Ottawa Field Naturalists' Club (OFNC)
Ottawa/Gatineau (50 Km radius from Parliament Hill) E. Ontario, W. Quebec
Compiler: Derek Dunnett at sightings@ofnc.ca
Migration continues with reports of kinglets and juncos trickling in, and
Common Nighthawks everywhere. North winds and cooling temps tease the
possibility of many more migrants starting Friday morning. Possible rain
Saturday and Sunday could drop some very interesting birds. Don't commit
to cleaning out the garage this weekend.
Horned Grebe - Continued until Aug 21, Moodie Drive Quarry, Ottawa.
Least Bittern - Rideau River near Lock 13, Ottawa.
Baird's Sandpiper - Two during Aug 21-25, Carleton Place, at the Hwy 7
Storm Pond, Lanark.
Lesser Black-backed Gull - One or two continue in the Deschênes rapids,
countable from either side of the river. Several at the Moodie Drive
Quarry, Ottawa.
Red-headed Woodpecker - 8 reported from Constance Bay Ottawa (Spinnaker
Way, also Bayview Drive), Ottawa.
Red-bellied Woodpecker - Heard on chemin du Lac-Taylor,
Sainte-Cécile-de-Masham, Les Collines-de-l'Outaouais (I.e. Gatineau Park).
Philadelphia Vireo - Shirley's Bay, Andrew Haydon Park, Britannia CA (check
the sumac field or buckthorn patches), Champlain Park Woods, Champlain
Street Marsh, all Ottawa.
Yellow-throated Vireo - Aug 20-25, 2021 - Britannia CA (general location),
Ottawa, Ontario. Check the path behind the houses on the western edge,
South of the sumac field.
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - Reported from Old Prospect Road, Ottawa. Vincent
Massey/Hog's Back Parks, Ottawa.
Carolina Wren - Trend Arlington Park, Ottawa. Hidden Lake Trail (Carp),
Ottawa.
Dark-eyed Junco - Pakenham Concession 9, Lanark. Athlone Avenue, Ottawa.
Ottawa St. west of Joy's Road, Ottawa. Cooper St., Ottawa.
eBird Tip from the local reviewers:
When recording data in eBird, only use subspecies when you are sure you
can identify them (Yellow-shafted Flicker or Oregon Junco for example).
Many subspecies listed on eBird cannot be easily identified based on
morphology and cause headaches and unnecessary follow ups for reviewers
(Sandhill Crane subspecies for example). Just go with the species unless
you are sure of the subspecies.
Atlas Tip:
You can provide essential information for Canadian researchers, scientists,
government officials and conservation professionals that will guide
environmental policies and conservation strategies across Ontario for years
to come by taking 90 seconds to share your eBird checklist with the Ontario
Breeding Bird Atlas. Data compilation for this Atlas year will be underway
shortly, and submitting your records by August 31 is particularly helpful.
For more information visit https://www.birdsontario.org/ or contact the
Ottawa Regional Coordinator at Ottawa@birdsontario.org
The DND property at Shirley's Bay is now restricted to official business
only. If this changes in the future, there will be an announcement.