Day 4, shuttle, Point Pelee, Ontario
Day 4, The Tip, Pt Pelee, Ontario
Day 4, Barn Swallow, The Tip, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Baltimore Oriole, The Tip, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Barn Swallows, The Tip, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Baltimore Oriole, The Tip, Pt Pelee
Day 4, The Tip, Point Pelee
Day 4, The Tip, Point Pelee, Ontario
Day 4, Baltimore Oriole, The Tip, Pt Pelee
Day 4, birders at The Tip, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Baltimore Oriole, The Tip, Point Pelee
Day 4, White-crowned Sparrows, Pt Pelee
Day 4, four Whimbrels, Onion Fields, nr Pt Pelee
Day 4, Snowy Owl, Onion Fields, near Pt Pelee, 10…
Day 4, paintings on front door of Leamington hotel…
Day 4, Leamington hotel's front entrance
Day 4, on way back to Leamington, Ontario
Day 4, front door of Leamington hotel, Ontario
Day 4, front door of Leamington hotel, Ontario
Day 4, front entrance of Leamington hotel, Ontario
Day 4, American Robin, near Leamington, Ontario
Day 4, Leamington hotel's front entrance, Ontario
Day 4, near Leamington, Ontario
Winter in the park
Wearing their white, winter toques
Pileated Woodpecker
Where are the birds?
Hairy Woodpecker
A welcome splash of colour
Across the valley and up the hill
Winter walk in the park
Waterdrops on my car windscreen
Nature's winter artwork
Waterdrops on my windshield
Winter decorations
Canada Geese
Day 4, American Robin, Pt Pelee
Day 4, spring's new growth, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Magnolia Warbler, Point Pelee
Day 4, fungi, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Jack-in-the-pulpit / Arisaema triphyllum, P…
Day 4, American Robin, Pt Pelee
Day 4, Jack-in-the-pulpit / Arisaema triphyllum, P…
Day 4, Great Crested Flycatcher, Pt Pelee
Day 4, new growth, Pt Pelee
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Day 4, Black-throated Green Warbler / Setophaga virens, Pt Pelee, Ontario
Some of my absolute worst photos from this two-week trip have turned out to be new birds for me! I don't know if anyone is likely to recognize what this bird is, but I thought I would add it just in case. Update: adding the ID the next day - Black-throated Green Warbler / Setophaga virens - yet another new species for me. This is the only photo I managed to get, so I am glad I got it and didn't delete it later. Many thanks to friend, Tony, for his help again. He is an excellent birder and knows the warblers so well. This was the only Black-throated Green that was seen on Day 4.
Just added 12 photos very late tonight (actually, it is almost 1:30 in the morning now). Too late to even think about adding descriptions, so will have to do that tomorrow. Hopefully, I will be able to add the last 14 or so shots from Day 4 of our trip, then it will be on to Day 5. Not all that many photos to post from Day 5, as it was a day of travelling.
Day 4 of our holiday was 10 May 2018. We had a ridiiculously early start to the day, as we had been told that American Woodcocks (Scolopax minor) tend to gather in and around the hotel parking lot. That information was just too good to ignore, so I think it was sometime after 4:00 am that we were out there, searching. As it turned out, in vain, though we did hear two individuals vocalizing in the dark bushes across the road. The American Woodcock is "a small chunky shorebird species found primarily in the eastern half of North America. Woodcocks spend most of their time on the ground in brushy, young-forest habitats, where the birds' brown, black, and gray plumage provides excellent camouflage." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_woodcock
This last day was spent at Pt Pelee, walking a few trails including at The Tip again. We also drove to The Onion Fields, just north of Pt Pelee, between Hillman Marsh and Pt Pelee, where we had a great sighting - a very, very distant male Snowy Owl, sitting way out in a field, next to a white post!! Awful photos, but will eventually post one of them, just for the record. As always, I did not manage to see every species of bird this day, but was happy to see at least some of them!
The next morning, 11 May, we had to do the very long drive from Pelee to Toronto, where we caught a plane to Quebec City, arriving there at 2:45 pm. From there, we had a long drive east to reach the small village of Tadoussac on the St. Lawrence Seaway. There, we would be staying for a week at the summer 'cabin' of one of our group of friends.
For a more detailed account of our two-week trip east, see www.flickr.com/photos/annkelliott/45038233955/in/datepost...
Just added 12 photos very late tonight (actually, it is almost 1:30 in the morning now). Too late to even think about adding descriptions, so will have to do that tomorrow. Hopefully, I will be able to add the last 14 or so shots from Day 4 of our trip, then it will be on to Day 5. Not all that many photos to post from Day 5, as it was a day of travelling.
Day 4 of our holiday was 10 May 2018. We had a ridiiculously early start to the day, as we had been told that American Woodcocks (Scolopax minor) tend to gather in and around the hotel parking lot. That information was just too good to ignore, so I think it was sometime after 4:00 am that we were out there, searching. As it turned out, in vain, though we did hear two individuals vocalizing in the dark bushes across the road. The American Woodcock is "a small chunky shorebird species found primarily in the eastern half of North America. Woodcocks spend most of their time on the ground in brushy, young-forest habitats, where the birds' brown, black, and gray plumage provides excellent camouflage." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_woodcock
This last day was spent at Pt Pelee, walking a few trails including at The Tip again. We also drove to The Onion Fields, just north of Pt Pelee, between Hillman Marsh and Pt Pelee, where we had a great sighting - a very, very distant male Snowy Owl, sitting way out in a field, next to a white post!! Awful photos, but will eventually post one of them, just for the record. As always, I did not manage to see every species of bird this day, but was happy to see at least some of them!
The next morning, 11 May, we had to do the very long drive from Pelee to Toronto, where we caught a plane to Quebec City, arriving there at 2:45 pm. From there, we had a long drive east to reach the small village of Tadoussac on the St. Lawrence Seaway. There, we would be staying for a week at the summer 'cabin' of one of our group of friends.
For a more detailed account of our two-week trip east, see www.flickr.com/photos/annkelliott/45038233955/in/datepost...
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