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?
Day 2 - 2 rarities and one semi-rare and 56 species seen. We next headed to Brampton for a Ross's Goose and then Colonel Sam Smith Park in Toronto for a King Eider and an Eared Grebe. Got 2 of the 3 as the Eared Grebe has not been seen for a few days.
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.
We tried for the Pacific Loon and Western Grebe in Hamilton twice more this week and did I mention it was cold? LOL. Both of us felt we saw the loon in very rough water for seconds but just not good enough looks for us to be 100% confident that is what we saw. There is also a Red-throated Loon being seen and they are similar enough at long distances to us that we want to be sure of what we have seen. We even had some time to spend a few hours with our grandkids feeding the birds at LaSalle.
Saturday we decided after 6 days driving and birding we needed a day off. We still added 2 common species, one at our feeder and the other at a boardwalk nearby, a Tufted Titmouse (that is a bird not a mouse). The last day of the week we headed into Hamilton again ever hopeful for calm water and IT WAS! LIKE GLASS! Within minutes we had great looks at what was definitely a Western Grebe and close enough to even get pictures. We managed to see a Red-throated Loon but quite a distance out and then on the advice of another birder we headed into Hamilton to look for the Loon from further along the bay. The Pacific Loon was THERE! We have tried multiple times for this bird so it was great to finally catch up with it and we still had a couple of hours before Benson's hockey game so we chased down a very out of season Orange-crowned Warbler at Princess Point. Both Jerry and I saw it at different times as it flew across the tops of the grass but did not get great views. Oh and Jerry saw a Brown Creeper that I did not so we end week one with HIM AHEAD OF ME BY ONE BIRD!!! I'll get a Creeper in the next day or so but SHEESH! LOL. Still, a triumphant end to a long, very cold and windy week.
Great start, Ellen. At least you dipped only once with the Western Tanager. We missed it THREE times when we squeezed in looks between family visits
ReplyDeleteIt has been a challenge for most - we met someone who was there for her 6th visit! We may try again when we do our algonquin trip - if is survives the coming cold.
Delete