Although cold temps had firmed up the muddy surface of Hochreiter Road (east of 
Bradford/west of Holland Landing) enough to make it driveable this morning, a 
skin of ice 
  on the flooded fields apparently prompted last weekend's visiting waterfowl 
to search for open water elsewhere.  Only about 50 N. PINTAIL out of a group 
that exceeded 300 on Sunday afternoon were present today and ALL of the swans 
from last week (approx. 40 Tundras and 3 Trumpeters) were gone.  This left only 
four GW TEAL, a pair of BUFFLEHEAD, and four BLACK DUCKS to find open water not 
claimed by the ubiquitous Mallards and Canada Geese.  Warmer temps and spring 
rains may once again set the stage for migrant waterfowl in the weeks ahead, 
but today the duck show on Hochreiter was quiet.
   
  Still, the sun was bright, the sky was blue, and a male RED-BELLIED 
WOODPECKER gave me an adrenalin jolt by "kwirring" loudly from a tree near the 
roadside, then flying to an even closer perch to grant me better views.  This 
species is not rare here, but it is not an everyday sight.  It is the first I 
have seen since last autumn.  
   
  Despite the morning chill, most of the ice in the Holland Landing lagoons 
turned out to be melted and there were some waterfowl swimming in the first two 
cells: WOOD DUCK (6), RING-NECKED DUCK (2), COMMON MERGANSER (2), HOODED 
MERGANSER (2), and - of course - several more Mallards and Canadas.  In the 
trees west of the ponds there was one very vocal PILEATED WOODPECKER and one 
drumming YELLOW-BELLIED SAPSUCKER (my first of the spring).  Two BROWN CREEPERS 
were singing their high, sweet songs from the flooded hardwood bush on the 
north side.
   
  Northeast of this location by 3 or 4 kms, the 2nd Concession (Main Street out 
of Newmarket) also held some good spring arrivals north of the Queensville 
Sdrd.: TREE SWALLOW (1), NORTHERN FLICKER (2), NORTHERN HARRIER (1 male), 
AMERICAN KESTREL (1 female spooking the Killdeer on the sod fields), and a 
COOPER'S HAWK doing a display flight above the distant trees to the west 
(scoped, of course).
   
  The MacKenzie Marsh in north-central Aurora was also largely free of ice 
today.  Several ducks were there including three pairs of Ring-necks, a pair of 
Hooded Mergs, and a pair of Common Mergs.  The Cawthra Mulock reserve continues 
to host some transient GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLETS while Eastern Phoebes were 
proclaiming territory in three different places.  I almost stepped on an 
AMERICAN WOODCOCK in the woods near the orchard.  Turkey Vultures continue to 
tilt their way across the sky across York region, clearing flight paths for the 
Broad-wings, Osprey, and other hawks still to come.
   
  Ron Fleming, Newmarket
   
  Newmarket is halfway between Toronto and Barrie.
   
   
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Subject: [Ontbirds]
        Hamilton Naturalists Club Birding Report - Thursday, March 29th,
        2007
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On Thursday, March 29th, 2007 this is the HNC birding report:

OSPREY
CASPIAN TERN
YELLOW-BELLIED SAPSUCKER
EASTERN PHOEBE
TREE SWALLOW
CHIPPING SPARROW
FIELD SPARROW

Snow Goose
Cackling Goose
Tundra Swan
Wood Duck
American Wigeon
Northern Shoveler
Northern Pintail
Green-winged Teal
Harlequin Duck
Wild Turkey
Horned Grebe
Turkey Vulture
Bald Eagle
Northern Harrier
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Cooper's Hawk
Northern Goshawk
Red-shouldered Hawk
Red-tailed Hawk
Rough-legged Hawk
American Kestrel
Peregrine Falcon
American Woodcock
Sandhill Crane
Iceland Gull
Lesser Black-backed Gull
Long-eared Owl
Northern Saw-whet Owl
Northern Shrike
Tufted Titmouse
Brown Creeper
Golden-crowned Kinglet
Eastern Bluebird
Hermit Thrush
Eastern Meadowlark
Rusty Blackbird
Purple Finch


What a great time of year, migrants are appearing daily here in the HSA!

Among the new migrants appearing this week, the Niagara Peninsula Hawkwatch
at Beamer Conservation Area recorded its first OSPREY on Monday.  Other
raptors seen in the week were numerous Turkey Vultures, Bald Eagles,
Northern Harrier, Sharp-shinned Hawk, Cooper's Hawk, Northern Goshawk,
Red-shouldered Hawk, Red-tailed Hawk, Rough-legged Hawk and American
Kestrel.  Last Friday was a banner day with over 1500 raptors passing
through.  Of course there are other birds passing overhead with SNOW GOOSE,
Wood Duck, EASTERN PHOEBE, YELLOW-BELLIED SAPSUCKER and Eastern Bluebird all
being seen this week.

Nearby at the area known as Saltfleet, Eastern Meadowlarks have returned to
their old haunt on 10th Road East south of Ridge Road.  A Northern Shrike is
also still lurking about on 10th Road East ready to move north soon.  On the
next road over 8th Road East a flooded field provided an excellent venue for
duck identification last Saturday.   In between the corn stalks were
hundreds of Canada Geese along with Northern Pintail, Northern Shoveler,
Wood Duck, Green-winged Teal and American Wigeon mixed in.  When the birds
took to air there were hundreds of waterfowl filling the skies!  Wild Turkey
also seem to be flourishing here with a number of mid-sized flocks being
seen at various points from 1st Road West to 8th Road East on the mountain.
A group of 15 - 20 were seen on 1st Road West along with a Northern Shrike.

The earliest record of CASPIAN TERN was recorded this week with a single
bird being seen on Wednesday in front of Canada Centre for Inland Waters.
Other birds seen here were a first year Iceland Gull and a first year Lesser
Black-backed Gull. The number of Ring-billed Gulls and Double-crested
Cormorants continues to grow at and astounding rate out here. A number of
American Wigeon (52) were present on the harbour last Monday.  Many reports
of Tundra Swans have also come in this week from various places on the bay
and the lake.

A couple of other good early migrants to report this week.  TREE SWALLOWS
were seen on Kirkwall Road and at Merrick Orchard in the Dundas Valley. An
early record of FIELD SPARROW was noted at the Jerseyville Rail Trail and a
CHIPPING SPARROW was reported in the Dundas area at a feeder.

As predicted, American Woodcock numbers have increased this week with birds
being heard at the orchard at Cumberland and Harvester, at Rattray Marsh and
off of York Road this week.

The lakefront properties in Burlington were full of water and birds this
week as heavy rains made an interesting walk through both Shoracres/Paletta
in Burlington and Shell Park in Oakville.  Among migrants seen here were
Eastern Phoebe, Brown Creeper and Golden-crowned Kinglet at Shell Park. At
Shoreacres, Hermit Thrush, Fox Sparrow and a singing Purple Finch were
highlights in the week.

In the odds and sods this week, the Peregrine Falcons have been putting on a
spectacular show at the two nesting spots that they have in the Hamilton
Area.  The pair on the lift bridge have been seen in active chase and the
pair on the Standard Life Building have been exhibiting mating behaviour as
well.  A neat link to view our Hamilton birds on the Standard Life Building
is http://www.hamiltonnature.org/hamfalcam.html.  Check it out to see the
progress of Madame X and Serge.  Three Sandhill Cranes were calling and seen
over southwest Grimsby near Puddicombe Farms on Tuesday.  A flock of SNOW
GEESE were seen over Woodland Cemetery.  At Bronte Creek Provincial Park
Long-eared and Northern Saw-whet Owl are still being reported. A Tufted
Titmouse was a delight to see at a feeder in a Burlington back yard and over
a hundred Rusty Blackbirds were reported from the Middletown Marsh area last
weekend.  Purple finches and Great Blue Heron were reported passing through
the Grand River area of Brantford.

That's the news for the week.  Keep reporting your sightings.  Its going to
get busy here at the hotline.

Have a great week,
Good Birding,
Cheryl Edgecombe
905-381-0329





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