On Friday, November 28th, 2008, this is the HNC Birding Report:

WHITE-EYED VIREO
BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER

Cackling Goose
Hooded Merganser
Common Loon
Bald Eagle
Red-shouldered Hawk
Rough-legged Hawk
Merlin
Killdeer
Greater Yellowlegs
Purple Sandpiper
Dunlin
Iceland Gull
Lesser Black-backed Gull
Glaucous Gull
Great Black-backed Gull
Great Horned Owl
Snowy Owl
Long-eared Owl
Northern Saw-whet Owl
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Pileated Woodpecker
Northern Shrike
Brown Creeper
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
Eastern Bluebird
American Pipit
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Fox Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Snow Bunting
White-winged Crossbill
Pine Siskin

There has been some interesting birds found here in the Hamilton Study Area
this week.  Last Saturday in Bronte Creek Provincial Park, a WHITE-EYED
VIREO was found on a trail near the tennis courts.  Other birds seen on that
outing and on the next couple days after that were Red-shouldered Hawk,
Great Horned, Long-eared and Northern Saw-whet Owl, Pileated and Red-bellied
Woodpecker, Northern Shrike, Eastern Bluebird, Ruby-crowned Kinglet and a
sizable flock of White-winged Crossbills near Parking Lot F.

Also found this week was a very late female BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER at
LaSalle Park.  The bird was found last Sunday and seen briefly on Monday but
still could be in the area as there is alot of tangle located on the hill.
Many of you will remember how easy it was to find the Yellow-breasted Chat
there a few winters ago (NOT!).  While looking for this bird a Pileated
Woodpecker was seen in the trees along the top of the hill.

Snowy Owls continue to invade the area with several being seen this week.
One was seen last weekend across from the movie theatres located on Burloak
just south of the QEW.  Another bird was seen flying across the highway at
the junction of the QEW and 403.  Two birds were seen (one juvenile and one
adult) on the break wall at Canada Centre for Inland Waters and yet another
bird was seen yesterday along Hwy 407 just east of Winston Churchill Blvd.,
sitting on a post on the north side of the highway.  These will likely
continue to be seen regularly in the next few weeks.

At Fifty Point Conservation area a Purple Sandpiper was flushed from the
jetty on the east side on Tuesday.  Bald Eagle and  Lesser Black-backed Gull
were seen on the same day and today a flock of 6 Snow Buntings were seen in
the parking lot.

Winter finches continue to infiltrate the area.  In addition to the ones
seen at Bronte Creek, White-winged Crossbills were also reported in the
Patterson Tract located on 4th Concession just west of Woodhill and at
various spots in the Carlisle and Flamborough area.  Pine Siskins were seen
at a feeder in Brantford.

Out at the Dundas Marsh, a Merlin perched at Presidents Pond yesterday.
Eastern Bluebirds and Yellow-rumped Warbler on the path out the willows may
be of interest to winter listers and a group of Hooded Mergansers were
present in Spencer's Creek.

For those with patience for sifting through masses of gulls, rewards are
many.  This week at the Waterdown Garden Supply located on Hwy 5 just west
of Peter's Corners a variety of gulls including Glaucous, Iceland, Greater
and Lesser Black-backed (7 of them!) were sorted out.  Also seen were two
Greater Yellowlegs, Killdeer and a small flock of American Pipits.  These
are all good birds for winter listers.  Please note there is no access into
the property on the weekend.  Please respect these conditions.  Safety vests
must be obtained from the office when it is opened in order to gain access.

In the odds and sods this week, 5 Cackling Geese were seen near the Grand
River just upstream from Caledonia.  A Common Loon was also in the river.  A
couple of reports of Rough-legged Hawk came in from Guelph Line just north
of Dundas and another on the North Service Road near King Road.  A late
Dunlin was seen in the Desjardins Canal last Saturday.  A Brown Creeper was
seen at Woodland Cemetery.  Another American Pipit was seen on the bluffs at
Burloak Park last Sunday.  A Fox Sparrow is still present at a feeder in
Flamborough and four White-throated Sparrows showed up out of nowhere at my
feeder on Wednesday.

Winter listing starts Monday.  Please report your sightings!  With the
possible storm moving in, unusual birds could be popping up in unusual
places.

Good birding,
Cheryl Edgecombe
HNC Hotline
905-381-0329








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