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I was happy to see a big flock of goldfinches both days this weekend, with my highest count on Saturday coming in at 144, just over half my highest count from winter 2009-2010. Today the goldfinches were also joined by a couple nice adult male Purple Finches and 3 Pine Siskins. The big highlight of the day was an American Tree Sparrow - I haven't seen one here since December 3.
A pair of Hairy Woodpeckers adds a little variety.. |
Here are my ebird checklists from Saturday and Sunday.
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The other bird-related thing I did this weekend was try a new technique for recording birds for ebird on a drive. I needed the help of Erica for this one. We had about a two hour car drive heading to White Lake for a post-Christmas get-together at her Aunt and Uncle's so we thought we'd do a survey of the winter birds on the southern Canadian Shield- with a twist. We recorded in 10km intervals to get a better representation of the frequency different species occur at. In two hours, we managed a whopping 63 individuals of 9 species (a bit higher than I would have guessed...). Here's the list with the frequency of checklists for each species:
Common Raven - 55%
Blue Jay - 35%
American Goldfinch - 25%
Black-capped Chickadee - 20%
Wild Turkey - 10% (two each near Denbigh and MacArthur's Mills)
American Crow - 5% (Burnstown)
Red-breasted Nuthatch - 5%
American Robin - 5% (near Calabogie)
European Starling - 5% (in Bancroft)
Anyways, I thought it was a neat twist and provided more information than just doing a single list for the entire car ride.
sounds very scientific of you, mike! you'll be happy to know we finally have our feeders up and running, but so far we've only got house sparrows, any suggestions? i think it's just the weather, and hopefully some other species will start checking in as the cold progresses:)--your sis!
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