I birded Rattray marsh for 3.5 hours this afternoon. There were 5 Least Sandpipers, 7 each of Spotted Sandpipers and Lesser Yellowlegs, 11 Killdeer on the mudflats. There were 71 Red-necked Grebes feeding about 150 m. off-shore. I meet Chris Jackson at the marsh, who was photographing the Great Blue and Green herons and a Great Egret. Chris had found the Green Heron nest and showed me where it was located: it was located on thick horizontal branch of Weeping Willow leaving over the marsh along sw shoreline. He had seen two adults and one juvenile earlier in the day and photographed the kingfisher harassing one of the Green Herons. After Chris left, one adult and 3 newly-fledged young returned to the nesting tree and in the next hour they flew back and forth from the mudflats, the posts of the carp fence or the nearby trees, but mostly kept returning to the nest tree. Two were still in the nest tree when I left. In spit of the fact I have been birding Rattray Marsh for a long time, I have never found evidence of breeding--I was really thrilled to see the nest and three young Green Herons and Chris should get the credit for finding the nest and young Green Herons. I also found newly-fledged broods of Blue-gray Gnatcatchers, Black-capped Chickadees, Song Sparrows and a newly-fledged Downy Woodpecker. The details of these breeding records are further elaborated on in e.bird.

Directions: Park at the south end of Bexhill Road which runs south off Lakeshore Boulevard between Erin Mills Park/Southdown Road and Mississauga Road. The entrance is marked by a sign and there is map of the marsh and adjacent woodlands and trails at the bottom the hill leading to the marsh.

Wayne Renaud (289-828-0043)

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