Presqu’ile Bird Report for Week of 22-28 Feb 2019

By Doug McRae

HIGHLIGHTS: HOODED MERGANSER X COMMON GOLDENEYE, EASTERN BLUEBIRD, BROWN 
THRASHER


It has been another quiet week with minimal coverage.  There are a few hints 
that spring is coming, particularly with an increase in diving ducks.  There 
were also more cases of birds seen in places they haven’t been all winter, but 
its difficult to tell which are actual migrants versus local wintering birds 
starting to move around a bit more.


Presqu’ile Bay was frozen for much of the week pushing diving ducks out into 
the open lake where they were hard to see hiding behind massive ice 
accumulations along the south shore. Diving ducks, when visible, are clearly 
starting to increase with high counts of 9 CANVASBACK on 23 and 26 Feb, and 350 
REDHEAD on 23 Feb.  WHITE-WINGED SCOTERS also picked up with a high of 35 on 22 
Feb.  The most interesting waterfowl was a hybrid HOODED MERGANSER X COMMON 
GOLDENEYE that was seen near the Lighthouse on 23 Feb.  This is only the second 
time this hybrid has been recorded here – the first being found several years 
ago at the same location by the same observer!


WILD TURKEYS have not been as obvious recently with only a few sightings this 
week leaving one seasoned observer to wonder if there has been some winter 
mortality from all the ice and snow.  BALD EAGLES were seen on several dates 
with at least 2 immature and one adult involved.  The only other raptor reports 
were of single COOPER’S HAWKS on 22 and 24 Feb. A GREAT HORNED OWL was reported 
on 23 Feb and a BARRED OWL on 22 Feb was the only other owl sighting. 


Three BROWN CREEPERS on 22 Feb is the largest single day count since the CBC in 
December – likely local wintering birds coming out of the woodwork rather than 
new migrants.  At least two EASTERN BLUEBIRDS could be heard calling near the 
park office on 22 Feb.  These might be part of the same group of 6 that was at 
the Birdhouse Nature Store about 300m away from 14-18 Feb. An AMERICAN ROBIN in 
a treetop at the Lighthouse on 23 Feb might have been a migrant.  The wintering 
BROWN THRASHER is still going strong at a Bayshore Rd feeder. 


A single SNOW BUNTING flew over the gate area during a blizzard on 25 Feb.  
Another possible migrant was a male RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD that spent part of 27 
Feb at the Birdhouse Nature Store feeders, just outside the gate where none 
have been in weeks.


On a final note unrelated to birds, I would like to suggest caution around the 
large “ice volcano” formations that have developed along the south shore.  
These spectacular formations are especially substantial this year and should be 
enjoyed for sure.  Maybe I am a chicken but I do not walk out on these for fear 
they might collapse or calve off, or I might slide off into the water.  If that 
happened and you ended up in the water you would not be able to get back out.  
Nor can you be seen from shore.  On family day there must have been 40 people 
taking pictures and exploring the formations from the very edge, which just 
strikes me a precarious and ill advised.

Directions: Presqu’ile Provincial Park is located on the north shore of Lake 
Ontario, just south of the town of Brighton.  It can be reached from either 
Hwy. 401, or Cty. Rd. 2 and is well signed.  A Park map can be found in the 
information tabloid available at the Park gate.  Presqu’ile’s two offshore 
islands – Gull and High Bluff – support a large multi-species colonial bird 
nesting area and access is not permitted during the breeding season (10 
March-10 September).


 

 

 

 

Doug McRae
P.O. Box 3010
Brighton, Ontario
K0K 1H0
613-475-5014 H
613-243-4161 C


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