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[Ontbirds]Waterfowl on Upper Niagara River and Lake Erie

J
Jmpawli88@aol.com
Sat, Jan 26, 2008 10:18 PM

I started this afternoon (Sat. Jan. 26) at the parking lots just south of
Fort Erie near the fort and worked my way up along the Niagara Parkway (CA)  to
about Miller's Creek.  I expected to make it to Niagara Falls,  but the shear
magnitude of waterfowl all along that stretch amongst the ice  flows was truly
amazing and kept me busy.  In total, I  estimated nearly 21,000 ducks from
the open water at the ice boom in  Lake Erie up along the west river to about
the middle of Grand Island.  No  major rarities were seen although I can hardly
say I gave the  effort justice in the relatively short amount of time I  was
counting.  The huge concentration is likely  the result of the late freeze-up
over the last week.  If freezing  continues I suspect the numbers to drop
rapidly since the river itself  seems to be close to freezing over in many spots as
well.  Get out  there and see it when you can.

Totals:
150 Canada Geese
16 Tundra Swans
2 Mute Swans
13900 Greater Scaup
700 Lesser Scaup
42 RING-NECKED DUCKS
800 Canvasback
200 Redhead (inc. a leucistic drake)
600 Common Mergansers
800 Red-breasted Mergansers
3 Hooded Mergansers
1400 Common Goldeneye (inc. a female with a drab all-yellow bill)
1280 Bufflehead
20 Long-tailed Ducks
2 White-winged Scoters
80 Mallard
5 Am. Black Ducks

The large majority of Scaup were between the Peace Bridge and the ice boom,
with nearly 60% feeding in the current with Bufflehead and RB Mergs,  and the
rest rafting in tight flocks between the reef lighthouse and the  breakwalls
on the US side.  Nearly all of the Canvasback and Redhead were  flocking
amongst the Common Goldeneyes and Common Mergs that were  feeding in the current
between the Railroad Bridge to just downstream of  Strawberry Island; nearly all
of the Lesser Scaup were in this stretch as  well.  Interesting although
rather gruesome was watching an adult Great  Black-backed Gull fly in, attack, and
then devour a drake Bufflehead near  Nichol's Marina--guess they're not shy
when they're hungry.

Jim Pawlicki
Amherst, NY

If directions are needed to any of the above locations, you can e-mail  me
privately.

**************Biggest Grammy Award surprises of all time on AOL Music.
(http://music.aol.com/grammys/pictures/never-won-a-grammy?NCID=aolcmp003000000025
48)

I started this afternoon (Sat. Jan. 26) at the parking lots just south of Fort Erie near the fort and worked my way up along the Niagara Parkway (CA) to about Miller's Creek. I expected to make it to Niagara Falls, but the shear magnitude of waterfowl all along that stretch amongst the ice flows was truly amazing and kept me busy. In total, I estimated nearly 21,000 ducks from the open water at the ice boom in Lake Erie up along the west river to about the middle of Grand Island. No major rarities were seen although I can hardly say I gave the effort justice in the relatively short amount of time I was counting. The huge concentration is likely the result of the late freeze-up over the last week. If freezing continues I suspect the numbers to drop rapidly since the river itself seems to be close to freezing over in many spots as well. Get out there and see it when you can. Totals: 150 Canada Geese 16 Tundra Swans 2 Mute Swans 13900 Greater Scaup 700 Lesser Scaup 42 RING-NECKED DUCKS 800 Canvasback 200 Redhead (inc. a leucistic drake) 600 Common Mergansers 800 Red-breasted Mergansers 3 Hooded Mergansers 1400 Common Goldeneye (inc. a female with a drab all-yellow bill) 1280 Bufflehead 20 Long-tailed Ducks 2 White-winged Scoters 80 Mallard 5 Am. Black Ducks The large majority of Scaup were between the Peace Bridge and the ice boom, with nearly 60% feeding in the current with Bufflehead and RB Mergs, and the rest rafting in tight flocks between the reef lighthouse and the breakwalls on the US side. Nearly all of the Canvasback and Redhead were flocking amongst the Common Goldeneyes and Common Mergs that were feeding in the current between the Railroad Bridge to just downstream of Strawberry Island; nearly all of the Lesser Scaup were in this stretch as well. Interesting although rather gruesome was watching an adult Great Black-backed Gull fly in, attack, and then devour a drake Bufflehead near Nichol's Marina--guess they're not shy when they're hungry. Jim Pawlicki Amherst, NY If directions are needed to any of the above locations, you can e-mail me privately. **************Biggest Grammy Award surprises of all time on AOL Music. (http://music.aol.com/grammys/pictures/never-won-a-grammy?NCID=aolcmp003000000025 48)