hugh currie wrote:

>     November 8 was a very special day at High Park in Toronto. I was
> lucky enough to be the official counter. The day started slowly with
> only 3 raptors between 10 and 11 although one was a Merlin perched
> close. There were no raptors between 10 and 11 and only two red-tails
> between 12 and 1. Then the floodgates opened . Exactly 100 red-tails,
> one cooper's, one red-shouldered and three dark morph rough-legs passed
> between 1 and 2.
> But the real excitement came at 2:10 when Naish McHugh spotted a strange
> bird to the north. I quickly got the scope on it just as it wheeled
> showing the classic falcon profile - but this bird was huge, comparable
> in size to nearby red-tails, and its identity was quickly known to all
> seven of us. While we watched, it dive-bombed a passing adult Golden
> Eagle several times ( had they carried on this way all the way from
> northern Quebec?). Then the bird drifted south-east and came closer so
> that we could see that it was a dark morph. It finally went out of view
> at 2:21 PM and may possibly be seen again on the Toronto waterfront.
> Total raptors were 152 today with Bald Eagle 1, Cooper's Hawk 1,
> Northern Goshawk 1, Red-shouldered Hawk1, Red-tailed Hawk 136,
> Rough-legged Hawk 7, Golden Eagle 1, American Kestrel 1, Merlin 1,
> Gyrfalcon 1 and unidentified 1.
>     High Park is just south of Bloor St., west of Keele St. in west
> Toronto. The hawk watch is conducted immediately north of the Grenadier
> Restaurant parking lot.
>                                 Hugh Currie

hugh currie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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