Over Easter weekend at the east end of Algonquin Park just off hwy 60 I saw a 
mixed flock of at least two hundred and fifty small birds. The ratio was 
approximately 45% tree sparrows. 45% juncos and 10% fox sparrows.  I saw the 
same ratio of the same species at feeders at a house south west of Huntsville . 
There were about 100 birds feeding.
sylvia naylor
From [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Mon Apr 17 19:33:56 2006
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Date: Mon, 17 Apr 2006 19:33:38 -0400 (EDT)
From: RON FLEMING <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Pine Warblers, etc. - York Region
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Seeing your first warbler species of the year is always a treat, so I was very 
pleased to encounter several PINE WARBLERS singing on territory at the Hall 
Tract in Ballantrae this afternoon.  Two birds were singing from high in a pine 
tree (as they should, by rights) at the parking lot on McCowan Road north of 
Wellington Rd., while at least three others were too busy foraging to do much 
singing at all.  These latter three were much easier to see; they were in a 
shorter group of conifers (spruce?) that sits at the east end of the fields 
marked for reforestation (directly east of the junkyard).  There were also 
large numbers of Golden-crowned Kinglets, several N. Flickers and Brown 
Creepers, two drumming RUFFED GROUSE, two YELLOW-BELLIED SAPSUCKERS, and a 
PILEATED WOODPECKER in this area.  I also had my first butterfly of the spring: 
a Gray Comma.

  I hoped to see or hear Red-shouldered Hawks back on territory in this area 
but had no luck.  Still, I would be surprised if they are not back yet.  
Stephen Cluff, who lives further east in Goodwood (beyond York Region and into 
Durham) has had Red-shoulders back on his wooded property for almost three 
weeks now.

  Following St. John's Sdrd. west to Aurora, I stopped to check the McKenzie 
Marsh.
  There are still 30+ RING-NECKED DUCKS, 4 HOODED MERGANSERS, and about 10 
COMMON MERGANSERS lingering in the north pond, plus two PIED-BILLED GREBES that 
may well nest at this location.  I heard my first SWAMP SPARROWS of the spring 
singing from the cattails on the south side. Mary Carnahan reports that another 
PB Grebe has been hanging around the southernmost pond at Newmarket's Fairy 
Lake (right beside Mulock Dr.) for two weeks now.

  At the Cawthra Mulock nature reserve in NW Newmarket this morning the many GC 
Kinglets in attendance have been joined by an influx of their fiesty cousins, 
the RUBY-CROWNED KINGLETS.

  Ron Fleming, Newmarket

  The Hall Tract is east of the Newmarket/Aurora area, accessed most easily by 
taking Wellington Road east out of Aurora and following it to McCowan Road.  
Turn north and go past the first forest tract, then look for a new gravel 
parking lot (freshly fenced)on the east side of the road.  If you get out and 
see a junkyard on the south side of the lot, you are in the right place.

  To get to the McKenzie Marsh, go a km further north on McCowan and turn west 
at St. John's Sdrd.  This leads straight into Aurora; the marsh is just east of 
Yonge St.
  Newmarket and Aurora are halfway between Barrie and Toronto.


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Subject: [Ontbirds]Beamer Pt - April 15, 2006
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April 15, 2006 was an excellent day at Beamer Pt. The birds were low and in
good numbers and by the time I left (around 2:30 PM), 12 species of raptor
had been seen: red-tailed hawk, broad-winged hawk, red-shouldered-hawk,
merlin, american kestrel, peregrine falcon, osprey, sharp-shinned hawk,
coopers hawk and turkey vulture. 3 species of swallows were also seen as
well as a brown thrasher that was calling from around the park.



I managed to get good shots of red-tailed hawk, sharp-shinned hawk, osprey,
northern harrier, turkey vulture and broad-winged hawk. By luck, I also
managed to get 2 bad photos of a peregrine falcon and red-tailed hawk in the
air at the same time. All the photos can be seen at
http://www.giraud.com/latest.



Good Birding

Jacques Giraud


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