brant County 199 species
Ontario 285 species
Canada 370 species
See, I've been close, 200,300,400 are completely doable with lots of planning and good birding karma coming back to us.
Stay tuned...we start January 1!
I have moved!!! Please go to theovenbirdblog.com for my newest posts.