Outdoor Ontario
Photography => Ontario Birds => Topic started by: thouc on October 05, 2021, 12:36:59 AM
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I was lucky to find this Connecticut Warbler last week (Sep 27) at Strathroy Sewage Lagoons. A lifer for me!
(https://cdn.download.ams.birds.cornell.edu/api/v1/asset/373143771/640)
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Thanks for posting, lagoons sound very interesting. No pipers?
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Way to go professor! So that's what the creature of the Strathroy Lagoon looks like. So much like a Mourning warbler but with too much eye make-up to hide the evidence of that lachrymose period. Way, way better picture of one than I once got at Duffin's Creek. Only had a 135mm lens deployed at a considerable distance before the bird vanished. Perhaps back to Connecticut? Who really knows what lurks in the mind of a Yankee warbler. You trekkers are amazing. Such a long haul for an elusive individual. I tip my hat to you if I could only find it. I wonder ... whot's it like to be really, really good at something?
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Only shorebirds there were some Yellowlegs. There has been better shorebird action lately in wet farm fields with Hudsonian Godwits and others showing up in a lot of places last week of September and still some left.
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Oh wow, what a great find and photo. I was debating whether to head out but couldn't find much info about the kind of permission did I need to get into the lagoons - is it open to public?
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The Strathroy Sewage Lagoons are open, no permits requited and attract ducks, shorebirds and songbirds. I saw on eBird someone actually did refind the Connecticut Warbler the day after, after a two hour search.
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The Strathroy Sewage Lagoons are open, no permits requited and attract ducks, shorebirds and songbirds. I saw on eBird someone actually did refind the Connecticut Warbler the day after, after a two hour search.
Thanks for the info. I'll remember for my next trip in that direction.