It seems the spring migration is just about done for another year. All the
migrant passerines seem to have moved on and the last of the shorebirds was
a small flock of about 10 Semipalmated Sandpipers on the east end of Amherst
Island on Wednesday. As late as last weekend there were still Dunlin,
Black-bellied Plover and Short-billed Dowitcher. Now the only "new"
shorebird one is likely to see are those miniature baby killdeer on stilts,
scurrying about.

Other sightings of note; a pair of Purple Finches just north of Elginburg
for the last couple of weeks, a Scarlet Tanager yesterday at the same
location, a Black-crowned Night-Heron in Collin's Creek on Unity Road (these
birds are very infrequent north of the 401) and a late report of a
Red-headed Woodpecker on the Colebrook Road west of Harrowsmith in late May.
This is a species that is very hard to find in the Kingston area anymore.

I will give this report a break until the shorebirds return in midsummer.
The garden beckons.

Have a great summer.
Peter Good
Kingston Field Naturalists
613 378-6605

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