Everyone,

Myself and Joshua D. Vandermeulen have just returned from Netitishi Point on 
southern James Bay, where we were present on the dates of October 21 to 
November 3 inclusive.

In total we saw a total of 83 species.  Here are some of our highlights:

NORTHERN FULMAR:
One on October 29; excellent looks as it flew along the tide line (tide 1/4 in) 
from west to east.  It looked disoriented.  As a side note, this was Josh's 
339th species in Ontario for 2012, thus officially setting a new provincial 
record; more to come!

UNIDENTIFIED SHEARWATER:
One dark shearwater seen at a distance on November 3.  Seen for some time 
before it disappeared, possible landing on the water.  Short-tailed?  Sooty?  
Manx?  Who knows, but it was reminescent of the Sooty/Short-tailed Shearwater 
we saw two Novembers ago also at Netitishi Point.

NORTHERN GANNET:
One ADULT on October 23, flying from W to E.  This is only the second record 
ever for northern Ontario, the first also at Netitishi Point (late October 
1981).

GREAT CORMORANT:
One adult on November 1.  This is a NEW species for northern Ontario.  The bird 
was flying alone from east to west, and gaining altitude after it passed our 
location.  The bird looked disoriented.

COMMON EIDER:
One female type on October 22.  Unlike King Eiders that are always observed 
migrating from west to east, this bird approached from the east, loitered along 
the shore for a bit, and eventually flew west.  This is one of very few records 
for southern James Bay.

KING EIDER:
Numerous sightings in low numbers.

HARLEQUIN DUCK:
Singles on October 26 and 30; very few records for southern James Bay.

GYRFALCON:
Four sightings of single birds.

BAIRD'S SANDPIPER:
One on October 27 to November 1; exceptionally late (record-late) for southern 
James Bay.  Too bad its presence later into November could not be monitored.

PURPLE SANDPIPER:
One on October 21.

POMARINE JAEGER:
One on October 29 and two singles on October 30; as expected, all migrating 
from west to east past our location.

PARASITIC JAEGER:
Three singles on October 29; I presume these are record-late for southern James 
Bay.

BONAPARTE'S GULL:
One on October 23, and four on October 30; presumably record-late for southern 
James Bay, the species simply does not normally stay beyond early October!

LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL:
Two singles on October 30.

GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULL:
More numerous than past visits, with maximum counts of (12) on October 29 and 
(16) on November 2.

BLACK-LEGGED KITTIWAKE:
Two juveniles together on October 30, flying from east to west.

BLACK GUILLEMOT:
Two on October 28.

MOURNING DOVE:
Two on October 26 and one on October 28.  Who knows what they were doing -- 
reverse migrants?

WESTERN KINGBIRD:
One immature on November 1.  Wow what a crazy record!  At high tide, gale-force 
NW winds, ice pellets hitting us in the face, this thing goes whipping by just 
10 feet in front of our wind shelter.  It landed briefly on logs 50 feet away, 
where we could see that it was a "yellow-bellied" kingbird, but not much else, 
then it took off farther down the beach where we totally lost it.  We then 
re-grouped, and headed east down the coast in a desperate attempt to re-find 
it.  Luckily we found it about 1 km down the shore, feeding along a line of 
tide debris.  The bird was very bedraggled, but very tame, and we got lots of 
great photos.  I must admit, without refinding this bird we both would have 
been extremely depressed without having an initial ID pinned down!  This is 
only the 2nd record for southern James Bay; also easiest the latest-ever record 
for northern Ontario.

WINTER WREN:
One on October 22; record-late for southern James Bay by quite some time.

WATERFOWL MEGA-MIGRATION:
Even though the overnight low was only -2 C on October 29, something set the 
waterfowl into overdrive today, as there was a mega-migration of birds flying 
from west to east towards Hannah Bay and presumably an exit from James Bay via 
the Harricanaw River.  This was Day 1 of 7 days of storm weather, so they must 
have sensed its arrival.  Here are some of our totals for this date:

BRANT -- 24,100 -- presumably a new record-high count for Ontario?
AMERICAN BLACK DUCK -- 600
MALLARD -- 400
GREEN-WINGED TEAL -- 280
NORTHERN PINTAIL -- 6600; only a few birds thereafter!
NORTHERN SHOVELER -- 32; none thereafter.
AMERICAN WIGEON -- 63; only two thereafter.
LONG-TAILED DUCK -- 8000
BLACK SCOTER -- 300
WHITE-WINGED SCOTER -- 350

WEATHER:
Incredibly the lowest temperature for the entire trip was just -2 C.  No snow.  
No frozen ground.  No ice on puddles.  Numerous plants still flowering 
including Red Clover, Tall White Clover, a buttercup, a wild carrot type thing. 
 Mourning Cloak butterfly on October 27.  Several mosquitoes attacked us on 
October 25.  An impressive thunder and lightning show on October 25.  How is 
this all possible?!?!  Clearly James Bay is a very unique macro-environment and 
I am always amazed by this place,

HURRICANE SANDY SUPER-TIDE:
Super-tides on southern James Bay are extremely dangerous, since they can flood 
areas that are normally dry.  We once experienced such an event at White Top 
(adjacent to Ship Sands Island) in early October 1972, and it was not a 
pleasant experience.  Late yesterday our low tide was higher than most high 
tides, then the relentless NW wind intensified.  The incoming high tide was 
massive, re-arranging the whole waterfront at Netitishi Point.  Luckily 
Netitishi Point itself is high and dry with a spruce forest, so we were never 
in any danger.  However, both the "gyrfalcon" pole and wind shelter, 
constructed mostly by Brandon Holden two years ago, is now history.  Thanks a 
lot Hurricane Sandy!

In total we had 11 sightings that pertain to OBRC rarities, and full 
documentation of all will be submitted in due time,.

For more details and upcoming photos, be sure to check out Josh's blog:  
www.joshvandermeulen.blogspot.com

Netitishi Point is located 21 miles due east of Moosonee.  At this time of year 
it is accessible only by helicopter.

Alan Wormington
Josh Vandermeulen





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