Like most other locations in southern Ontario, the huge influx of migrants (hawks, vultures, swallows, passerines) contributed to the breaking of many one day and even seasonal highs at the 9 year old Port Burwell migration watch. Typically, this watch is held for about 3 or 4 hours over 6 Saturday or Sunday mornings for campers and for day visitors. Rather than list all the broken records here's some of the most interesting sightings from the last couple of days.

On Saturday around 3:30 p.m., a single COMMON RAVEN soared up in a kettle of Turkey Vultures but pealed off to the east rather than the west. This is likely the same bird reported at Hawk Cliff, some 30 km to the west, on Sunday. This is only the 5th record for Elgin County since 1954 and the first for us in 20 some years of hawk watching. The 4 fall records are October 9, 15, 17 and 22 and are of birds travelling with crows or vultures.

On Sunday about 12:30 p.m., a beautiful, crisply plumaged dark-morphed adult Red-tailed Hawk soared over us with several other redtails for almost 10 minutes providing us with great looks including a bright rufous tail. Hopefully it was seen at Hawk Cliff an hour or so later so we can compare elapsed time.

Sunday's 29 Bald Eagles shattered our previous 1 day high of 8. Somewhat surprisingly to us only 8 or so of these were full adults (5+ years). There were at least 6 fourth year birds (dusky white head, some with smudgy line, black band on white tail) but no 3rd year birds, the "white-bellied" bird. At 12:15 a 1 year old Bald Eagle circling low over us was joined by a subadult Golden Eagle providing at least 20 watchers with the spectacle of their life. Many of the people who come to our migration watches have never seen a Bald Eagle, let alone kettles of 4 or 5 birds, let alone 20 + birds over 3 hours , let alone a Bald and Golden soaring together low over head! Hopefully, there will be a few converts to hawk watching among this crowd.

In the afternoon we decided to search the sparsely vegetated dunes in the park for "rare" sparrows. We had two surprises. First, we flushed a Wilson's Snipe from the driest, barest part of the dunes where it had been hidden below a mini Scots Pine. Meanwhile there are dozens of wet interdunal meadows nearby where one would most expect to flush a snipe. And, instead of flushing many sparrows (only 1 or 2 each of Lincoln's, Song, Savannah) we flushed at least 25 Palm Warblers from the weedy foredunes and waste areas.

The Port Burwell Provincial Park migration watches are finished for this season as the park closes October 10. The park is located on the west side of Big Otter Creek in Port Burwell in southeastern Elgin County about 20 minutes south of Tilsonburg on Hwy 19 (Plank Road).

Dave Martin, Linda Wladarski, Ross Snider
Harrietsville and Ingersoll
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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