Good morning

 Yesterday Ian Cannell took Jay Peterson and myself up to the Bruce Peninsula 
for a day of birding and despite the heavy fog in the early morning we too ( 
like the OFO outing on the weekend ) came up with 101 species of birds but with 
just 3 pairs of eyes.
  We birded most of the usual roads up there and added a couple more that we 
were successful on last year and despite that, for the first time we did not 
see or hear one Sandhill Crane. Must have seen us coming. 
  We started at the north end of the peninsula at Cape Hurd Rd and worked our 
way south and the following are some of the birds listed on our outing. Where I 
noted the Warbler numbers I know that for each one they were undercounted.
  Common Loon, Pied-billed Grebe, American Bittern, Great Egret, Wood Duck, 
Green-winged Teal, Osprey, Cooper's Hawk, Wild Turkey, Sora, Upland Sandpiper, 
Wilson's Snipe, Common, Forster's and Black Terns, 5 Black-billed Cuckoos, 
Great Horned Owl, R-T Hummingbird, Y-B Sapsucker, 2 Pileated Woodpeckers 
together, E. Wood-Pewee, E. Phoebe, Alder, Least and Great Crested Flycatchers, 
Common Raven, Red-breasted Nuthatch, Brown Creeper, House, Winter and Marsh 
Wrens, E. Bluebird, Veery, Hermit and Wood Thrushes, Brown Thrasher, 
Blue-headed, Warbling and  Red-eyed Vireos ( 31 Red-eyed ), 14 Warbler species 
including Golden-winged, 36 Nashville, Black-throated Blue, 27 Black-throated 
Green, Blackburnian, Pine, 62 A. Redstart, 31 Ovenbirds, Mourning, and 43 
Common Yellowthroat Warblers, Scarlet Tanager, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Indigo 
Bunting, E. Towhee, Clay-colored, Field, Grasshopper and White-throated 
Sparrows, 5 Brewer's Blackbirds, and Purple Finch.
 Of course we also saw a million Bobolinks, E. Meadowlarks, and Savannah 
Sparrows along the way
 After we finally decided to quit the Bruce Peninsula we headed on down to 
Sauble Beach and there we saw the Piping Plovers ( 4 of the 7 Adult and 2 of 
the chicks ). A total of 6 of these endangered birds. A new life days total for 
all three of us.  A great big vote of thanks from all birders should be given 
to the guardians of these birds as they watch and protect them from predators 
and humans. Thank You Guys and Gals. ( The Plovers are usually at the north end 
of the beach. Look for the enclosed and signed area and the Guardians watching 
over the birds ).

Directions:-

 BRUCE PENINSULA 
OWEN SOUND is at the junction of Highways 6, 21 and 26 and is approx. 190 km / 
118 miles northwest of Toronto, 120 km / 75 miles west of Barrie, and 210 km / 
130 miles north of London.

>From Owen Sound proceed west and then north on Hwy 6 to Wiarton ( approx. 32 
>km / 20 miles ). Continue through Wiarton north on Hwy 6 and you are on the 
>Bruce Peninsula and you can bird any of the roads from Wiarton to Tobermory at 
>the northern tip of the peninsula.

SAUBLE BEACH

OWEN SOUND is at the junction of Highways 6, 21 and 26 and is approx. 190 km / 
118 miles northwest of Toronto, 120 km / 75 miles west of Barrie, and 210 km / 
130 miles north of London.

>From Owen Sound proceed west and then northwest on Hwy 6 approx. 19 ½ km / 12 
>miles to Hepworth ( south of Wiarton ). At Hepworth turn left ( west ) on 
>County Road 8 and proceed approx. 11 km / 6 3/4 miles to Sauble Beach.



Norm Murr
Richmond Hill, ON

"Sils mordent, mords les"
_______________________________________________
ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial 
birding organization.
Send bird reports to ONTBIRDS mailing list [email protected]
For instructions to join or leave ONTBIRDS visit 
http://www.ofo.ca/information/ontbirdssetup.php
ONTBIRDS Guidelines may be viewed at 
http://www.ofo.ca/information/ontbirdsguide.php

Reply via email to