I birded most of the trails and marsh (and adjacent lake) from 3:40 to 6:00 pm.  I found the Arctic Tern at 3: 55 pm as it flew in from the lake through the marsh over-flow channel with two Common Terns.  It was about 20 feet over my head and I could clearly see the small bark red bill with no black tip.  It flew around and circled back again over me back into Lake Ontario.  I checked the lake again at  6:00 am and could not relocate the bird although there were still at least 5 Common Terns on the marsh.  Like other areas of the southern Ontario the warbler fallout was widespread with warblers scattered through virtually all areas I covered.  Mark Cranford gave me the location of the Blue-winged Warbler.  Here the warbler totals:  Yellow-rumped: 64; Palm: 33; Black-and-white and Black-throated Green: 20; Nashville and Blackburnian: 5; Orange-crowned and Pine: 3; Yellow: 2 and singles of Northern Waterthrush, Ovenbird, Hooded, Blue-winged, Chestnut-sided, Magnolia and Common Yellowthroat.  Other highlights include a Clay-colored Sparrow singing just outside the gate leading to the soccer field of Green Glade School. The were also small numbers of Gray-head, Warbling and Red-eyed Vireos.  The only flycatchers I saw were  two Great Crested.  Other than a dozen Robins I found not other thrushes ... very strange.  There were small numbers of Baltimore Orioles and Rose-breasted Grosbeaks.  


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