There have not been any outstanding sightings locally but there is enough
activity that I thought I should restart this column as the fall season
begins. A few unexpected waterfowl lingered into the summer; a Brant and a
White-winged Scoter on Amherst Island until July 3rd and 2 Common Goldeneye
in the Amherstview Sewage Lagoons on July 22nd. Early arrivals include a
Redhead and a Hooded Merganser on Amherst as well as another Hooded, a
Bufflehead and a Lesser Scaup in the lagoons on August 10th. Other unusual
birds during the summer included a pair of Tufted Titmice at Elginburg and a
Wilson's Phalarope on Wolfe Island in mid June, 3 Evening Grosbeaks at
Cartwright's Point on July 22nd and the recurrence of  Prairie Warblers on
the Canoe Lake Road after an absence of many years.

 

Great Egrets have put in several appearances; one in the Moscow marsh on
July 2nd, another on Amherst on August 3rd, then 4 on the Orser Road on
August 15th. The last was in the Wilton Creek at Morven on the 17th and 18th
of August. None of these were banded.

 

Three Common Nighthawk concentrations have been reported; several on
Gardiner's Road, August 8th, a dozen at the lagoons on the 13th and a
smaller group near Camden East on the 17th. Warbler movement has barely
started; many Kingston birders concentrate on Prince Edward Point this time
of year and closer to the city the only reports so far are Canada on the
7th, Chestnut-sided on the 13th, both at Elginburg, and a Mourning on Wolfe
on the 14th. To show that fall is really on the way I was emailed a photo of
a half-red, half-green Scarlet Tanager taken in Frontenac Park.

 

All the rain has meant that many local ponds and creeks are too deep for
shorebirds. There were none on Wolfe this week and the water behind the dyke
on Amherst leaves very little habitat exposed. The lagoons are more
promising but nothing unusual has shown up yet. Here is a short chronology
of shorebird arrivals; Greater Yellowlegs, Lesser Yellowlegs, Least
Sandpiper, and Short-billed Dowitcher on July 3rd, Solitary Sandpiper on
July 15th, Semipalmated Sandpiper on July 27th, Semipalmated Plover on
August 5th, and Baird's Sandpiper on August 10th. Upland Sandpipers were
present on Amherst at least until the10th.Given the dearth of local habitat
it's probably a good thing that the KFN has planned a field trip to
Presqu'ile Provincial Park on Sunday August 31st.

 

Cheers,

Peter Good

Kingston Field Naturalists

613 378-6605

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