Red-throated loons and shorebirds
Outdoor Ontario

Red-throated loons and shorebirds

Tyler · 2 · 1599

Tyler

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    • Posts: 210
I stopped by Darlington Provincial Park this evening to for a quick look for shorebirds

On the central section of the beach there were the following
 Sandpipers: 83 Least, 21 Spotted, 9 Semi-palmated, 13 Dunlin
Plovers: Killdeer 4, Semipalmated 2

If the small ponds remain on the beach and the birds are not excessively disturbed, the beach should get ALOT more shorebirds over the next 3 weeks.

Offshore lots of birds sitting on a flat lake
Loons: Common 22, Red-throated 6
1 Horned Grebe
5 Species of Gulls including Great Black-backed and Little
Waterfowl: 1200+ Red-breasted Mergansers, 420 long-tailed Ducks, 30+ Gadwalls( feeding on emrging midges offshore), 5 White-winged Scoters, 7 Bufflehead and 5 Common Goldeneyes


A 10 minute stop at the Oshawa Second marsh netted me 2 Black Terns, American Bittern, Sedge and Marsh Wrens
 and a Sora

Direction:

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.

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.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Tyler »


Tyler

  • Old Timer
  • *****
    • Posts: 210
Went for a quick hike at dawn from the GM parking lot to the Darlington barrier beach this morning. Didn't stop to smell the warblers.


Shorebirds on the beach consisted of 81 Least, 9 spotted, 3 semi-palmated, 25 Dunlin, 2 killdeer and 3 Semi-palmated plovers. The shorebirds were foraging from the waterline up into the willows shrubs and were scattered along the beach.

Other species
8 Common Loons
515 red-breasted mergansers
14 Buffleheads
9 Black Scoters
7 Common goldeneyes
Caspian and Common terns
4 Bonaparte's Gulls
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Tyler »