The female has laid eggs for the past 5 days with the last egg laid last night. 
 I suspect that the clutch size is now complete because the female is now 
incubating.  When I checked today, the female was sitting tightly on the nest 
despite looking at her from a distance of two feet.
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Subject: [Ontbirds]white pelican at rondeau
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Algonquin Park - Rusty Blackbird, Red Crossbill
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This morning, from 5:30 to 8:30 am I birded the upper part of the Mizzy Lake 
Trail Loop in Algonquin Park, accessed by the old rail bed off of Arowhon Rd.  
Overall birding was excellent, there was no wind and the cold overnight 
temperatures kept the mosquitoes within tolerable limits.
 
The two most interesting birds were:
 
1.  a pair of RUSTY BLACKBIRDS at Wolf Howl Pond right where the Mizzy Lake 
Trail meets the old rail bed.  The male was "singing" in the top of a spruce 
along the edge of the berm and the female was in a nearby tree.
 
2.  an early morning flyover of a calling female RED CROSSBILL on the rail bed 
west of Wolf Howl Pond.
 
Other Algonquin breeding specialties were well in evidence, including:  
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher (5), Olive-sided Flycatcher (1), Blue-headed Vireo 
(2), Gray Jay (2), Boreal Chickadee (1), Golden-crowned Kinglet (2), 
Ruby-crowned Kinglet (5), and 13 species of warblers, including Northern Parula 
(3) and Canada (1).
 
DIRECTIONS - From Highway 60, turn off on Arowhon Rd., about 15 km east of the 
West Gate.  Continue north for about 6km until the road forks into three, turn 
right onto the old railbed and continue a short distance, parking where there 
is a chain across the road.  Walking this rail bed for about 500m will join up 
with the upper part of the Mizzy Lake Trail at Wolf Howl Pond.  Continuing 
along this trail will take you past West Rose Lake another 300m past this a 
productive coniferous swamp.From [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Sun Jun 10 11:19:58 2007
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Date: Sun, 10 Jun 2007 11:19:56 -0400 (EDT)
From: RON FLEMING <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Least Bittern, Clay-coloured Sparrow, etc. Newmarket Area
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Finally had an opportunity to do some local birding again and found some 
interesting local birds this morning.  Best of these was a Least Bittern that 
flushed from the south side of Hochreiter Road as I walked the stretch between 
the gray garage and the road's western end.  It stayed above the grass tops for 
about 5 seconds before dipping down and out of sight - a brief look, but long 
enough to take in details like the white "braces" on its  black back, the buffy 
patches at the leading edge of the wing,  and the diminutive size of this 
little bittern.  Also flushed a Sora and a Blue-winged Teal, then heard a 
Virginia Rail doing his "kiddick" calls somewhere just out of sight.  There 
were also several Marsh Wrens singing like little sewing machines in the tall 
grasses there.

  At the Cawthra Mulock reserve the local nesters were in good voice.  The most 
interesting of these was a Black-billed Cuckoo singing along the hydro cut 
halfway between Dufferin and Keele (possibly the same bird that vocalizes from 
the orchard east of the square silo), a Clay-coloured Sparrow doing his dry 
buzzes below Bobolink Ridge, and several Alder Flycatchers announcing "free 
beer" east of the hydro cut.

  In the "slightly old news" department, Bruce Brydon had an Olive-sided 
Flycatcher along Bathurst Street north of Morning Sdrd. (NW Newmarket) about 
ten days ago and Frank Pinilla had Common Nighthawks going over his place in 
north Richmond Hill on four different occasions in late May.

  Hochreiter Road runs west from a Bathurst Street North in NW Holland Landing 
while the Cawthra Mulock reserve is situated north of Green Lane on the west 
side of Bathurst Street in NW Newmarket.

  Ron Fleming, Newmarket

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