With a lot of walking and quite a bit of luck, Hugh Currie, Richard Pope, and I 
managed to find most of the Algonquin specialities this weekend, but it took 
from noon Friday, Jan 19th  to noon Sunday, Jan 21st to do so.

2 female Ruffed Grouse - 1 right beside the road
1 male Spruce Grouse - 15m up in a mature spruce beside the Spruce Bog trail, 
200m north of the causeway over the bog - our last find on Sunday
N. Saw-whet Owl calling north of the gate on the Opeongo Road - Saturday - 
heard by Hugh only.
1 male Am. Three-toed Woodpecker right behind the washrooms at the Spruce Bog 
parking lot - stellar views at head height and 3m distance - our second-last 
find on Sunday morning. Many km travelled looking for this bird and then it 
just appeared! NO other birders to show it to!
1 female Black-backed Woodpecker just north of the gate on Opeongo Road on 
Saturday.
Gray Jays, Red-breasted Nuthatches - numerous
1 Boreal Chickadee just north of the Opeongo Road gate Saturday, just south of 
the gate Sunday - probably the same bird, with a small group of Black-cappeds.
10+ Purple Finches at the Visitor Centre feeders and a few other spots
Red Crossbills - numerous and widespread, a few at Vistor Centre feeders
White-winged Crossbills - large numbers everywhere, singing beautifully
redpolls - one small flock of 15 birds south edge of  bog at Spruce Bog Trail 
on Friday only - not found again
Pine Siskins - numerous and vocal, many at Visitor Centre feeders
Evening Grosbeaks - huge flock, 80-100, at Visitor Centre feeders - these 
feeders were definitely most active fairly early in the morning.

No Great Gray Owl, no Pine Grosbeaks, but we could hardly complain!

Margaret Bain
Cobourg
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Niagara River Gulls
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A cold day on the river brought in a good number of gulls and light winds
made for reasonable comfort.  At the power plants from the Adam Beck
overlook, we had one first-basic BLACK-LEGGED KITTIWAKE, one immature
GLAUCOUS GULL, second-basic and adult THAYER'S GULLS, and about five ICELAND
GULLS.

On the breakwall below the control gates, were four LESSER BLACK-BACKED
GULLS (one first-year), a couple ICELANDS, and three GLAUCOUS GULLS.
Between there and the falls were four more ICELAND, two more GLAUCOUS, and
2-3 more LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULLS.  No sign of the California Gull that Jim
Pawlicki found above the falls yesterday nor of the bird at the power
plants.

Good birding!
Willie
----------------
Willie D'Anna
Betsy Potter
Wilson, NY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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