No concert in Roy Thompson Hall can rival the one heard in Algoma 
beginning each evening near dusk.

>From our campsite beside a logging road just west of Hwy. 553 
(approximately 25 km north of Massey, ON), spring peepers begin the 
show, while Sandhill Cranes croak loudly from all directions. After 
their first (barely audible) sweet twitterings, Woodcocks take to the 
air with a fluttering flight to perform the evening's "sky dance", 
plummeting earthward to end the performance with a chorus of loud 
"peents". The presence of humans does not cramp their style. They 
freely land and make their calls mere feet from your standing place. 
Ruffed Grouse add to the cacophony with a staccato rhythm of 
low-pitched drum beats.

If you are unable to visit Algoma or other areas where Woodcocks are 
active in the spring, try reading Aldo Leopold's account of their  "sky 
dance" in his masterpiece of nature writing, "A Sand County Almanac".

Sandra and Bob Hawkins

 
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Extremely early Rose-breasted Grosbeak
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Minutes ago, my father observed an extremely early male Rose-breasted Grosbeak 
behind our home in Pine Point Park.

Pine Point Park is most easily accessed from the foot of Allenby Ave., which is 
the first street east off Islington Ave. immediately north of Hwy 401 in 
Etobicoke.

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