Visitors to the Viewing Day at Tiny Marsh on Saturday, April 16, were treated 
to a special visitor. A male PROTHONOTARY WARBLER was found on the dike trail 
along the drainage creek by RuthAnne Gale at about 11:30 a.m.  It remained in 
the area for at least 2 hours and was viewed by many of us at a range of 10-15 
meters.

The bird was feeding on insects on the dogwood shrubs and in small trees along 
the south bank, especially those over water in the drainage creek. 

Directions to Tiny Marsh Provincial Wildlife Area: (thanks to Ron Fleming for 
his post of April 14): 

Tiny Marsh is about a 20 minute drive northwest of Barrie and about 10 minutes 
east of Wasaga Beach. Exit Hwy. 400 at the Bayfield St. ramp in Barrie, then 
follow Bayfield northwest (left). Bayfield becomes County Road 27 (do not turn 
onto #26 west toward Stayner and Wasaga). Keep going north (straight). Take 27 
north through the village of Elmvale, cross the little Wye River, then look for 
Simcoe Road 6 and turn west (left). The road quickly angles northward through 
the hamlet of Saurin. Go a short distance to 1st Conc., which is the Tiny-Flos 
Townline (a sign on the left indicates the way toting Marsh). Turn west (left) 
on the unpaved townline road and go 3.5 km to either the first parking lot on 
the right or another half km to the Interpretive Centre parking lot.

>From the Interpretive Centre parking lot, cross the bridge toward the building 
>and turn right onto the dike trail and follow it about a half km east past the 
>next bridge. The bird was 40 paces east of that bridge along the drainage 
>creek on the right.

If you park in the first lot, just cross the bridge which leads to the main 
cross-marsh dike, but turn right immediately onto the dike trail.
From [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Sat Apr 16 18:31:52 2005
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From: "Bob Bowles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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The Prothonotary Warble found by Ruthann Gale this morning at Tiny Marsh was 
still at the same location at 5:30 this evening.  A number of us watched from 
the levee as it fed along the channel.  This is the 7th record for Simcoe 
County for this species and the first since June, 1974.

We have past the April 15th egg date and there are still 12 Great Gray Owls 
left in Simcoe County around Midland, Coldwater, Orillia, and Barrie.

Bob Bowles
Orillia, Ontario
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Hearst-sandhill cranes/winter wren/kinglets
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Gidday Folks!

With this warm beautiful weather continuing we have gone from winter to summer 
in just 2 weeks (yesterday it hit 19C). The snow has evaporated and the ice is 
out on many of the creeks and rivers and the lakes are not far behind. With no 
rain the water levels are presently down, and the dry conditions are starting 
to get the forest fire crews nervous. Right now we are about 2 weeks ahead of 
things, and the migrants are starting to sing their way back up to their 
favourite boreal forest nesting sites to feed on our always generous , and soon 
to awake, supply of black flies, and mosquitoes.

The raptors have been flying in regularly this week with Northern harriers, 
rough-leggeds, red tails and many American kestrels now cruising many of the 
abandoned farmfields we have in the Hearst and Kapuskasing area. Yesterday 
afternoon the first sandhill cranes arrived and last night a winter wren was 
heard calling behind my house along Kendall creek. This afternoon a ruby 
crowned and a golden crowned kinklet was heard in the same location , which is 
14 km. east of Hearst.

Hearst is a small french Canadian community of  6000 along the northern 
TransCanada Hwy. #11, 6 hours east of Thunder Bay and 6 hours north of North 
Bay.


Marc Johnson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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