I'll start this report with a very exciting sighting for me on my way home from 
work.  I was coming down Prince of Wales Drive near Barrhaven, following 
alongside the Rideau River, where I spotted two adult OSPREYS hunting at two 
different spots along the river.  Later in the afternoon, I relocated one of 
them near the Chapman Hills Conservation Area on Prince of Wales Drive.  This 
is likely the same one that I heard was spotted further downriver near 
Nicholl's Island at Manotick.

I returned to Earl Armstrong Road to search once again for the E. BLUEBIRDS 
that I had seen this past weekend.  Luck was on my side yet again, and I found 
an adult male and female along the fence line.  I parked there and watched the 
two flit around from the ground to the fence, then to a nearby bush and back to 
the fence.  At one point the male perched on the post directly across the road 
from where I was parked and posed for at least twenty beautiful photos.  All 
the while this was going on, I was aware of a WILSON'S SNIPE calling somewhere 
off in one of the fields beyond the tree line.  The call was the unmistakably 
"sci-fi UFO" sound the snipe makes when it is doing its courtship flight.  
Unfortunately I did not actually see the bird, but the courtship call continued 
the entire time I was parked watching the bluebirds - probably thirty minutes 
or longer.

I continued on down Earl Armstrong to High Road and parked at the end of the 
road.  There I found another male E. BLUEBIRD and three SAVANNAH SPARROWS 
foraging along the roadside.  Of course, the usually AM. ROBINS and RED-WINGED 
BLACKBIRDS were also in the field, as was a single SONG SPARROW and a number of 
EUROPEAN STARLINGS.  The sun was setting at this point, so I headed back home.  
Before I left, however, I saw what I am confident was an E. KINGBIRD on a tree 
limb.  The tail was too long to be a red-wing, and it was bobbing its tail 
while it chirped.  In the fading light I did see through my binoculars a dark 
cap and upper body with a whitish underbody.  I can not be 100% on this, but 
the behaviour, shape, and size, were right for a kingbird.

DIRECTIONS: MapQuest "Earl Armstrong Road & High Road."  Watch along the side 
fence posts for E. bluebirds and maybe even E. meadowlarks.
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