Whimbels, Shorebirds and Loons on the move
Outdoor Ontario

Whimbels, Shorebirds and Loons on the move

Tyler · 3 · 1717

Tyler

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Darlington Provincial Park barrier beach Lake watch 6:20 to 10:20

290 Whimbrels moving west first flock was 6:46 last one seen this morning was 9:50. one flock of 2 birds landed on the beach for approximately 10 minutes.

Other Shorebirds
2 Ruddy Turnstones
2 Short-billed Dowitchers
97 Least Sandpipers
6 Semi-palmated Sandpipers
1 Pectoral Sandpiper
13 Spotted Sandpipers
16 Dunlin
8 Semi-palmated Plovers
1 Black-bellied Plover
4 Killdeer

There was also a steady movement of Loons towards the west and north west consisting of 52 Common Loons, 11 Red-throated Loons, and 6 Loon species

Other species observed from the beach
1 Great Egret flying west
223 Bonaparte's Gulls
3 Little Gulls
28 Caspian Terns
2 Black Terns
5 Turkey Vultures on the beach feeding on the seasoned Raccoon carcass.
Waterfowl: 1 Black Duck, 2 Wood Ducks, 8 Gadwall, 3 Greater Scaup, 4 Lesser Scaup, 1 Ring-necked Duck, 8 Buffleheads, 15 White-winged Scoters, 154 Long-tailed Ducks and 1488 Red-breasted Mergansers

Direction:

The McLaughlin Bay Barrier beach can be accessed from either Oshawa Second
marsh (west access point) or Darlington provincial park (east access point)

Oshawa Second Marsh

Exit from the 401 at the Harmony Rd. Exit(419) in Oshawa. Go south on
Farewell St. Colonel Sam Drive. Turn East onto Colonel Sam Drive and follow
to the parking lot at the GM Headquarters. Park in the west parking lot
close to the marsh. The east (GM) platform is visible from the NW corner of
the lot.

To the Barrier Beach head south to the lake and then east along the
shoreline

For a trail map of the Oshawa Second Marsh area visit
 www.secondmarsh.com and check the link for a trail map of
the area

Darlington Provincial Park
borders the east side Oshawa Second Marsh/McLaughlin Bay Nature Reserve.

To access the campground and park store area from the east.Take the Courtice
road exit from the 401 and follow the park signs. There is a small parking
lot at the gatehouse. Park here and walk the trail to the south. This will
take you into the campground area. The park store is just south of the main
office past the main gate.

For the Barrier Beach park at the beach parking lot and head west along the
maintained beach.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Tyler »


Tyler

  • Old Timer
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    • Posts: 210
Darlington Provincial Park Lake watch 5:40am to 10:30am
Expecting a good flight of Whimbrels this morning I got down just before
sunrise and was joined over the morning by 11 visitors

However the Whimbrels were not cooperating. We had one flock of 6 birds at
8am.

Shorebirds present included : 1 Short-billed Dowitcher, 1 White-rumped
Sandpiper, 57 Least Sandpipers, 8 Spotted Sandpipers, 15 Dunlin, 3
Semi-palmated Plovers and 7 killdeer (including one nest right along beach
line where many people walk by.)

Sharp eyed Steve LaForest picked out a sole Brant flying west at 9:51.

There was again  a steady movement of Loons towards the west and north west
consisting of 51 Common Loons, 36 Red-throated Loons, and 13 Loon species.

Other Species present
Waterfowl: 3 Greater Scaup, 4 Scaup Sp., 3 Common Goldeneyes, 5 Buffleheads,
76 White-winged Scoters, 50+ Long-tailed Ducks and 500+ Red-breasted
Mergansers
Gulls and Terns:  78 Bonaparte's Gulls, 4 Black Terns, 6 Common Terns, and
12 Caspian Terns
1 Osprey and Northern Harrier
294 Cormorants moving east and west all morning.
Also we had a White-tailed Deer buck come onto the beach at 9:30 to check us
out.

Direction:

The McLaughlin Bay Barrier beach can be accessed from either Oshawa Second
marsh (west access point) or Darlington provincial park (east access point)

Oshawa Second Marsh

Exit from the 401 at the Harmony Rd. Exit(419) in Oshawa. Go south on
Farewell St. Colonel Sam Drive. Turn East onto Colonel Sam Drive and follow
to the parking lot at the GM Headquarters. Park in the west parking lot
close to the marsh. The east (GM) platform is visible from the NW corner of
the lot.

To the Barrier Beach head south to the lake and then east along the
shoreline

For a trail map of the Oshawa Second Marsh area visit
 www.secondmarsh.com and check the link for a trail map of
the area

Darlington Provincial Park
borders the east side Oshawa Second Marsh/McLaughlin Bay Nature Reserve.

To access the campground and park store area from the east.Take the Courtice
road exit from the 401 and follow the park signs. There is a small parking
lot at the gatehouse. Park here and walk the trail to the south. This will
take you into the campground area. The park store is just south of the main
office past the main gate.

For the Barrier Beach park at the beach parking lot and head west along the
maintained beach.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Tyler »


Tyler

  • Old Timer
  • *****
    • Posts: 210
Darlington Provincial Park Lake watch 5:40am to 11:30am

Whimbrels

30 birds total in 2 flocks 8:30 and 10:53am

There was a bad heat shimmer over the lake and I had several flocks of
possible Whimbrels (160+ birds). However due to the heat shimmer distorting
the flocks and to the presence of migrating Brant and White-winged Scoters
these flocks can only be referred to as Bird Sp.

Shorebirds
1 Red Knot
10 Short-billed Dowitchers
1 Sanderling
1 White-rumped Sandpiper
3 Semi-palmated Sandpipers
50 Least Sandpipers
18 Spotted Sandpipers
90 Dunlins
10 Semi-palmated Plovers
7 Killdeer
1 Black-bellied Plover


Loon Migration was down significantly from the last 2 days. Totals : Common
Loon 30, Red-throated Loon 5, Loon Sp. 4

Brant one flock of 23 birds at 9:36am

Tern Sp 5 At 10:49  I had a flock 5 Common/Arctic type terns come in off the
lake and fly north past me while gaining altitude until they were lost in
the sky.

Terns and Gulls: 7 Little, 190 Bonaparte's, and 1 Great Black-backed Gull
(only the 3rd over the last 7 days), 15 Caspian and 5 Common Terns

Waterfowl: Most species have declined. Highlights 148 White-winged Scoters
and 5 Buffleheads
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Tyler »