I birded with Matthew Strimas-Mackey at Oshawa Second Marsh on Saturday afternoon. We took the GO train to Oshawa station and biked the 7 kilometers to Second Marsh. We started at the platform on the east side of the marsh, from which it was pretty far to see peeps on the mudflats on the other side of the marsh. We then walked the loop south down to the lake shore and around passing by McLaughlin Bay (which was dead empty, apart from a Mute swan). After this we walk north along the eastern side of the marsh cutting across the northern side, to end up on the gravel road down the western side of the marsh, where peeps could be viewed much closer up, and with the afternoon sun in our back.
Migration-wise it was pretty quiet. Except for 28 Semipalmated sandpipers and a sub-adult Bald eagle most birds are probably local residents. Yet, we had some good opportunities to practice on the songs of Marsh and Chipping sparrows and Marsh wrens, which was useful. There were lots of ducks; >50 Canada geese, >50 Mallards, and a Bufflehead, Green-winded teal, Blue-winged teal, Wigeons, Shovelers, Trumpeter swans, and >20 Great Blue herons.
Selected species from my notes:
50 Canada Goose
2 Trumpeter Swan
6 Wood Duck
5 Gadwall
2 American Wigeon
50 Mallard
1 Blue-winged Teal
15 Northern Shoveler
1 Green-winged Teal
1 Bufflehead
20 Great Blue Heron
1 Turkey Vulture
1 Bald Eagle
10 Killdeer
1 Spotted Sandpiper
28 Semipalmated Sandpiper
10 Caspian Tern
5 Common Tern
1 Belted Kingfisher
2 Eastern Wood-Pewee
1 Great Crested Flycatcher
1 Warbling Vireo
2 Red-eyed Vireo
1 American Crow
X Tree Swallow
20 Bank Swallow
3 Barn Swallow
1 House Wren
2 Marsh Wren
1 Gray Catbird
X Yellow Warbler
1 American Redstart
2 Common Yellowthroat
X Chipping Sparrow
X Song Sparrow
5 Swamp Sparrow