Lslie Street Spit Aug. 26th
Outdoor Ontario

Lslie Street Spit Aug. 26th

Anonymous

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Good evening.

 Today was a slow migration day compared to the middle of this week due to weather but that will change for the better. Despite the slowness Alfred Adamo and I found 60 species of birds on The Spit including the following species some of which are early or new arrivals and some are increased numbers..

 4 Great Egrets, 5 Great Blue Herons, 127 Mute Swans, 2 Northern Shovelers, 100+ Gadwall, 7 Lesser Scaup, 13 Hooded Mergansers, 2 Red-breasted Mergansers, Semipalmated Plovers, 47 Caspian Terns, Ruby-throated Hummingbirds, Belted Kingfishers, 8 Flycatcher species including Olive-sided Flycatcher, E. Wood Pewee, Yellow-bellied Flycatchers, Eastern Phoebe and Eastern Kingbirds, 1 Brown Creeper, Gray Catbirds, lots of Cedar Waxwings, Red-eyed and Warbling Vireos,  17 Warbler species including Tennessee, Northern Parula, Black-throated blue, Pine, Bay-breasted, Northern Waterthrush, Wilson's and Canada, House Finch and many American Goldfinches.

 Another nice day to be out and with some good birding days ahead including the start of some of the Hawk viewing areas on Sept. 1st.
 including High Park here in Toronto. Such a large and birdy place and we only met 3 other birders on the whole Spit. A greatly (along with The Islands) under birded but very productive area.

 For you  Butterfly folks, we observed about 2000+ Monarchs on The Spit today with about 1000 of them being on the base in the morning and I was told by Dan Derbyshire that he saw about 5000 Monarchs at the lighthouse in the early morning.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Anonymous »


paul bremner

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Hi Norm! I really enjoy your birding posts. The Spit is one of our favourite spots in Toronto.

I was pleased to see you're leading the Toronto Ornithological Club's outing at the Spit on September 2. My wife and I and a couple of friends are planning to join the group. We're new to the birding world and eager for some insight from experienced birders such as yourself.

My question is this: will it be too early to see any hawks? Or do they usually pass through that area? I've seen harriers at the Spit during the winter, but I haven't been there in early September before.

Any thoughts?
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by paul bremner »


Anonymous

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Hello Paul

 Glad to have you on board for Saturday.

 As you may have noticed in my post for today, we had 7 Raptor species on The Islands. They are starting to move and we may see (this Saturday) Osprey, N. Harrier, Sharp-shinned and Falcons, or nothing at all, but by the end of the week we should expect some Raptor movement if we have the right winds (NW or North).

 Keep your fingers crossed as those winds would also be good for passerine movement.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Anonymous »


paul bremner

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Fingers are crossed. Makes it hard to type, though.

We'll see you there...
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by paul bremner »