Now that hunting season has begun we are starting to get concentrations of
waterfowl within the city limits. Last Saturday the Cataraqui River
contained a few Horned and 21 Pied-billed Grebes along with an excellent
selection of ducks that included  8 Wood Ducks, 130 Am. Wigeon, and 20
Ring-necked Ducks. On Sunday there were 11 types of shorebird and 12 species
of duck on Amherst Island. The highlights were 2 Am. Golden Plover, 3
Sanderling, 4 Baird's Sandpipers, a Redhead and a Canvasback. There was also
a noticeable movement of passerines on Amherst; 30 E. Phoebes, 25 Palm
Warblers, 100 Am. Pipits were tallied.
There were significant night flights of thousands of Swainson's and hundreds
of Grey-cheeked Thrushes on both Sept. 20/21 and Sept. 22/23.
Raptors of note this week included both Peregrine Falcon and Merlin on
Amherst, another Merlin near Bedford Mills, and a Red-shouldered Hawk over
the sewage lagoons last Sunday and an immature Sharp-shinned Hawk that
buzzed some feeders near Camden East on Wednesday, then reappeared as an
adult Cooper's Hawk to pull the same stunt today.
Some lingering migrants included both a Whip-poor-will at Bedford Mills and
a Common Nighthawk near Elginburg last Friday,   a Ruby-throated
Hummingbird, again at Bedford Mills, and a Yellow-billed Cuckoo on Amherst
last Sunday. New arrivals this week were Lincoln's, White-throated, and
White-crowned Sparrows as well as both kinglets and Dark-eyed Juncos.

Cheers,
Peter Good
Kingston Field Naturalists
613 378-6605


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