Snow Goose
Cackling Goose
Tundra Swan
Wood Duck
American Wigeon
Blue-winged Teal
Northern Shoveler
Northern Pintail
Green-winged Teal
King Eider
Red-breasted Merganser
Pied-billed Grebe
Horned Grebe
Red-necked Grebe
Turkey Vulture
Osprey
Bald Eagle
Northern Harrier
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Red-shouldered Hawk
Red-tailed Hawk
Rough-legged Hawk
Golden Eagle
Merlin
Peregrine Falcon
Sandhill Crane
Killdeer
Wilson's Snipe
American Woodcock
Little Gull
Iceland Gull
Lesser Black-backed Gull
Glaucous Gull
Snowy Owl
Eastern Phoebe
Northern Shrike
Common Raven
Tree Swallow
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Eastern Bluebird
Lapland Longspur
Chipping Sparrow
Rusty Blackbird


Another week of struggling to find spring here in the Hamilton Study Area
has brought in some hardy migrants but at the end of the day WHERE IS
SPRING????  Over the past week a number of migrants have forged their way
through rising and falling temperatures, icy conditions and then a melt.
Birds are backed up in a big way and when the warm temperatures persist the
flood gates will open.

This week's highlight is not in bold but in the end, it was a spectacular
find.  A full adult male King Eider was seen on the west side of LaSalle
Marina on Tuesday.  Stunning photos reveal colours that could not ever be
replicated.  It was a breath of fresh air to light up the spring but sadly a
one and a bit day wonder.  The bird was seen briefly on Wednesday east of
the marina but flew off and was not found again.  

Migrants coming into the area this week include a number of species of
waterfowl. A Snow Goose has been a casual guest at Windermere Basin earlier
in the week with another one seen at Trafalgar and Derry Road.  Cackling
Geese seem to be migrating through the area in numbers this spring with
birds seen at 8th Line and Britannia in Mississauga, Bronte Harbour, LaSalle
Marina, Satellite Golf Course up on Centennial and Mud Street and at 5th
Road East in Saltfleet.  Flocks of Tundra Swans were seen over various
places in the Hamilton Study Area throughout the week.  In the wet fields in
Saltfleet on 3rd Road East, 5th Road East and 10th Road East, Wood Duck,
American Wigeon, Blue-winged Teal (5th road east and LaSalle Marina),
Northern Shoveler, Northern Pintail and Green-winged Teal have been seen in
numbers with Canada Geese.  Red-necked Grebes were seen off Burloak Park,
LaSalle and other areas on the west end of the lake. Killdeer continue to
grow in numbers.  Wilson's Snipe have come into the traditional flooded
field on 5th Road East between Green Mountain and Mud Street. American
Woodcock have now been reported in numbers from a few areas, the Pinetum
Trail at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Windermere Basin and more than a dozen
at the campground at the east side of Bronte Creek Provincial Park. Today
two Little Gulls were seen off Bronte Harbour.  Swallows were studied from
here as well with Tree Swallows gathering in numbers here.   Tree Swallows
were also seen at Windermere Basin.    Eastern Phoebes numbers are
increasing with birds seen at Beamer Memorial Conservation Area at the
Hawkwatch, 6th Line and Upper Middle in Oakville and at Rattray Marsh in
Mississauga.  A Chipping Sparrow was a welcome yard guest and first arrival
at a feeder in east Oakville.  A number of reports of Rusty Blackbirds have
come from the Saltfleet area this week mixed in with the ever arriving
Red-winged Blackbirds and Grackles.  Lapland Longspurs were seen and heard
rattling over Elm Tree/Kemp Road in Saltfleet last Monday.

It's been a mixed bag up at the Niagara Peninsula Hawkwatch this week.  Some
days have seen good numbers, some days like today a little more dismal.
Over the week, Bald Eagle, Northern Harrier, Sharp-shinned, Red-shouldered
and Red-tailed Hawk, Merlin and Peregrine Falcon have been reported.  Turkey
Vultures seem to still be the majority of the migrants coming through the
area.  Of interest were a few Rough-legged Hawks seen in Saltfleet last
Sunday sitting as they do on tiny branches at the top of shrubs or trees.
Over the course of an hour at least 4 were seen up there.  The Dark Western
Red-tailed Hawk was a highlight up there last Sunday soaring between 8th and
10th Road East south of Green Mountain Road.  Two Golden Eagles were seen
migrating over Hilton Falls Conservation Area in North Halton.

In the odds and sods this week, other King Eiders were seen off the
Burlington Ship Canal and at Bronte Harbour where they have been wintering.
A Pied-billed Grebe and Horned Grebe were seen at the Desjardins Canal over
the past two days.  Other Horned Grebes were present at LaSalle Marina.  The
Osprey found last week at the City View Motel on York Road near the Hwy 6
interchange on the 403 has been seen regularly.  Another was seen off Fifty
Road out over the lake. Sandhill Cranes have been reported back at Grass
Lake, hard to know how far these birds roamed in the winter so could be in
the migrant section of the report.   Iceland Gulls have been notable this
week with one seen today over the northeast shore of the harbour and two
more at Bronte Harbour.  While looking at the adult King Eider a keen
observer was able to find, Lesser Black-backed, Iceland and Glaucous Gulls
sitting on the still frozen west harbour.  While listening for Woodcock at
Bronte Creek Park, a Snowy Owl flew overhead, a reminder that this is still
a transition time.  A Snowy Owl was still present mid-week at Bronte
Harbour. Common Ravens and Peregrine Falcons are each potentially nesting in
the quarry up on 10th Road East north of Green Mountain Road with the
Peregrines looking like they are comfortable taking over the old Raven nest
from last year.   Northern Shrikes were seen on 3rd Road East and at Olympic
Arena.  A reminder!  All shrikes should be looked at this time of year as
Loggerhead Shrikes are early migrants.   Eastern Bluebirds were seen near
the Dundas Peak and out at Glen Morris.  

A highlight for me this week was coming across a Red-breasted Merganser
sitting in the middle of someone's lawn about a block from the lake.  Tired
from migration or knocked down by something, the bird was not injured but
sure looked funny as a lawn ornament.

Who knows what could have come in from this southern system.  When the
weather clears, take a run out to look for migrants.  Please send your
sightings here!

Good birding,
Cheryl Edgecombe
HNC.


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