Ontario
Ottawa/Gatineau
21 October 2008

Birds mentioned:

GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE
Cackling Goose
Canada Goose
TUNDRA SWAN
Surf Scoter
White-winged Scoter
Black Scoter
Long-tailed Duck
BARROW'S GOLDENEYE
Gray Partridge
Wild Turkey
GREAT EGRET
LITTLE BLUE HERON
Northern Goshawk
Rough-legged Hawk
Golden Eagle
Peregrine Falcon
Sora
Common Moorhen
Sandhill Crane
American Golden Plover
Spotted Sandpiper
LONG-BILLED DOWITCHER
BLACK-BACKED WOODPECKER
Carolina Wren
MARSH WREN
American Robin
Gray Catbird
Yellow-rumped Warbler
American Tree Sparrow
Vesper Sparrow
Savannah Sparrow
Fox Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
White-crowned Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Lapland Longspur
Snow Bunting
Northern Cardinal
Red-winged Blackbird
Pine Grosbeak
White-winged Crossbill
Pine Siskin

Hotline: Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club
Phone number: 613-860-9000
For the Bird Status Line PRESS * (star)
To report bird sightings PRESS 1 (one)
Rare bird alerts are now included in the introductory message
Coverage: Ottawa/Gatineau (Canada National Capital Region) E. Ontario, W.
Quebec
Compiler & transcriber: Chris Lewis [EMAIL PROTECTED]

At 7:00 am, Tuesday October 21, 2008 this is Chris Lewis reporting.

The past week was a great one for pleasant weather, good birding, and even
some exciting sightings. The annual Ottawa-Gatineau Fall Bird Count was held
from the 18th to the 19th and a preliminary total of 125 species included
some good records for this count. The final results will be available on the
OFNC web site all the totals are in.

The best bird of the month was found on the day after the count - a juvenile
LITTLE BLUE HERON was spotted along the Quebec shoreline of the Ottawa River
on the morning of the 20th and was relocated later in the marsh at the
northeast end of Petite Baie Clement south of Angers. Interestingly, the
discoverers of the heron were looking for 2 rare in Ottawa juvenile TUNDRA
SWANS that were reported on the 18th. The swans were happily feeding in the
river when the heron flew into view. Talk about serendipity!

A GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE on the Ottawa River east of Andrew Haydon Park
and a male BARROW'S GOLDENEYE were great finds on the 19th; the Barrow's was
a very early arrival for Ottawa, and a 1st record for the fall count. A
total of 8 Cackling Geese was a record high number for the count. Although
waterfowl numbers (other than Canada Geese) remain generally low, a good
diversity of both dabbling and diving ducks were seen since the 13th. A
large raft of perhaps 200 mostly White-winged Scoters at Shirley's Bay on
the 15th did not linger, but a smattering of Surf, White-winged and Black
Scoters remained through the weekend, and up to 10 Long-tailed Ducks have
been seen on the Ottawa River on Lac Deschenes since the 13th.

Two Gray Partridge were seen at the Casselman lagoons on the 19th and a
total of 87 Wild Turkeys was a record high for the fall count. The GREAT
EGRET (still present at the pond along Earl Armstrong Rd. near High Rd. on
the 20th) was a 2nd count record.

Raptor reports on the weekend included 2 Northern Goshawks
and 2 Golden Eagles on the Quebec side, 2 Peregrine Falcons on the R.H.
Coats building at Tunney's Pasture on the Ontario side, and at least 20
Rough-legged Hawks throughout the count area.

On the late side were 3 Common Moorhens at the Embrun lagoons and a Sora at
Petrie Island on the 19th. Twenty-five Sandhill Cranes were counted
southeast of Ottawa on the weekend.
Nine species of shorebirds were highlighted by 17 American Golden Plovers at
the quarry pond on Giroux Rd., a late Spotted Sandpiper in the Earl
Armstrong/High Rd. pond and a lingering LONG-BILLED DOWITCHER at the Moodie
Dr. quarry pond, all on the 19th. Rounding out the noteworty non-passerines
was a BLACK-BACKED WOODPECKER found in the Marlborough forest along Flood
Rd. on the 19th.

Although the only warblers reported on the weekend were Yellow-rumpeds,
there were still lots of songbirds around, and some were even singing,
including a Carolina Wren on Lake Rd. in Aylmer, Quebec on the 17th and 2
MARSH WRENS at Petrie Island on the 19th. Four Gray Catbirds were still
around on the weekend, and many areas were literally hopping with some of
our common favourites such as American Robin, Northern Cardinal, Red-winged
Blackbird and a good variety of sparrows including American Tree, Vesper,
Savannah, Fox, White-throated, White-crowned and Dark-eyed Junco. The St.
Albert lagoons hosted 69 Lapland Longspurs on the 18th, and flocks of Snow
Buntings are showing up in increasing numbers. Pine Siskins are now
dominating the finch reports, and White-winged Crossbills and Pine Grosbeaks
were both vocal and visible on the weekend in appropriate habitats.

Thank you - Good Birding!



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