Good Morning

Yesterday morning Ian Cannell and I birded a few areas in the Long Point Area 
and on a beautiful Spring morning we found a few nice birds including Green 
Heron, Red-shouldered Hawk, 3 Yellow-billed and 1 Black-billed Cuckoo, Several 
Red-bellied Woodpeckers, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, 2 Pileated Woodpeckers, E. 
Wood-Pewees, 3 Acadian Flycatchers, Willow and Great-crested Flycatchers, E. 
Phoebes, Carolina and House Wrens, E. Bluebirds, Veerys, Wood Thrushes, Brown 
Thrashers, 2 Yellow-throated Vireos, 3 Blue-winged Warblers, Pine Warblers, 3 
Prothonotary and 9 Hooded Warblers, Louisiana and Northern Waterthrushes, 
Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, E. Towhees, Field, Vesper and 
White-throated Sparrows.

The wood lots in this area have lots of standing water that over the last 
couple of years has been very beneficial to nesting birds like the Prothonotary 
Warbler, Louisiana Waterthrush and Acadian Flycatcher and of course the 
Mosquito though they were not TOO bad yesterday, the Mosquitos that is.

Note:- These 3 bird species are endangered or threatened in Ontario so trying 
to track them down for photos is not a good idea as they are in their nesting 
areas and should not be disturbed or harassed. Now don’t start emailing me 
telling me I hate photographers.

After birding the above area we headed off to the Currie Tract at Campbellville 
to see what Ontario Hydro has done to the birding area there. 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One of the last times that we birded the Currie Tract we saw Both Cuckoos 
including 3 Yellow-billed, Yellow-throated Vireo, 7 Mourning and 9 Blue-winged 
Warblers including 2 Brewster’s.

This time we were lucky to hear 1 B-B Cuckoo and see 1 Blue-winged Warbler and 
very little else.

Ontario Hydro’s signage says that they did a “Land Management” procedure and 
that they would occasionally do the same in the future. Their idea of “Land 
Management” was to bull doze the area down to bare dirt leaving nothing but 
stones, dry earth and rocks in a wide swath along the hydro tower line and very 
little growth has happened since.

It is a shame to see it ruined in such a way though I do realize that they need 
access to the towers but in other tower lines a single 1 vehicle wide un bull 
dozed road seemed to suffice.

Ian informed me as we left the area that yesterdays visit is the last he would 
be making (to that past bird rich area) there.

Directions:-

LONG POINT AREA - CENTERED ON PORT ROWAN

Port Rowan is southwest of Hamilton, to reach it you can drive south on Hwy 6 
from Hamilton, passing through Hagersville and turning right, west in Jarvis 
onto Hwy 3, drive to Simcoe and turn left, south on Hwy 24 and follow this to 
Hwy 59, ( it curves to the west south of Simcoe) and your in the Long Point 
Area.

Turn left (south) on Hwy 59 at Hwy 24 and Port Rowan is straight down Hwy 59 
(about 6 kms) on County Rd 42 (Lakeshore Rd), Big Creek Marsh, etc. are just a 
little further south of County Rd 42.

Or you can exit Hwy 403 just west of Brantford. Exit at Hwy 24 South at Exit 91 
and drive south through Simcoe and follow it to Hwy 59, ( it curves to the west 
south of Simcoe) and your in the Long Point Area. 

The wood lots, fields, marshes etc. are north, south, east and west of Port 
Rowan.

==========================================================================================================================

CURRIE TRACT - IF still interested in checking this area out.

Exit Hwy 401 at Guelph Line ( Exit 312 ) ( at Campbellville ) and drive north 
just past the second entrance into the Mohawk Raceway and you will see a small 
road on your right (Green Postal Sign #9475), turn in here and you will come to 
a small parking lot about 200 yards from the entrance. This is the start of the 
trail system.

Be sure to put anything you re not taking with you out of sight in the trunk or 
under the seat if possible.

Norm Murr
Richmond Hill
Ontario, Canada
_______________________________________________
ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial 
birding organization.
Send bird reports to [email protected]
For information about ONTBIRDS including how to unsubscribe visit 
http://www.ofo.ca/site/page/view/information.ontbirdssetup

Reply via email to