The end of the line!

 Well folks, it is 11:30pm on December 31 of 2022. The end of my big year has come! I can’t believe this time has come already, it seems like just the other day I was starting my big year, chasing Mountain Bluebirds, Boreal Owls and other winter rarities…

359 is now officially the new Ontario big year record! Woot!! Hell of a ride…


Right now I’m down in Ohio celebrating New Years with Alessandra’s family… was planning on doing a year end post, but the evening got away from me! Today I birded along Lake Erie for my last day of the year, which I’ll go into more detail on tomorrow. I’ll do more posts on big year stuff in the coming days and weeks!


Thanks for following along this year! It’s been a blast blogging this year : )


eBird alerts off, discord notifications silenced… time for a much needed nap : )


Ontario Yearlist @ December 31 - 359

My third Cormorant of 2022


  If you told me when I started out my big year that on December 20th I’d be driving 3 hours to chase a water bird in the dark, I’d probably believe you. You see I have no mis illusions about twitchers being sane people, I have accepted this long ago. Anyways, at 9pm on Tuesday, December 20th I was rolling up to Hamilton in search of a cormorant.


I’ll stop here and back things up a bit, specifically 5 hours earlier before this madness began. I was just driving back home from Sauble Beach, where Alessandra and I had been running a few errands for my parents, when I received a call from William Konze. William and I usually call each other when a rare bird shows up, so my mind immediately jumped to that possibility. He was over in Ottawa with Andy Nguyen, searching for Gyrfalcons after a successful Gray Partridge hunt (with binoculars, not guns), so he could just be phoning to talk about that… however, that was the less exciting possibility. “Check the Hamilton RBA on discord, there’s a Great Cormorant”, turns out my first hunch was right, there was a rare bird.

The Great Cormorant is a slippery fiend, and a bird that had been assigned to my “annoying misses of 2022” list along with other horrible, malicious birds like Painted Bunting and Western Kingbird. The first one of the year was in the winter, and although it was never technically in Ontario, it was tantalizing close… 1km across the river in Niagara Falls. That was annoying yes, but the topper came on October 23rd, when one was photographed on the Ajax waterfront in Durham. This individual was posted too late in the day to chase, but birders were there right up until sunset and it seemed like it was roosting there. The following day I was at the location before dawn… but nothing, no corm, it had vanished in the night. Knowing all this, I think you would understand why I have mixed feelings about this Atlantic mega-cormorant.

After a quick dinner back at home, and a bit of texting with Alvan and other observers, I made the decision to drive down immediately and search for it in the dark. My reasoning was 1) even if there was only a small chance of seeing it at night, it was better than no chance and 2) I would rather drive down at night than leave at 3:30am in the morning. Also Ezra Campanelli had seen the bird in the evening, bringing him within 2 birds of me…Alessandra was instantly on board with chasing it, which I’m not sure means she’s as crazy as me or she's just the most supportive girlfriend ever. Christmas wrapping was put on hold, gear loaded into the car, and we were off. Arriving at Bayfront Park, we pulled up to the Pier 4 parking area and walked out to the tip of land. According to  Alvan the bird was sitting out on a rocky breakwall. My scope is actually pretty impressive at gathering light in dim conditions, and with the faint lights shining off the docks of the marina we could make out shapes in the dark. Several hundred gulls roosted along the rocks, and meticulously we picked through them one by one. Great Black-backed still stood out, so surely a cormorant would too right? It’s interesting birding at night, as the normal issues associated with using a scope (heat shimmer, distance) are replaced by the shroud of darkness. Despite over half an hour of scanning in the cold, we couldn’t resolve any of the shapes into cormorants, though a few geese did give us a start. We returned back to Paris to stay with my aunt for the night, with plans to return the next morning.

December 21st marks the winter solstice, the day with the shortest period of daylight during the calendar year. On the plus side, since sunrise is so late it meant I didn’t have to wake up at an ungodly hour, so that was nice. On the down side, if I didn’t immediately find the cormorant I wouldn’t have much time to search during the day. 

We met up with William and Andy at Pier 4 at 6:30am, and the scene was basically the same as I had left it only a few hours before. Although sunrise isn’t until 7:49, the sky begins to lighten slightly around 6:40. It was around that time that my scope landed on a dark, bird-like shape tucked in behind some Herring Gulls. A few minutes of intense staring, plus a slight increase of light, resolved the bird into a cormorant. Size alone made it a Great because it towered above the nearby gulls (Double-crested look similar in size to gulls). Finally it was light enough that we could see extensive white on its throat, the clincher for the identification. The bird preened for about half an hour, then took off, circled twice low over our heads and disappeared over the high level bridge towards the city.


Poor record shots....

- First view predawn!

- Great Cormorant





The birders who arrived after sunrise were pretty disappointed, but luckily for them after another 40 minutes the bird returned, landing on the same break wall where it had spent the night on. My fingers were getting cold by this point (in my rush to leave the previous day I have forgotten all of my warm gloves), so after taking a few more photos we headed back to Bruce. It has been a pretty decent year for Atlantic birds for me... Great Cormorant, Dovekie, Razorbill and Northern Gannet. Will this be my last bird of 2022, who knows? One or two more would always be nice, but it’s a matter of chance at this point.


Ontario yearlist @ December 22nd - 359

Alcid twitching

 



On a big year the prospects for new birds begin to seriously dwindle in December. Most vagrant songbirds show up in November, so if there was something like a Black-headed Grosbeak at a feeder, chances are it would have been found already. Similarly, it’s very late in the year for shorebirds and puddle ducks to show up, because most of these birds are earlier migrants. The most likely rarities to show up, that would also be new for me, are the following;

  • Common Eider
  • Short-billed Gull
  • Common Gull
  • California Gull
  • Barn Owl
  • Thick-billed Murre
  • Gray-crowned Rosy Finch


There are also more remote possibilities like other alcids, Ivory Gull and lingering warblers, but those are never too likely. It just comes down to a waiting game at this point. Self finding a new bird is fairly unlikely, so for the month of December I remain on the ready, phone nearby in case a bird is reported. 


On December 10th my phone flashed with a Discord message to the Ontario Wide Bird Alert. My heart raced. What was it?! Dovekie. Ashbridges Bay in Toronto. Panic. Could I get there in time? I was in Bruce with Alessandra, 3 hours away from Toronto. It was only 10am at that point so daylight wasn’t an issue, but alcids are notoriously flighty.

We were off immediately, heading south at high (but technically legal…) speeds. Two hours out I got a message that the bird had flown out in to the lake and disappeared in the chop. Despair. Measuring in at only 20cm long, finding a small bird like that in a large, wavy expanse of water is near impossible. Then twenty minutes later it flew into the marina that it was originally seen in and landed. William called when we were under and hour away and said it was being quite cooperative and swimming close to shore. Hope grows. 5 minutes away I get a text from him saying it just flew out of the inlet again. Disbelief, more panic. We rolled into the parking lot and I full out ran the remaining 800 meters, around the marina and out the the rocky point. The amassed crowd there said it hadn’t been seen in several minutes, so the best bet was to just wait there for it to return. My phone chimed with another alert, the bird was seen in the water by the parking lot, the same parking lot that I was l just in! I started jogging back there, followed by a few others. We were stopped in our tracks halfway there with news that the Dovekie was now back at its original spot at the point. Frustration, and more running. This time the bird didn’t fly away, and when I arrived it was swimming contently just offshore. Relief.

I climbed down the large rocks to get down to the birds level, where I spotted a large flat rock that was just above the water. I laid down and waited, as the Dovekie worked it’s way up the shore, popping up for a few seconds and then diving for a long period of time. It then emerged out of the water right in front of me, almost touching distance. I rattled off twenty shots before it dove again. Over the next hour and a half I watched it working back and forth along the rocks, sometimes drifting out further but always ending up back by the shore again.

This bird represents the first truly chaseable Dovekie in Ontario, so it was an Ontario bird for everyone present (and a full on lifer for me). I find a lot of birds look larger when they’re on the water, but seeing this seabird up close really showed how small it really is (smaller than a Robin!!). With a tiny bill, a striking black back and head, a white belly and throat and a partial black collar, its a gorgeous little bird. When it dives it’s wings come out, giving it the impression of a tiny, short-necked penguin. I got soaked by Lake Ontario waves several times, but honestly it was worth it. By far one of my favourite experiences this year, in the top 5 easily. Just such a charismatic and enjoyable bird to watch, and being 358 for my yearlist didn’t hurt either : )


- Dovekie photo'ing


- Dovekie

- Dovekie




I spent the past few days helping William look for Gyrfalcon on the peninsula, but we came up short. Large numbers of Bohemian Waxwings, Black Scoter, Red-necked Grebe and several Northern Shrikes and dark morph Rough-legged Hawk provided some highlights though.


Ontario yearlist @ December 14th - 358









Niagara Gulling in early December



As the sky began to warm into the pre sunrise glow on December 3rd, I was heading down Victoria Road in Guelph with Alessandra… our destination, Niagara On-The-Lake. Unlike a lot of my drives this year, the purpose of the trip was not to chase a rare bird, but to lead a Gull outing with Justin Peter for OFO.

This year has ended up being a whirlwind of big year activities, and having free time to actually lead bird walks was hard to come by. Things start to slow down in December though, as winter sets in across the province and less rarites show up. Niagara region is also a good place to be at this time of year, as a lot of my “likely” (I use the word lightly with massive quotations) new yearbirds are rare gulls.


Arriving at parking lot just west of the Niagara River mouth, I found a collection of twenty odd birders clad in winter gear with an array of spotting scopes aimed at the lake. The keeners, arriving before the start time and antsy to get going. Justin was easy to spot, with a commanding personality and also being a full foot taller than most of the birders around him. I hadn’t seen him since we lead a hike together at the Huron Fringe Birding Festival 3 years ago, so it was nice to catch up again. Neither of us had lead a hike in this region before, and frankly didn’t have much of a plan for the route, so after a brief strategy talk we got the group together and headed out. The idea was to start at Queens Royal Park by the river mouth, then work our way up the river to the control gates above the falls. With a group of over 30, the real challenge is trying not to lose people on a tour with many stops like this one.


The first stop turned out to be the best of the day, at Queens Royal Park. We had been there for several minutes already, adding common species like Red-breasted Merganser and Bonaparte’s Gull, when Alessandra told me that she had just seen a Razorbill! Refinding it took several minutes, but soon enough my scope landed on a large, black and white alcid with a thick bill. My second Razorbill of the year, and ironically in the same spot as my first in the beginning of January. This was a lifer for many in the group (including Alessandra) and definitely the highlight of the day. After watching it dive and swim around with some Horned Grebes for awhile, I spotted a second Razorbill with it! Pretty crazy stuff. My photos are subpar because of the distance, but they’re marginally better than my January ones.


- Razorbills

- Alessandra post find

Starting the day with a seabird sets a pretty high bar to follow, and while none of the birds we found during the day matched it’s rarity, there were definitely highlights. An adult Little Gull at Queenston, circling into a frenzy of several hundred Bonaparte’s, banking occasionally to reveal its jet black underwings for a few seconds before disappearing into the fray again. Several Iceland Gulls at Adam Beck, including two adults of the “Thayer’s” subspecies, with darker primaries and more streaking on the head. We also found a rare Herring Gull x Lesser Black-backed Gull hybrid, only my 2nd time seeing this combination in Ontario.


- The Group

After the group disbanded around 3pm, Alessandra and I drove back down to the river mouth to meet up with Andy Nguyen, William Konze and Luke Raso to watch the flyby of gulls. Our hope was to see a Black-headed Gull, which there had been a possible report of up river in the morning. Hundreds of Bonaparte’s flashed by, their wings illuminated in the golden hour light as they rose up and banked, then dipped into the shadows and disappeared out into the lake. I ended up counting around 3,800, but no Black-headed. Last year around this time I had 12,000, so weaker numbers this season apparently. A nice Red-throated Loon provided some photon ops here though.


- Red-throated Loon




I ended the day by strolling along the top of the falls with Alessandra, where hundreds of Christmas lights are arranged around the parks and roadsides. Coupled with the falls being lit up by massive beams of coloured lights, it gave the whole area a nice festive feeling and was a nice end to a day of relaxed winter birding.




Panama Trip - Part 1

Just after midnight on the morning of February 22nd (I couldn't really sleep due to preflight jitters/trip excitement, so to me it was s...