On Thursday, June 21st, 2007, this is the HNC Birding Report:

Blue-winged Teal
Lesser Scaup
Least Bittern
Black-crowned Night Heron
Northern Goshawk
Peregrine Falcon
Common Moorhen
American Coot
Spotted Sandpiper
Great Black-backed Gull
Common Tern
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
Black-billed Cuckoo
Eastern Screech Owl
Eastern Kingbird
Yellow-throated Vireo
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Winter Wren
Marsh Wren
Eastern Bluebird
Brown Thrasher
Pine Warbler
Canada Warbler
White-throated Sparrow

Slim pickings this week in the Hamilton Study Area.  No rarities around but
reports from a few spots of some less common birds around the area offer
some diversity in birding this week.

Last Saturday at the Grimsby Sewage Lagoons, an early morning trip produced
Common Moorhen, probably sitting tight on nest but heard clucking in the
marsh.  Other birds seen here were Blue-winged Teal, Black-crowned Night
Heron, three pair of American Coots with young, Common Tern with young and
Spotted Sandpiper.

An interesting nook of the Hamilton Study Area is the LaFarge Trail running
between 8th Road West and 10th Road West in Flamborough near Middletown
Road.  This northern habitat presents a unique and diverse number of birds
with a more northern element not found elsewhere in the HSA.  This week on
the trail just north of 8th concession a Winter Wren, Canada Warbler and
White-throated Sparrow were heard.  This particular part of the trail is
also good for Ruffed Grouse.

Another neat spot this week is the Millgrove Loam Pits.  Located west of Hwy
6 (just west of Moffat Road) on 5th Concession West in Flamborough, a trip
in by canoe yielded a pair of Least Bittern, Common Moorhen, Yellow-throated
Vireo and Marsh Wren.  Both species of Cuckoos are doing well here and an
Eastern Kingbird was seen on nest.  A trail on the west side of the property
goes back into the Loam Pits and some of these birds may be heard and/or
seen without a canoe but it is a great place to walk and probably one of the
most extensive marshes in the area.

A trip back to see the Northern Goshawks in Killbride came up with two young
calling and an adult calling back in the distance but the birds were not
seen.  Pine Warblers were also trilling away in the area.

At Hopkins Tract off of York Road near Dundas, Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Eastern
Bluebirds and a Brown Thrasher were among birds seen here in the week.

Our Peregrine Falcon chick, Jump Up, is doing extremely well at the Sheraton
Hotel in Hamilton.  The other surviving chick had to be taken to Guelph
University to treat a bacterial infection.  Unfortunately, two more chicks
succumbed to this infection.  Jump Up appears to be exercising its wing and
ready to give the falcon watchers a good show and scare, probably sometime
this week!

In the odds and sods, a few Lesser Scaup are still present in the Windermere
Basin, a Great Black-backed Gull was seen flying past Sioux Lookout Park in
Burlington this week, an Eastern Screech Owl pair has taken up residence in
the New Street and Tiperrary area of Burlington and a pair of Red-breasted
Nuthatches are nesting close to the Walkers Line and New Street area, a bird
not often seen in the summer months in the city.

Keep reporting your sightings!  Summer is here and birds will be on the move
again.

Have a great week!
Cheryl Edgecombe
HNC Hotline
905-381-0329

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