Sorry for the late post.

Jeff Gross, Holly Anderson and myself birded Wildwood Lake on Wednesday to 
check 
out the shorebirds and to look for migrant passerines. There was a good variety 
of birds present, the best of which was a Eastern [Yellow] Palm Warbler between 
the two bridges. This is about my 6th record [4th fall] for this subspecies for 
Oxford County, so it seems rare but regular, with most fall records tightly 
clustered around the last week of Sept and the 1st week of Oct.

Shorebird numbers are coming up slowly, as more mud is exposed by the 
controlled 
draining of the lake. Most common was Lesser Yellowlegs [120] Pectoral 
Sandpiper 
[60] and Killdeer [300] . New were 28 American Golden Plover, 2 Black-bellied 
Plover and one White-rumped Sandpiper. 6 Stilt Sandpipers were holdovers from 
last week.

An adult Peregrine Falcon and two Merlins kept us entertained and kept the 
shorebirds on their toes. The Peregrine was particularly charismatic, making 
about 5 stooping attacks on the shorebird flocks, driving shorebirds into the 
water and mud and causing one particularly flighty Yellowlegs to fly right past 
us and crash into the pine plantation along the edge of the lake. An odd site, 
seeing this bird poking about in the depths of the conifers! 

The Peregrine seemed well fed and uninterested in collecting any of the birds 
it 
had driven down into the mud or water. Just making a bit of sport, it would 
seem.

To reach the lake, take CR 6 north from the 401 to CR 28. Go west through 
Harrington and take the 1st right [31st Line] to the bridge.

Cheers,
James Holdsworth, Biological Consulting Services
14 Marian St,
RR#1 Woodstock, On, N4S-7V6
[519]537-2027
[519]535-8760 [cell]
[email protected]
_______________________________________________
ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial 
birding organization.
Send bird reports to ONTBIRDS mailing list [email protected]
For information about ONTBIRDS visit http://www.ofo.ca/

Reply via email to