LAUGHING GULL
WORM-EATING WARBLER

Blue-winged Teal
Wild Turkey
Red-throated Loon
Common Loon
Red-necked Grebe
Spotted Sandpiper
Upland Sandpiper
Whimbrel
Ruddy Turnstone
Sanderling
Semipalmated Sandpiper
Dunlin
Short-billed Dowitcher
Bonaparte's Gull
Little Gull
Common Tern
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
Common Nighthawk
Chimney Swift
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Red-headed Woodpecker
Eastern Wood Pewee
Alder Flycatcher
Willow Flycatcher
Least Flycatcher
Gray-cheeked Thrush
Mourning Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
American Redstart
Magnolia Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Canada Warbler
Wilson's Warbler
Clay-colored Sparrow
Grasshopper Sparrow
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Orchard Oriole


Things have quieted down here in the Hamilton Study Area as migration tapers
off and breeding bird areas are set up.  There were still some late migrants
filtering through and the bigger story this week was the shorebirds.  We
will start with our rarities of the week.  The LAUGHING GULL seen last
Friday continued into early Saturday morning and then disappeared.  A
WORM-EATING WARBLER was recorded in a yard in Central Burlington on two
consecutive days.  The bird was only partially seen but a recording was made
of the bird which was sent out for analysis.  It appears from the sonogram
and from the recording that it was a valid record.  The bird was in a
private yard and has not be heard subsequently.

As stated above, this was the week for shorebirds to move through.  As
always the biggest numbers of Whimbrel occur at Colonel Sam Smith Park which
is out of the HSA but favourable winds and a few loose flocks always seem to
move through just at the boundary of the circle.  On Sunday a flock of 13
Whimbrel flew in circled the Port Credit Marina and one landed on the break
wall then the group departed.  Also last weekend a couple of thousand Dunlin
could be seen on the break wall just to the east of Port Credit Harbour.
Mixed in with them were Spotted Sandpiper, Ruddy Turnstone, Sanderling,
Semipalmated Sandpiper and one Short-billed Dowitcher.  Gulls were plenty
and a careful screening of the Bonaparte's Gulls yielded one Little Gull to
a keen observer which others were able to see and compare as they sat in the
water at the harbour.   Common Terns seem to have set up a colony on the
roof of the marina to the east of the harbour. An odd sighting at the
harbour was a flying male Blue-winged Teal.  

The woodlots have been quieter this week.  A check of Lakeside Park in
Mississauga on the way back from Port Credit yielded Ruby-throated
Hummingbird, Eastern Wood Pewee, Willow and Least Flycatcher, Mourning
Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, American Redstart, Magnolia, Blackburnian,
Blackpoll, Black-throated Green, Canada and Wilson's Warbler.  At the Joshua
Creek Trail things were quieter but an interesting sound was a Mourning
Warbler mimicking a Common Yellowthroat.  American Redstart and Wilson's
Warbler were also here.  

In the odds and sods this week, my weird sighting of the week was a Wild
Turkey flying from the Suncor Property to north Shell Park over Rebecca.  A
significant record of two Red-throated Loons were late migrants seen and
photographed at Confederation Park last Saturday.  Common Loons were seen
daily flying over New Street and Rebecca on my drive to Oakville.
Red-necked Grebes are nesting in three locations this year, Bronte Harbour
where they have 5 eggs, Bronte Marsh and Burloak Park.  A Ruddy Turnstone
and a half dozen Short-billed Dowitchers were seen at Windermere Basin. A
sizable flock of Dunlin were seen near the Sunfish Pond at Valley Inn but
unable to land due to high water. Highlights from Brantford in the Hardy
Road area were a pair of Upland Sandpipers and Orchard Orioles.
Yellow-billed Cuckoo was heard at Cityview Park in Burlington, a
Gray-cheeked Thrush also present in the woodlot here.  A Black-billed Cuckoo
flew across York Road near Dundas in the week.  An interesting sighting was
of Common Nighthawks over Princess Point and in downtown Hamilton which were
seen again flying around the next morning.  Chimney Swifts seem to have a
significant roost here in the vicinity of the Scottish Rite in Hamilton.  A
pair of Red-headed Woodpeckers were seen in the west end of Confederation
Park.  Alder Flycatcher, Mourning and Wilson's Warbler were highlights of a
walk in Shoreacres in Burlington.  Clay-colored and Grasshopper Sparrows
were singing at 6th Concession and Valens in Flamborough.  There are many
good places for both species here as well as Cityview Park.  Finally a
Rose-breasted Grosbeak migrant or potential breeder was heard singing on
Charlton Ave earlier in the week.

That's the news for this week.  Please keep sending your sightings along,
its important to note late migrants and unusual breeders.

Cheers,
Cheryl Edgecombe
HNC.
 



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