Saturday before Ernesto hit I birded the Oshawa Second Marsh-Darlington Provincial Park area

Highlights

Oshawa Second Marsh

Waterfowl: 9 species including 46 Wood Ducks, 17 Gadwall, 2 American Wigeon and 1 Northern Shoveler.
8 Pied-billed Grebes
34 Common Moorhens
6 American Coots
1 Sora
7 Green Herons
1 Merlin
large foraging flock of Chimney Swifts, Purple Martins, and 4 swallow species. A mixed flock of warblers and chickadees were moving east along the barrier beach forest/shrubs. Knowing chickadees= warblers in the fall I waited in the se corner of the 2nd marsh for the flock to pass. It paid off with 26 warblers(11 species) moving with 5 chickadees. Highlights: 1 Hooded, 1 Cerulean, and 1 Connecticut.

Next I walked the Barrier beach between McLaughlin Bay and Lake Ontario. Pre storm there was an algae mat from McLaughlin Bay Nature Reserve into the west end Darlington Provincial Park.
Highlights

Shorebirds: 22 Sanderlings, 1 Ruddy Turnstone, 8 Semi-palmated Plovers, 3 Killdeer, 9 Spotted, 1 Baird's, 2 Pectoral, 5 Least, and 32 Semi-palmated

Flybys: Little Gull 1 immature (east), 1 Parasitic Jaeger imm (east), several Bonaparte's Gulls and Caspian Terns. Foraging in the low vegetation along a beach line was an early Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow and alot of Yellow-rumped Warbler 50+

In the middle of the barrier beach is a clump of mature poplars. I decided to check out McLaughlin Bay there and flushed a moulting female Australian Shelduck. We surprised the @#@ out of each of other. Obviously an escapee.

In Darlington Provincial Park I ran into a small chickadee/warbler flock that gave me two more species for the day.

Then the rain came and I had a wet walk to my truck.

Tyler

Directions

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
http://secondmarsh.science.uoit.ca/ and check the link for a trail map of
the area.

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