EURASIAN WIGEON
HARRIS'S SPARROW

Ross's Goose
Tundra Swan
Wood Duck
Blue-winged Teal
Northern Pintail
Green-winged Teal
Redhead
Ring-necked Duck
Hooded Merganser
Ruffed Grouse
Common Loon
Turkey Vulture
Osprey
Bald Eagle
Northern Harrier
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Red-shouldered Hawk
Rough-legged Hawk
Golden Eagle
Merlin
Sandhill Crane
Killdeer
Greater Yellowlegs
Pectoral Sandpiper
Wilson's Snipe
American Woodcock
Iceland Gull
Lesser Black-backed Gull
Caspian Tern
Belted Kingfisher
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Eastern Phoebe
Tree Swallow
Barn Swallow
House Wren
Golden-crowned Kinglet
Eastern Bluebird
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Fox Sparrow
Red-winged Blackbird
Eastern Meadowlark
Rusty Blackbird
Common Grackle
Brown -headed Cowbird
Common Redpoll

Spring creeps in slowly here in the Hamilton Study area with many frustrated
birders wondering when is it (spring) going to happen?  The weather has not
been conducive to migration but there are still some good birds about here
in the area.  The EURASIAN WIGEON seems to have a wide range but is still
around this week last being seen at the quarry pond on Green Mountain Road
between 10th and 11th Road East on Tuesday. The HARRIS'S SPARROW first
discovered several weeks ago continues to be seen at the feeder and on the
lawn of the house immediately east of 6547 Ellis Road near Cambridge as of
today

Waterfowl are still very much in the picture.   The Ross's Goose was seen
with a flock of Canada Geese flying over  a field on 4th Concession in
Flamborough.  Attempts to locate the bird came up short.  In the quarry pond
where the Eurasian Wigeon was seen Wood Duck, American Wigeon, Northern
Pintail, Ring-necked Ducks  and Hooded Merganser were seen.  Flooded fields
on 5th Road East are good places for Blue-winged and Green-winged Teal.  A
flooded field on 8th Line and Britannia in Oakville contained Northern
Pintail, American Wigeon, Green-winged and Blue-winged Teal.  Decreasing
numbers of swans were reported in fields in this area and up in Saltfleet,
the bulk of them moving through already.  A pair of Blue-winged Teal were
seen at the Valley Inn.

Shorebirds are starting to arrive albeit in miniscule numbers.  Fifth Road
East in Saltfleet between Powerline and Mud Street was host to our first
Wilson's Snipe of the year.  The field at 8th Line and Britannia had 3
Wilson's Snipe today.  Earlier in the week, Pectoral Sandpiper and a Greater
Yellowlegs were present.  A Greater Yellowlegs was seen at a distance at the
Valley Inn.  American Woodcocks are being heard in all their traditional
areas.  A good place to listen is off York Road near Dundas at the RBG
Property there known as Hopkins Tract.

There have been a couple of good hawk migration days up at Beamer Memorial
Conservation area in Grimsby.  This week's haul includes arriving Osprey,
Bald and Golden Eagles, Sharp-shinned, Red-shouldered, Red-tailed and
Rough-legged Hawk, Northern Harrier, Peregrine Falcon and Merlin.  The Bald
Eagles continue to attend to their chicks on nest at Cootes Paradise.  The
Merlins continue to exhibit territorial behaviour at the same site they have
been on Howe Avenue in Hamilton for the past three years.  Another Merlin
was seen on Upper Middle Road and Walker's Line.

In the odds and sods department, Ruffed Grouse are still coming into a
feeder at Westover Road and 8th Concession East in Flamborough.  Common
Loons are beginning to be seen migrating onto and over the lake.  Sandhill
Cranes were seen west of Glen Morris likely returning to the breeding
grounds near Grass Lake.  Our first Caspian Tern of the year was seen at 40
mile creek in Grimsby last weekend.  Another was seen in front of Canada
Centre for Inland Waters mid-week.  At the Suncor Pier at the end of Great
Lakes Blvd in Oakville, both Iceland and Lesser Black-backed Gulls were seen
last Sunday.  A Belted Kingfisher returned to the bluffs at Burloak Park in
Burlington.  Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Eastern Phoebe and Rusty Blackbirds
were seen at 8th Road East near the Dofasco Trail in Saltfleet.  Tree
Swallows have been coming in this week with multiples being seen at Bronte
Harbour, at the Hendrie Valley Trail off Unsworth and at Windermere Basin.
A Barn Swallow was an early arrival with a flock of Tree Swallows at Bronte
last weekend.  A House Wren was reported from  Inglewood and Gloucester in
Hamilton.  Golden-crowned Kinglets seem to be creeping their way into the
area with a few reported at various locations.  Eastern Bluebirds were seen
checking out nest boxes near Deer Run Court in Brantford.  A Yellow-rumped
Warbler was seen in a back yard in Dundas, overwintering successfully in
this location. Fox Sparrows have been seen at feeders at the hawk watch at
Beamer, in downtown Burlington where one appears to have successfully
overwintered and just west of Raspberry House at the RBG Arboretum.  Mixed
flocks of Red-winged Blackbird, Common Grackles and Brown-headed Cowbirds
seem to be everywhere now.  Lastly a Common Redpoll was a guest at a feeder
in South Burlington, these birds have significantly decreased in number over
the past couple of weeks, on their way north.

That's the news for this week.  Good birding!
Cheryl Edgecombe
HNC





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