Ontario/Quebec
Ottawa/Gatineau
05 April 2011

Hotline: Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club
Phone number: 613-860-9000
For the Bird Status Line PRESS * (star)
To report bird sightings PRESS 1 (one)
Coverage: Ottawa/Gatineau (Canada National Capital Region) E. Ontario,W.
Quebec
Compiler & transcriber: Chris Lewis [email protected], or [email protected]

Migrants continue to arrive and move through with geese once again the main
event. Although the flooding in the agricultural fields has seriously
receded, there is still enough water and food to attract huge numbers of
CANADA GEESE all over the region, as well as single GREATER WHITE-FRONTED
and CACKLING GEESE near Bourget on the 3rd. The incredible build-up of
Greater SNOW GEESE along the St. Lawrence River began to disperse in recent
days and some showed up closer to Ottawa on the weekend; flocks ranging in
size from 250 - 5000 were found by many observers from the Ottawa River at
L'Orignal to the South Nation River in St. Albert and the fields near
Bourget and Navan.

The pair of adult TRUMPETER SWANS continues to frequent the Jock River near
the bridge along 9th Line Beckwith west of Ashton, and there has been a slow
but steady increase in the variety of ducks. NORTHERN PINTAIL has been the
most numerous species, WOOD DUCK, AMERICAN WIGEON and NORTHERN SHOVELER were
also reported in small numbers, 2 REDHEAD were found in the Bourget area on
the 3rd, and RING-NECKED DUCK, LESSER SCAUP, BUFFLEHEAD and HOODED MERGANSER
are also being seen in more locations.

A pair of GRAY PARTRIDGE was a nice discovery in a field along Frank Kenny
Rd. near the bridge over Bear Brook on the 3rd, and the 1st seasonal report
of PIED-BILLED GREBE also came from the east the same day. DOUBLE-CRESTED
CORMORANTS have begun to check out previous nests in the RING-BILLED GULL
colony in the Deschenes rapids of the Ottawa River as of at least March
30th. Good numbers of TURKEY VULTURES were reported, an early OSPREY was
seen on a nest platform on the Rideau River at Gideon Adams Park south of
Kars on the 31st, single BALD EAGLES, NORTHERN HARRIERS and ROUGH -LEGGED
HAWKS were again noted in various locations, and other raptor reports
included MERLIN and PEREGRINE FALCON - the former in the the Carlingwood
area of Ottawa and the latter near a known breeding site near Luskville
falls in the Eardley escarpment of the Gatineau hills on the 30th.

SANDHILL CRANES were still present in the fields at Smith Rd. west of Navan
on the 3rd, but distance and terrain prevented an accurate count of numbers.
A single GLAUCOUS GULL was still at the Trail Rd. landfill on the 2nd.

The action on the songbird front is still a bit slow except for the
well-established and very vocal common species. A NORTHERN SHRIKE
was seen along Therrien Rd. west of Luskville, Quebec, on the the 30th. The
HERMIT THRUSH that survived the winter at the feeders near the Hurdman (Hwy
417) bridge was still here on the 1st. A few SNOW BUNTINGS and DARK-EYED
JUNCOS were noted on the 3rd, and the local redpoll invasion continued last
week with perhaps 200 COMMON REDPOLLS at the Hurdman feeders on the 1st and
similar numbers gorging themselves at other local feeders during the past
week.

Thank you - Good Birding!



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