I re found the Neotropic Cormorant at Sunnyside Beach ( west side toward Windermere Parking lot). It took me 5 minutes to find it, it was with 15 others DC Cormorant on the break wall facing the beach). Took some recognizable Videos and pics through scope. While I was viewing it, it was being harassed and pushed into the water by juveniles DC Cormorants, it would get back up on the wall and a few minutes later it would be pushed back into the water. Then, at 3:45 pm, 4 human laden with paddles on surfboards moved back and front in front and all the cormorants went swimming. I observed it for 30 minutes and did not see any other Birdwatcher there. Good luck. It should come back to the wall in front of Sunnyside beach on the west side of the beach. May be best to park at the Windermere lot, them walk to beach... A shorter walk than from Ellis ave lot.
Luc Fazio Sent from my iPad > On Jun 25, 2015, at 2:38 PM, Hugh Currie <[email protected]> wrote: > > Apparently the bird has gone back to the breakwall at the foot of Ellis Ave > _______________________________________________ > ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial > birding organization. > Send bird reports to [email protected] > For information about ONTBIRDS including how to unsubscribe visit > http://www.ofo.ca/site/page/view/information.ontbirdssetup > Posting guidelines can be found at > http://www.ofo.ca/site/page/view/information.ontbirdsguide > > _______________________________________________ ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial birding organization. Send bird reports to [email protected] For information about ONTBIRDS including how to unsubscribe visit http://www.ofo.ca/site/page/view/information.ontbirdssetup Posting guidelines can be found at http://www.ofo.ca/site/page/view/information.ontbirdsguide

