Hello Everyone,

This is in response to Fred Helleiner's posting of sighting a Canada Goose with 
a neck collar. 

Report your observations of marked birds or if you find a bird band to the 
Canadian Bird Banding Office, by calling toll-free 1-800-327-2263 
(1-800-327-BAND), by sending an e-mail message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or by 
writing a letter to:

Bird Banding Office
National Wildlife Research Centre
Canadian Wildlife Service
Ottawa, Canada  K1A 0H3

Starting mid March, you will be able to report encounters on line at 
www.reportband.gov. 

If you do find a marked bird or a bird band it is important to note as much 
information as you can about the bird. This will help scientists and 
researchers continue to learn about, monitor and conserve bird populations.

If the bird is found alive do not try to remove the band. This could result in 
an injury to the leg.

Please note the following:

numbers, in sequence, appearing on the band or bands
colours and materials of any bands or markers in addition to a metal band
date on which the bird or band was found or observed
exact location the bird or band was found or observed
species, sex and age of the bird (if known)
whether the bird was alive, dead, injured, free, or trapped
how the bird died (if known)

Be sure to include your name, mailing address, and phone number so that we may 
send you a certificate of appreciation. The certificate will tell you the 
species of bird, where and when it was banded, its age, whether it was male or 
female, and who banded it. We will tell the bander where and when the bird or 
band was found and its condition.

When recording information from a collared goose, the more information that you 
can provide, the more likely the individual bird can be identified or marking 
project determined. 

Important information to record for goose collars:

Collar colour, code, code colour, and orientation of codes on the collar 
Date the bird was observed 
Exact location the bird was observed 
Species age and sex of the bird if known 
Your name, address, telephone number and e-mail address 

Your contribution is important! Thank you!

For more information on the Bird banding program please visit our website:  
http://www.cws-scf.ec.gc.ca/nwrc-cnrf/default.asp?lang=En&n=B197CA34-1

Lesley Howes 
Bird Banding Biologist / Biologiste de baguage des oiseaux 
National Wildlife Research Centre / Centre national de la recherche faunique 
Canadian Wildlife Service / Service canadien de la faune 
1125 Colonel By Drive / Raven Road 
Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0H3 
 
Telephone / téléphone: 613-998-0515 
Fax / télécopieur: 613-998-0458 
Email / courriel: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Website: http://www.cws-scf.ec.gc.ca/nwrc-cnrf/default.asp?lang=En&n=B197CA34-1
Site internet: 
http://www.cws-scf.ec.gc.ca/nwrc-cnrf/default.asp?lang=Fr&n=B197CA34-1
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Thread-Topic: Gyrfalcon - Gray Adult - Sault Ste. Marie
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Gyrfalcon - Gray Adult - Sault Ste. Marie
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Hi fellow birders,

I am passing on this report on behalf of Stan Phippen (an experienced
birder in the Sault).

Today at 9:30am Stan observed a gray adult Gyrfalcon out his office
window. It was flying westward, outside the Great Lakes Forestry Centre
between the building and Queen Street. This bird may quite likely be the
same bird I observed on Jan 26/07 in the Sault.  There is very little
open water anywhere, so this bird is most likely feeding on Rock Pigeon.

Other birds of interest include White-throated Sparrow and White-crowned
Sparrow coming to feeders. Both Black-backed and Three-toed WP's coming
to suet in town (which seems odd but then again there are so many around
this year). Still many Brown Creeper and Golden-crowned Kinglet around
(just never left).

Sault Ste. Marie is 3.5 hours west of Sudbury along Hwy 17. The Great
Lakes Forestry Centre is located at 1219 Queen Street East (along the
St. Mary's River) near the end of Pine Street.

Good Birding

Ken McIlwrick
Sault Ste. Marie
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Whitby Common Raven 02-18-07
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Excuse my spelling and Grammar, I am Dyslexic thank you.



Another good bird in Whitby yesterday(02-18-07) was a Common Raven seen at 
12:30 pm just south of Brock st and Dundas st.

sorry for the late post but wear house hunting and just got to the computer .. 

Craig 











Craig & Bev McLauchlan 
Toronto-Ont-Canada-world 
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Subject: [Ontbirds]Ottawa/Gatineau 17Feb07... American Three-toed Woodpecker,
 Black-backed Woodpecker, Gray Partridge, Northern Hawk Owl
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- RBA

* Ontario
* Ottawa/Gatineau
* 17 February 2007
* ONOT0702.17

- Birds mentioned

Barrow's Goldeneye
GRAY PARTRIDGE
Wild Turkey
Bald Eagle
Northern Goshawk
Golden Eagle
Wilson's Snipe
Snowy Owl
NORTHERN HAWK OWL
Short-eared Owl
AMERICAN THREE-TOED WOODPECKER
BLACK-BACKED WOODPECKER
Northern Shrike
Horned Lark
Carolina Wren
American Robin
Song Sparrow
Lapland Longspur
Snow Bunting
Red Crossbill
White-winged Crossbill
Pine Siskin

- Transcript

hotline: Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club
date: 17 February 2007
number: 613-860-9000
for the status line : press 2
for rare bird alerts: press 1
to report a sighting: press #
coverage: Ottawa/Gatineau (Can. Nat. Capital Reg.), E.Ont., W.Que.
compiler & transcriber: Chris Lewis  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
internet: Gordon Pringle  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

THE OFNC BIRD STATUS LINE @ 7:00 pm, SATURDAY FEBRUARY 17, 2007

This is Chris Lewis reporting.

Another week in the freezer curtailed birding ventures this past week, but
there were yet again some good reports.

The 1st report in 2 weeks of a male Barrow's Goldeneye was on the 16th on
the Ottawa River east of Remic rapids north of Lemieux Island.  On the 12th,
a small group of GRAY PARTRIDGE were seen again in the corn stubble in a
field along Garvin Rd. between Shea and Huntley Rds. near Richmond, and Wild
Turkeys were reported from Earl Armstrong Rd. south of the international
airport on the 10th as well as March Valley Rd. near Riddell Dr. on the 11th
and 16th.  Visits by several parties to the Eardley-Masham and Steele Line
Rd. area of the Gatineau Hills from the 10th through the 17th yielded a
total of 6 Bald Eagles of various ages, an adult and an immature Golden
Eagle, and an adult Northern Goshawk. This area continues to be an excellent
location for winter finches, with good numbers of both Red and White-winged
Crossbills and small numbers of Pine Siskins seen here as of the 17th.

A Wilson's Snipe appears to have wintered in a warm water ditch in the
parking lot behind the National Research Council at Montreal and Blair
Rds. - a bird discovered here in early December may be the same one that was
seen here on the 8th and 10th of February.  Owl reports included 2 Snowy
Owls at French Hill Rd. between Frank Kenny and O'Toole Rds. on the 11th,
and one in the Ste-Rose area between Conc. 19 and 20 on the 17th, the
NORTHERN HAWK OWL still present along Ch. McDonald west of Brennan's Hill
the same day, and a Short-eared Owl hunting at dusk in a field along
Woodkilton Rd. west of Vances Side Rd. near Dunrobin on the 15th.

A couple of those elusive northern woodpeckers continue to be spotted by
lucky observers - a male AMERICAN THREE-TOED WOODPECKER was found along the
trail off Kerwin Rd. on the 14th, and a male BLACK-BACKED WOODPECKER was
seen along the same trail on the 12th.  Northern Shrikes have not been
common in our area this winter; the most recent reports were of individuals
at Steele Line & Lac de Loups Rd. in Quebec, and March Valley Rd. in Kanata
on the 11th. A Carolina Wren continues to sporadically visit a feeder on
Burland St. near Britannia Bay as of at least the 11th, a single American
Robin was feeding on Staghorn Sumac fruits in the Britannia Conservation
Area on the 17th, a Song Sparrow was seen along Ste-Rose Rd. near Conc. 20
on the 17th, and small numbers of Horned Larks and Snow Buntings continue to
be reported from agricultural fields around our area, with some flocks
containing single Lapland Longspurs.

Thank you - Good Birding!

- End transcript

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