With the Holiday Beach hawk count shut down due to the stormy weather and severe winds, I had a free day to roam. Though it would seem Van Wagner's was the place to be (Wilson's AND Leach's Storm-Petrels, jaegers, Purple Sandpipers, Brant, Black-legged Kittiwake, etc.! and I know I shouldn't do this to myself, but if I had spent the day there today, I would have potentially seen 7 year birds, 5 Ontario birds, and 4 lifers), I went to a place a bit closer for me, Point Edward near Sarnia (for those who have seen the van I drive for birding, you know that even Point Edward was a stretch for such a rust-infected rust-bucket). Hurricane Sandy and the resulting weather in the province is moving a lot of birds around, producing pretty unbelievable rarities, and making things quite exciting for Ontario birders looking to see what else shows up in the next few days (oh, a Razorbill, too, waa?!). All in all, I had a great day at Point Edward.
This was the first time I'd visited the spot. It was quite the scene. You essentially parked your car at the south end of Lake Huron and pray for birds to get blown into your windshield so you can see them through the wind and rain while turning on your (non-existent in my rust heap) heat periodically to remember what fingers feel like but in all seriousness, this is actually as much fun as one can have as a birder because, well, I mean, come on now(!) you're sitting w/ other birders in a row of cars in a storm scanning birds being blown all over the place and shouting out sightings from cracked windows while trying to adjust your scope that's propped up with your emergency brake and when every once in a while you run out of the vehicle to go shout to another birder, water splats at you from all angles like running through a car wash despite winds only coming from one direction and then you find out you missed a distant jaeger. I loved it.
Spent the time watching the action w/ Andrew Keaveney, Blake Mann, and Josh & Michael Bouman for about 6 hours. A lot of Brant are in the area right now. I estimated around 125 birds but I'm sure that's a conservative count. It was hard to get an accurate count as birds would fly by in flocks, land on the lake and then get pushed back into the river where they flew back out again into the lake. This happened all day. Bonaparte's, Herring, and Ring-billed Gulls were all present in good numbers (5 Great Black-backed and 1 Lesser Black-backed were also present) but the highlights were 2 juvenile Sabine's Gulls (lifer!) and 3 juvenile Black-legged Kittiwake (new year bird). We also had a gull that was a probable "Nelson's" Gull, a hybrid Herring X Glaucous. The bird was large and pale and had a Glaucous appearance but had brown to dark grey wingtips.
Other birds included 3 Red-necked Grebes, good numbers of White-winged and Black Scoters, Long-tailed Ducks, Canvasback, Redhead, lots of scaups, Bufflehead, Red-breasted Mergansers, a handful of Mallards, and a flock of Sanderlings. No Red Phalaropes while I was there but others had one earlier in the morning. My one disappointment was missing the jaegers that were spotted. I blame my windshield wipers, which don't work properly...they basically just press water around on the window rather than off it so that when I looked through, I was just seeing a kind of grey smear.
I have job training tomorrow but boy do I wish I could spend the day at Van Wagner's. I look forward to seeing what shows up on Lake Ontario tomorrow in the upcoming days.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Point Pelee Saturday, October 27
Hoping to see a Cave Swallow during the 2012 invasion, I spent Friday driving around the Onion Fields with my mum to try to see any that might be hunkered down in the rain or flying by Wheatley Harbour. We found very few birds (not even a Snow Bunting).
So, on Saturday, Marianne and I decided to try a different approach and park ourselves at the Tip of Point Pelee to see if any flew by in the late morning. I had a wedding in Cambridge to go to later in the day so my time was limited to the morning, which was rainy/cloudy the entire time. However, it was decent down there despite this, with many Common Loon flybys, a couple Bald Eagles and Red-shouldered Hawks overhead, lots of Bonaparte's Gulls, and a single American White Pelican that flew in over the rough waters on the lake and landed on the sandy spit off the Tip.
So, on Saturday, Marianne and I decided to try a different approach and park ourselves at the Tip of Point Pelee to see if any flew by in the late morning. I had a wedding in Cambridge to go to later in the day so my time was limited to the morning, which was rainy/cloudy the entire time. However, it was decent down there despite this, with many Common Loon flybys, a couple Bald Eagles and Red-shouldered Hawks overhead, lots of Bonaparte's Gulls, and a single American White Pelican that flew in over the rough waters on the lake and landed on the sandy spit off the Tip.
American White Pelican Instagram
American White Pelican #nofilter
Not a single swallow went by in the morning so we made our way up to Sparrow Field. Not a bad day for passerines with many Song, Swamp, White-crowned, and Chipping Sparrows, w/ singles of White-throated, Fox, and American Tree Sparrow. We also had a Gray Catbird and later had a Northern Saw-whet Owl pointed out to us by a group led by Paul Pratt.
Shy Northern Saw-whet Owl
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Pelee Birding Circle - still no Snow Bunting!
Originally I had planned to get out birding early today but after waking up very early to do chores around the farm I went back to sleep for a bit and didn't get out until 11am. Oh well.
I started the day behind Pelee Days Inn. Not much changed overnight though there seemed to be less of everything. Fewer Lesser Yellowlegs, only 2 Least Sandpipers found out of the group of 6 that's been hanging out, and definitely fewer Canada Geese. Still a few Pectorals around and Killdeer but I didn't see any Semipalmated Plover this time around. American Golden-Plover outnumbered Black-bellied there today.
Next was lunch. Anyone visiting the Pelee area MUST go to Birdies Perch, located right across from Pelee Wings Nature Shop. They make the best darn vegetarian wrap you could ask for, called the Green Goddess. I've had about 20 of them since moving back to Essex County. The restaurant is currently rated #1 on Trip Advisor: Birdies Perch Trip Advisor.Unfortunately, I believe it's closing at the end of October so we'll have to wait until next spring to enjoy it again but they are going to do wonderful during the month of May. I'm excited to see what business is like there when so many birders are around.
The Onion Fields didn't produce anything of note for me this afternoon unfortunately but things picked up when I visited Hillman Marsh. I had got a text from Marianne saying she had more Snow Buntings flying over her house so I thought Hillman might give me a good clear open sky to see/hear one flying by. No such luck but I did get migrating raptors including 2 Golden Eagles, Red-tailed Hawks, Northern Harrier, Sharpies, Turkey Vultures, and a single American Kestrel. A few Tree Swallows are still around the area and I had a late Nashville Warbler near the visitor centre.
Another highlight along the edge of the Shorebird Cell was a large # of Common Checkered Skipper. My count got up to 67 being as accurate as possible. I didn't continue along the trail past the Shorebird Cell so there may have been more. They were flying up from the ground every few steps I took. I saw more Checkered Skippers today than the combined total in my whole life. I also had a single Gray Hairstreak along this trail, Orange Sulphurs, Common Buckeyes, and one Monarch.
I finished up the day at Wheatley Harbour (after driving around the fields adjacent to Hillman trying to flush up a Snow Bunting from the side of the road...). Not much going on there besides a good number of migrating Bonaparte's Gulls, 7 Great Black-backed Gulls, and a Palm Warbler. I tried for the Nelson's Sparrow reported by Andrew Keaveney a few days ago but couldn't pish out anything interesting from the bushes at the harbour's edge.
Tomorrow, I plan to grab a lawn chair and park my keester on our back porch and wait for a Snow Bunting to fly over to get to 301. I just want that species out of the way!
And on that note, my Big Year has definitely slowed down after hitting 300. I can't do the same level of chasing I was doing earlier in the year to reach my goal so I'm relying on local rarities to bump my # up at this point. I'd love to go to Ottawa to get Barrow's Goldeneye, Western Grebe, and Tufted Duck but that's so implausible right now it's laughable.
I started the day behind Pelee Days Inn. Not much changed overnight though there seemed to be less of everything. Fewer Lesser Yellowlegs, only 2 Least Sandpipers found out of the group of 6 that's been hanging out, and definitely fewer Canada Geese. Still a few Pectorals around and Killdeer but I didn't see any Semipalmated Plover this time around. American Golden-Plover outnumbered Black-bellied there today.
Next was lunch. Anyone visiting the Pelee area MUST go to Birdies Perch, located right across from Pelee Wings Nature Shop. They make the best darn vegetarian wrap you could ask for, called the Green Goddess. I've had about 20 of them since moving back to Essex County. The restaurant is currently rated #1 on Trip Advisor: Birdies Perch Trip Advisor.Unfortunately, I believe it's closing at the end of October so we'll have to wait until next spring to enjoy it again but they are going to do wonderful during the month of May. I'm excited to see what business is like there when so many birders are around.
The Onion Fields didn't produce anything of note for me this afternoon unfortunately but things picked up when I visited Hillman Marsh. I had got a text from Marianne saying she had more Snow Buntings flying over her house so I thought Hillman might give me a good clear open sky to see/hear one flying by. No such luck but I did get migrating raptors including 2 Golden Eagles, Red-tailed Hawks, Northern Harrier, Sharpies, Turkey Vultures, and a single American Kestrel. A few Tree Swallows are still around the area and I had a late Nashville Warbler near the visitor centre.
Another highlight along the edge of the Shorebird Cell was a large # of Common Checkered Skipper. My count got up to 67 being as accurate as possible. I didn't continue along the trail past the Shorebird Cell so there may have been more. They were flying up from the ground every few steps I took. I saw more Checkered Skippers today than the combined total in my whole life. I also had a single Gray Hairstreak along this trail, Orange Sulphurs, Common Buckeyes, and one Monarch.
I finished up the day at Wheatley Harbour (after driving around the fields adjacent to Hillman trying to flush up a Snow Bunting from the side of the road...). Not much going on there besides a good number of migrating Bonaparte's Gulls, 7 Great Black-backed Gulls, and a Palm Warbler. I tried for the Nelson's Sparrow reported by Andrew Keaveney a few days ago but couldn't pish out anything interesting from the bushes at the harbour's edge.
Tomorrow, I plan to grab a lawn chair and park my keester on our back porch and wait for a Snow Bunting to fly over to get to 301. I just want that species out of the way!
And on that note, my Big Year has definitely slowed down after hitting 300. I can't do the same level of chasing I was doing earlier in the year to reach my goal so I'm relying on local rarities to bump my # up at this point. I'd love to go to Ottawa to get Barrow's Goldeneye, Western Grebe, and Tufted Duck but that's so implausible right now it's laughable.
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Holiday Beach Praised for Hawk Watching
I guess since I'm given a couple of close-ups in this news report, I figured I'd throw it on here for folks to see. Holiday Beach really is a wonderful place to visit and I love hawk-watching here in the fall.
http://www.ctvwindsor.ca/2012/09/holiday-beach-praised-for-hawk-watching/
And one more link:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/story/2012/09/26/wdr-holiday-beach-hawks.html
http://www.ctvwindsor.ca/2012/09/holiday-beach-praised-for-hawk-watching/
And one more link:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/story/2012/09/26/wdr-holiday-beach-hawks.html
A Day at Pelee and Surrounding Area
Today, Marianne and I did a tour of the Point Pelee Birding Circle almost from one end to the other. We started at the Tip at 8am to try for jaegers, gulls, and anything else that might fly by (was it too much to ask for a Cave Swallow before November?). Shortly after we arrived at the Tip, we were joined by Kory Renaud who was at 249 for his Essex County Big Year and hoping to get his 250th bird.
There were a decent number of Bonaparte's migrating by and lots of Herring and Ring-billed Gulls flying around at the Tip and we examined everything closely for a late Sabine's Gull or a jaeger flying through but no luck this morning. Lots of Red-breasted Merganser are at the Tip now and an assortment of ducks are flying by. We saw Gadwall, Mallard, American Wigeon, Bufflehead, Surf Scoter, and Ruddy Duck.
A few raptors were turning back over the Tip including Northern Harrier, Bald Eagle, Sharp-shinned and Cooper's Hawks, and 2 Peregrine Falcons. One of the falcons, a juvenile, had caught a Blue Jay and was actually eating it mid-flight!
In the shorebird department, we saw the most southern Least Sandpiper in mainland Canada struggling against the wind, walking on a 45 degree angle. When we first arrived, we also had a single Sanderling on the sandbar island off the Tip. A single Killdeer flew over.
One of the highlights was a gull that we first thought could have been the Vega Gull but after examining it closer, realized it was a hybrid of some kind. It appeared slightly larger and definitely taller (long-legged) than surrounding Herring Gulls with a dark grey mantle. Its legs were the same pink colour of a Great Black-backed Gull and the bill was larger than surrounding Herring Gulls. From our distance, the eye appeared dark and Marianne and Kory noted that its head appeared quite flat. I'm leaning toward Great Black-backed X Herring Gull due to bill size and leg colour.
Here's an iScoped photo (centre bird):
Once we moved on from the gull and started scanning the lake again, our best bird of the morning flew by, a Red-throated Loon. I spotted the approaching loon flying in from the east and noted that its head was held quite low in flight so I wanted to get Marianne and Kory on the bird. Once it got closer, Marianne noted the low head as well and upturned bill. This was Kory's 250th Essex County bird for the year and it was great to share that experience w/ him!
Other birds of note at the Tip were 3 Chimney Swifts, 9 Northern Rough-winged Swallows, 32 Tree Swallows, and 1 Barn Swallow (possibly my last for the year?).
After checking out Delaurier and Ander's Footpath (siskins, kinglets, goldfinches, Eastern Bluebirds, Eastern Phoebes, Purple Finch, Chipping Sparrows, juncos, Red-breasted Nuthatch, creeper, and Blackpoll Warbler), we went for lunch and then decided to check out behind Pelee Days Inn.
Sturgeon Creek's waters are very low right now so there are lots of mudflats for small groups of shorebirds. The set of shorebirds was almost identical to the birds I had a couple evenings ago at the same location: 40 Dunlin, a handful of Lesser Yellowlegs, 6 Least Sandpipers, Killdeer, a good number of Black-bellied Plover w/ a single American Golden-Plover, a couple Pectoral Sandpipers, and 2 Semipalmated Plovers.
I also noticed 6 interesting Canada Geese that were in an obvious group separate from the rest of the ~200 geese in the creek. They were all noticeably buffier at the base of the black neck and shorter-necked than the rest of the flock. I know there is much variation across Canada Goose subspecies so I want to be careful about calling them anything but they were definitely staying together as a group in the larger overall flock and stood out as distinct birds.
There were a decent number of Bonaparte's migrating by and lots of Herring and Ring-billed Gulls flying around at the Tip and we examined everything closely for a late Sabine's Gull or a jaeger flying through but no luck this morning. Lots of Red-breasted Merganser are at the Tip now and an assortment of ducks are flying by. We saw Gadwall, Mallard, American Wigeon, Bufflehead, Surf Scoter, and Ruddy Duck.
A few raptors were turning back over the Tip including Northern Harrier, Bald Eagle, Sharp-shinned and Cooper's Hawks, and 2 Peregrine Falcons. One of the falcons, a juvenile, had caught a Blue Jay and was actually eating it mid-flight!
In the shorebird department, we saw the most southern Least Sandpiper in mainland Canada struggling against the wind, walking on a 45 degree angle. When we first arrived, we also had a single Sanderling on the sandbar island off the Tip. A single Killdeer flew over.
One of the highlights was a gull that we first thought could have been the Vega Gull but after examining it closer, realized it was a hybrid of some kind. It appeared slightly larger and definitely taller (long-legged) than surrounding Herring Gulls with a dark grey mantle. Its legs were the same pink colour of a Great Black-backed Gull and the bill was larger than surrounding Herring Gulls. From our distance, the eye appeared dark and Marianne and Kory noted that its head appeared quite flat. I'm leaning toward Great Black-backed X Herring Gull due to bill size and leg colour.
Here's an iScoped photo (centre bird):
Once we moved on from the gull and started scanning the lake again, our best bird of the morning flew by, a Red-throated Loon. I spotted the approaching loon flying in from the east and noted that its head was held quite low in flight so I wanted to get Marianne and Kory on the bird. Once it got closer, Marianne noted the low head as well and upturned bill. This was Kory's 250th Essex County bird for the year and it was great to share that experience w/ him!
Other birds of note at the Tip were 3 Chimney Swifts, 9 Northern Rough-winged Swallows, 32 Tree Swallows, and 1 Barn Swallow (possibly my last for the year?).
After checking out Delaurier and Ander's Footpath (siskins, kinglets, goldfinches, Eastern Bluebirds, Eastern Phoebes, Purple Finch, Chipping Sparrows, juncos, Red-breasted Nuthatch, creeper, and Blackpoll Warbler), we went for lunch and then decided to check out behind Pelee Days Inn.
Sturgeon Creek's waters are very low right now so there are lots of mudflats for small groups of shorebirds. The set of shorebirds was almost identical to the birds I had a couple evenings ago at the same location: 40 Dunlin, a handful of Lesser Yellowlegs, 6 Least Sandpipers, Killdeer, a good number of Black-bellied Plover w/ a single American Golden-Plover, a couple Pectoral Sandpipers, and 2 Semipalmated Plovers.
I also noticed 6 interesting Canada Geese that were in an obvious group separate from the rest of the ~200 geese in the creek. They were all noticeably buffier at the base of the black neck and shorter-necked than the rest of the flock. I know there is much variation across Canada Goose subspecies so I want to be careful about calling them anything but they were definitely staying together as a group in the larger overall flock and stood out as distinct birds.
Here are the group of 6. The far left and right birds show the buffy base of neck w/ no white.
Comparing the two birds in the water, the goose on the left has a shorter neck, buffier front, smaller size, and slightly smaller bill.
We ended the day taking a quick drive around the Onion Fields and finishing up at the southeast end of Hillman Marsh. Not too much to note besides a Spotted Sandpiper found by Marianne on the beach at Hillman. Great day overall.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Holiday Beach Raptors and Kingsville area birding
I only had to help out w/ the Holiday Beach Hawk Count on Wednesday this week so I decided on Thursday to head out and do some birding around Essex County.
First off, the raptor count has been great. I agreed to help count 2 days/week during the duration of the counting season right after I got back from James Bay. Although I've missed the only 2 Swainson's Hawks that have flown over by one day this fall (the species would be an Ontario Year Bird and lifer), I've had a lot of good sightings there and it's certainly giving me a new appreciation for Official Counters. There are times when so many Turkey Vultures, Blue Jays, blackbirds, crows, and finches are flying over that you have up to 4 tickers in hand clicking away and trying to get an accurate count! A few highlights have been the huge numbers of Blue Jays (my highest day so far was 37,380 birds), likely one of my highest count of Tree Swallows I've ever had in an hour span (1,032 streaming by the tower), and the large numbers of ducks to sort through each day on the marsh adjacent to the tower. Another highlight at the beginning of the raptor season was the number of Soras that would start screaming in the marsh each time hunters' guns went off. In my time counting I've only had one juvenile Golden Eagle (I expect more), a few Red-shouldered Hawks (definitely expect more!) and not nearly the numbers of Red-tailed Hawks that will eventually fly over.
Back to Thursday. Andrew Keaveney and I checked out a few spots along the Lake Erie shoreline once the storms cleared, starting w/ Leamington Marina. Literally nothing interesting there so we tried Kingsville Marina where it was closed off due to construction! We then tried a couple places I've never birded before despite growing up in the area (slaps wrist dutifully). The stops included Lakeside Park, which has a very interesting beach with sandbars reaching well out into the lake along the shoreline where large groups of loafing gulls were sitting, and Cedar Island, another good spot for gulls. The only birds of note were a single Lesser Black-backed Gull, a good number of Great Black-backed Gulls, 2 Sanderlings, and a 90% sure Semipalmated Sandpiper, that was distant but showed most of the field marks we needed to safely say it wasn't any of the other peeps (well, except maybe Western but I won't go there....). I'll certainly be birding these areas again in the future having now been introduced to them.
First off, the raptor count has been great. I agreed to help count 2 days/week during the duration of the counting season right after I got back from James Bay. Although I've missed the only 2 Swainson's Hawks that have flown over by one day this fall (the species would be an Ontario Year Bird and lifer), I've had a lot of good sightings there and it's certainly giving me a new appreciation for Official Counters. There are times when so many Turkey Vultures, Blue Jays, blackbirds, crows, and finches are flying over that you have up to 4 tickers in hand clicking away and trying to get an accurate count! A few highlights have been the huge numbers of Blue Jays (my highest day so far was 37,380 birds), likely one of my highest count of Tree Swallows I've ever had in an hour span (1,032 streaming by the tower), and the large numbers of ducks to sort through each day on the marsh adjacent to the tower. Another highlight at the beginning of the raptor season was the number of Soras that would start screaming in the marsh each time hunters' guns went off. In my time counting I've only had one juvenile Golden Eagle (I expect more), a few Red-shouldered Hawks (definitely expect more!) and not nearly the numbers of Red-tailed Hawks that will eventually fly over.
Back to Thursday. Andrew Keaveney and I checked out a few spots along the Lake Erie shoreline once the storms cleared, starting w/ Leamington Marina. Literally nothing interesting there so we tried Kingsville Marina where it was closed off due to construction! We then tried a couple places I've never birded before despite growing up in the area (slaps wrist dutifully). The stops included Lakeside Park, which has a very interesting beach with sandbars reaching well out into the lake along the shoreline where large groups of loafing gulls were sitting, and Cedar Island, another good spot for gulls. The only birds of note were a single Lesser Black-backed Gull, a good number of Great Black-backed Gulls, 2 Sanderlings, and a 90% sure Semipalmated Sandpiper, that was distant but showed most of the field marks we needed to safely say it wasn't any of the other peeps (well, except maybe Western but I won't go there....). I'll certainly be birding these areas again in the future having now been introduced to them.
Sunday, October 07, 2012
My 300 (full breakdown will come at the end of 2012)
1
|
Here they are
(in taxanomical order):
All 300.
Greater White-fronted Goose
|
2
|
Snow Goose
|
3
|
Ross's Goose
|
4
|
Brant
|
5
|
Cackling Goose
|
6
|
Canada Goose
|
7
|
Mute Swan
|
8
|
Trumpeter Swan
|
9
|
Tundra Swan
|
10
|
Wood Duck
|
11
|
Gadwall
|
12
|
Eurasian Wigeon
|
13
|
American Wigeon
|
14
|
American Black Duck
|
15
|
Mallard
|
16
|
Blue-winged Teal
|
17
|
Northern Shoveler
|
18
|
Northern Pintail
|
19
|
Green-winged Teal
|
20
|
Canvasback
|
21
|
Redhead
|
22
|
Ring-necked Duck
|
23
|
Greater Scaup
|
24
|
Lesser Scaup
|
25
|
King Eider
|
26
|
Harlequin Duck
|
27
|
Surf Scoter
|
28
|
White-winged Scoter
|
29
|
Black Scoter
|
30
|
Long-tailed Duck
|
31
|
Bufflehead
|
32
|
Common Goldeneye
|
33
|
Hooded Merganser
|
34
|
Common Merganser
|
35
|
Red-breasted Merganser
|
36
|
Ruddy Duck
|
37
|
Ring-necked Pheasant
|
38
|
Ruffed Grouse
|
39
|
Spruce Grouse
|
40
|
Sharp-tailed Grouse
|
41
|
Wild Turkey
|
42
|
Red-throated Loon
|
43
|
Common Loon
|
44
|
Pied-billed Grebe
|
45
|
Horned Grebe
|
46
|
Red-necked Grebe
|
47
|
Eared Grebe
|
48
|
Magnificent Frigatebird
|
49
|
Double-crested Cormorant
|
50
|
American White Pelican
|
51
|
American Bittern
|
52
|
Least Bittern
|
53
|
Great Blue Heron
|
54
|
Great Egret
|
55
|
Snowy Egret
|
56
|
Little Blue Heron
|
57
|
Cattle Egret
|
58
|
Green Heron
|
59
|
Black-crowned Night-Heron
|
60
|
White-faced Ibis
|
61
|
Black Vulture
|
62
|
Turkey Vulture
|
63
|
Osprey
|
64
|
Golden Eagle
|
65
|
Northern Harrier
|
66
|
Sharp-shinned Hawk
|
67
|
Cooper's Hawk
|
68
|
Northern Goshawk
|
69
|
Bald Eagle
|
70
|
Red-shouldered Hawk
|
71
|
Broad-winged Hawk
|
72
|
Red-tailed Hawk
|
73
|
Rough-legged Hawk
|
74
|
King Rail
|
75
|
Virginia Rail
|
76
|
Sora
|
77
|
Common Gallinule
|
78
|
American Coot
|
79
|
Sandhill Crane
|
80
|
Black-bellied Plover
|
81
|
American Golden-Plover
|
82
|
Semipalmated Plover
|
83
|
Piping Plover
|
84
|
Killdeer
|
85
|
American Avocet
|
86
|
Spotted Sandpiper
|
87
|
Solitary Sandpiper
|
88
|
Greater Yellowlegs
|
89
|
Lesser Yellowlegs
|
90
|
Upland Sandpiper
|
91
|
Whimbrel
|
92
|
Hudsonian Godwit
|
93
|
Marbled Godwit
|
94
|
Ruddy Turnstone
|
95
|
Red Knot
|
96
|
Sanderling
|
97
|
Semipalmated Sandpiper
|
98
|
Least Sandpiper
|
99
|
White-rumped Sandpiper
|
100
|
Baird's Sandpiper
|
101
|
Pectoral Sandpiper
|
102
|
Dunlin
|
103
|
Stilt Sandpiper
|
104
|
Buff-breasted Sandpiper
|
105
|
Short-billed Dowitcher
|
106
|
Long-billed Dowitcher
|
107
|
Wilson's Snipe
|
108
|
American Woodcock
|
109
|
Wilson's Phalarope
|
110
|
Red-necked Phalarope
|
111
|
Red Phalarope
|
112
|
Bonaparte's Gull
|
113
|
Little Gull
|
114
|
Laughing Gull
|
115
|
Franklin's Gull
|
116
|
Ring-billed Gull
|
117
|
California Gull
|
118
|
Herring Gull
|
119
|
Thayer's Gull
|
120
|
Iceland Gull
|
121
|
Lesser Black-backed Gull
|
122
|
Glaucous Gull
|
123
|
Great Black-backed Gull
|
124
|
Caspian Tern
|
125
|
Black Tern
|
126
|
Common Tern
|
127
|
Forster's Tern
|
128
|
Rock Pigeon
|
129
|
Mourning Dove
|
130
|
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
|
131
|
Black-billed Cuckoo
|
132
|
Eastern Screech-Owl
|
133
|
Great Horned Owl
|
134
|
Snowy Owl
|
135
|
Barred Owl
|
136
|
Long-eared Owl
|
137
|
Short-eared Owl
|
138
|
Northern Saw-whet Owl
|
139
|
Common Nighthawk
|
140
|
Eastern Whip-poor-will
|
141
|
Chimney Swift
|
142
|
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
|
143
|
Belted Kingfisher
|
144
|
Red-headed Woodpecker
|
145
|
Red-bellied Woodpecker
|
146
|
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
|
147
|
Downy Woodpecker
|
148
|
Hairy Woodpecker
|
149
|
American Three-toed Woodpecker
|
150
|
Black-backed Woodpecker
|
151
|
Northern Flicker
|
152
|
Pileated Woodpecker
|
153
|
American Kestrel
|
154
|
Merlin
|
155
|
Peregrine Falcon
|
156
|
Olive-sided Flycatcher
|
157
|
Eastern Wood-Pewee
|
158
|
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
|
159
|
Acadian Flycatcher
|
160
|
Alder Flycatcher
|
161
|
Willow Flycatcher
|
162
|
Least Flycatcher
|
163
|
Eastern Phoebe
|
164
|
Great Crested Flycatcher
|
165
|
Thick-billed Kingbird
|
166
|
Eastern Kingbird
|
167
|
Loggerhead Shrike
|
168
|
Northern Shrike
|
169
|
White-eyed Vireo
|
170
|
Yellow-throated Vireo
|
171
|
Blue-headed Vireo
|
172
|
Warbling Vireo
|
173
|
Philadelphia Vireo
|
174
|
Red-eyed Vireo
|
175
|
Gray Jay
|
176
|
Blue Jay
|
177
|
Black-billed Magpie
|
178
|
American Crow
|
179
|
Fish Crow
|
180
|
Common Raven
|
181
|
Horned Lark
|
182
|
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
|
183
|
Purple Martin
|
184
|
Tree Swallow
|
185
|
Bank Swallow
|
186
|
Barn Swallow
|
187
|
Cliff Swallow
|
188
|
Black-capped Chickadee
|
189
|
Boreal Chickadee
|
190
|
Tufted Titmouse
|
191
|
Red-breasted Nuthatch
|
192
|
White-breasted Nuthatch
|
193
|
Brown Creeper
|
194
|
House Wren
|
195
|
Winter Wren
|
196
|
Sedge Wren
|
197
|
Marsh Wren
|
198
|
Carolina Wren
|
199
|
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
|
200
|
Golden-crowned Kinglet
|
201
|
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
|
202
|
Eastern Bluebird
|
203
|
Mountain Bluebird
|
204
|
Veery
|
205
|
Gray-cheeked Thrush
|
206
|
Swainson's Thrush
|
207
|
Hermit Thrush
|
208
|
Wood Thrush
|
209
|
American Robin
|
210
|
Gray Catbird
|
211
|
Northern Mockingbird
|
212
|
Brown Thrasher
|
213
|
European Starling
|
214
|
American Pipit
|
215
|
Bohemian Waxwing
|
216
|
Cedar Waxwing
|
217
|
Lapland Longspur
|
218
|
Ovenbird
|
219
|
Worm-eating Warbler
|
220
|
Louisiana Waterthrush
|
221
|
Northern Waterthrush
|
222
|
Blue-winged Warbler
|
223
|
Golden-winged Warbler
|
224
|
Black-and-white Warbler
|
225
|
Prothonotary Warbler
|
226
|
Tennessee Warbler
|
227
|
Orange-crowned Warbler
|
228
|
Nashville Warbler
|
229
|
Connecticut Warbler
|
230
|
Mourning Warbler
|
231
|
Common Yellowthroat
|
232
|
Hooded Warbler
|
233
|
American Redstart
|
234
|
Cape May Warbler
|
235
|
Cerulean Warbler
|
236
|
Northern Parula
|
237
|
Magnolia Warbler
|
238
|
Bay-breasted Warbler
|
239
|
Blackburnian Warbler
|
240
|
Yellow Warbler
|
241
|
Chestnut-sided Warbler
|
242
|
Blackpoll Warbler
|
243
|
Black-throated Blue Warbler
|
244
|
Palm Warbler
|
245
|
Pine Warbler
|
246
|
Yellow-rumped Warbler
|
247
|
Yellow-throated Warbler
|
248
|
Prairie Warbler
|
249
|
Black-throated Green Warbler
|
250
|
Canada Warbler
|
251
|
Wilson's Warbler
|
252
|
Yellow-breasted Chat
|
253
|
Spotted Towhee
|
254
|
Eastern Towhee
|
255
|
American Tree Sparrow
|
256
|
Chipping Sparrow
|
257
|
Clay-colored Sparrow
|
258
|
Field Sparrow
|
259
|
Vesper Sparrow
|
260
|
Savannah Sparrow
|
261
|
Grasshopper Sparrow
|
262
|
Le Conte's Sparrow
|
263
|
Nelson's Sparrow
|
264
|
Fox Sparrow
|
265
|
Song Sparrow
|
266
|
Lincoln's Sparrow
|
267
|
Swamp Sparrow
|
268
|
White-throated Sparrow
|
269
|
Harris's Sparrow
|
270
|
White-crowned Sparrow
|
271
|
Dark-eyed Junco
|
272
|
Scarlet Tanager
|
273
|
Western Tanager
|
274
|
Northern Cardinal
|
275
|
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
|
276
|
Indigo Bunting
|
277
|
Dickcissel
|
278
|
Bobolink
|
279
|
Red-winged Blackbird
|
280
|
Eastern Meadowlark
|
281
|
Western Meadowlark
|
282
|
Yellow-headed Blackbird
|
283
|
Rusty Blackbird
|
284
|
Brewer's Blackbird
|
285
|
Common Grackle
|
286
|
Brown-headed Cowbird
|
287
|
Orchard Oriole
|
288
|
Baltimore Oriole
|
289
|
Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch
|
290
|
Pine Grosbeak
|
291
|
Purple Finch
|
292
|
House Finch
|
293
|
Red Crossbill
|
294
|
White-winged Crossbill
|
295
|
Common Redpoll
|
296
|
Hoary Redpoll
|
297
|
Pine Siskin
|
298
|
American Goldfinch
|
299
|
Evening Grosbeak
|
300
|
House Sparrow
|
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