Migration has started to pick up on The Islands. It was a cold windy start on Thursday but yesterday made up for the cool weather with a hint of Summer.
Following is a list of some of the birds we ( Ian Cannell, Margaret Liubavicius, Alfred Adamo and myself ) have been finding down there.
Wood Duck, Canvasback, Lesser Scaup, all 3 Mergansers, Great Egret, Turkey Vultures, N. Harriers, Sharp-shinned and Cooper's Hawks, 3 Sandhill Cranes overhead, Caspian and Common Terns, Common Loons, Belted Kingfishers, 25+ Sapsuckers, 50+ Flickers, Least Flycatcher, Great Crested Flycatcher, 10+ E. Phoebes, Blue-headed Vireos, Cedar Waxwings, Veery, Swainson's Thrush, 35+ Hermit Thrushes, Wood Thrush, 10+ Brown Thrasher, 4 Carolina and 20+ Winter Wrens, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Purple Martins, 12 to 14 Cliff Swallows, Pine Siskins, Purple and House Finches, 35+ Yellow-rumped Warblers, 8 Pine warblers, (Yellow) Palm Warbler, Ovenbird, 12 Sparrow species including 10+ Fox, Swamp, White-crowned, 100+ White-throated, Savannah, Tree, 10+ Chipping, Vesper and 10+ Eastern Towhee, E. Meadowlarks and 9 Rusty Blackbirds.
A nice start to The Islands migration season.
Directions:-
TORONTO ISLANDS ( Ward