On Thursday, Jun 1st, 2006, this is the HNC birding report:

BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER
WHITE-RUMPED SANDPIPER
SANDERLING
OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER
YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO
ACADIAN FLYCATCHER
ALDER FLYCATCHER

Great Egret
Broad-winged Hawk
Semipalmated Plover
Spotted Sandpiper
Sanderling
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Least Sandpiper
Dunlin
Black Tern
Black-billed Cuckoo
Eastern Wood-Pewee
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
Great Crested Flycatcher
Red-eyed Vireo
Common Raven
Gray-cheeked Thrush
Wood Thrush
Blue-winged Warbler
Golden-winged Warbler
Lawrence's Warbler
Brewster's Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Pine Warbler
Bay-breasted Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
American Redstart
Louisiana Waterthrush
Mourning Warbler
Eastern Towhee
Indigo Bunting


The list a little shorter this week as extreme heat and the end of migration
means a quiet landscape for birding.

Last Friday, a foggy/rainy day was a good day for birding in the Hamilton
Study Area.  At Bronte Harbour, a Black-bellied Plover and a Black Tern both
sat on the pier on the west side of the Bronte River down at Bronte Harbour.
The Cliff Swallow colony is active and thriving at the restaurant at Bronte
Harbour.

At Rattray Marsh, several Great Egrets along with Semipalmated Plover,
Semipalmated, Least, and Spotted Sandpiper and many Dunlin made for an
interesting shorebird afternoon.

Other shorebird reports include a sizeable flock of SANDERLING flying around
Canada Centre for Inland Waters in Burlington and a few WHITE-RUMPED
SANDPIPERS seen at Smithville Sewage Lagoons in Smithville.

Also along the lakeshore, Shell Park in Oakville has reported late migrants
and some stragglers such as YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO, (along the pipeline near
Rebecca Street), Eastern Wood Pewee, Great Crested, Yellow-bellied and ALDER
FLYCATCHER, many Red-eyed Vireos, Gray-cheeked Thrush, Wood Thrush,
Bay-breasted, Blackpoll, Mourning Warbler and American Redstart.

Today at Kerncliffe Park, located off of Kerns Road in north Burlington,
both species of cuckoo were heard with Yellow-billed Cuckoo being seen along
with Great Crested Flycatcher, Eastern Towhee and Indigo Bunting.

This weeks jewel spot has been the Dundas Valley Conservation Area, a vast
area which in my opinion has been under birded. This weeks reports produced
Louisiana Waterthrush on the Beckett Trail and near the Merrick Orchard,
Hooded Warbler from the Artaban Lookout, a Pine Warbler was beautifully
photographed today near the trail centre off of Governors Road, Mourning
Warbler at the parking lot of Lions Club Road and at the intersection of the
rail trail and Mineral Springs, Acadian Flycatcher on the far west end of
the Sawmill Trail, Olive-sided Flycatcher at the north end of the Beckett
Trail parking lot, Broad-winged Hawk over the trail centre off of Governors
Road, and Common Raven over Martins Road.  Again this week, sightings of
Golden-winged warbler 100 ft east of the 7km mark on the Rail trail,
Brewster's Warbler near the southwest corner of the grassy area just west of
the trail centre, blue winged warblers which were numerous and Lawrence's
Warbler on the loop trail gave an insight into how complicated the
interbreeding of these two species can be.  The Dundas Valley contains many
different habitats and is well worth hiking in.  The trail centre with
available maps is located off of Governors Road in Dundas.

Our three peregrine chicks are doing well at the Sheraton Hotel.  Be sure to
view them on the webcam at Http://www.hamiltonnature.org/hamfalcam.html

That's the scoop for the week, cooler temperatures and another push of late
migrants look promising in the next few days.  Don't forget to report your
sightings!!!

Good Birding,
Cheryl Edgecombe
HNC Hotline
905-381-0329







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