Holiday Beach Migration Observatory
Ontario, Canada
Daily Raptor Counts: Sep 04, 2005
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Species            Day's Count    Month Total   Season Total
------------------ ----------- -------------- --------------
Turkey Vulture               0              8              8
Osprey                       0             11             11
Bald Eagle                   0              4              4
Northern Harrier             4             52             52
Sharp-shinned Hawk           1              6              6
Cooper's Hawk                2              8              8
Northern Goshawk             0              0              0
Red-shouldered Hawk          0              0              0
Broad-winged Hawk            1              2              2
Red-tailed Hawk              5             14             14
Rough-legged Hawk            0              0              0
Golden Eagle                 0              0              0
American Kestrel             2             46             46
Merlin                       0              1              1
Peregrine Falcon             0              0              0
Unknown                      0              0              0

Total:                      15            152            152
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Observation start time: 06:00:00 
Observation end   time: 13:00:00 
Total observation time: 7 hours

Official Counter: Bob Hall-Brooks

Observers:        Claude Radley, Will Weber

Visitors:
We welcomed Will Webber, President of HMANA and Dan Mennill, Professor of
Ornithology at University of Windsor (yes they finally have an Ornithology
course)amongst several visitors to the Tower today.



Weather:
Sunny with NE winds changing to E then SE, temperatures 17 -27 degrees
Celsius, barometric pressure 30.23 to 30.28 inches Hg.

Raptor Observations:
Very little despite promissing winds. Entertainment for observers and
guests provided by resident Bald Eagles, Red-tailed Hawk, Cooper's Hawk
and Harriers.

Non-raptor Observations:
Bird Alert !!! A flock of 8 American Avocets was seen most of the day in
one of the pools in the Marsh immediately to the West of the Tower.
Flushed once, they returned and later moved to another pool north of the
first.

Other shorebird sightings included Snipe (7), Golden Plovers (2) and
Black-bellied Plover (1).

A cacaphony of Sora and Virginia Rails made themselves heard but not seen
all day long, especially when someone walked the berm around the Trout
Pond.

Monarch butterflies numbered 34.

Predictions:
Winds are expected to return to NE tonight making tomorrow a good bet for
some good viewing.
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Report submitted by Bob Hall-Brooks ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Holiday Beach Migration Observatory information may be found at:
http://hbmo.org/


Site Description:
Holiday Beach Migration Observatory

Information on southern Ontario's hawk migration and the Holiday Beach
Conservation Area site
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Southwestern Ontario is largely an area of flat, featureless farmland.
There are only two geographic features of note in the region. One is the
proximity of the Great lakes, which influence bird migration in the area
to a great extent, The second is the shape of the province, roughly
funnel-shaped with the narrow end to the southwest. These features confine
south-bound bird migrants, especially hawks, to specific flight corridors.


Holiday Beach Conservation Area was formerly a Provincial Park, but is now
administered by the Essex Region Conservation Authority (ERCA). It is
strategically located at the extreme southwestern tip of southern Ontario.
The park is on the eastern end of a large freshwater estuary known as Big
Creek. (Specifically the site is 1.1 miles south of the junction Highway
20 (old 18) and Essex Road 50, Town of Amherstburg).

The Holiday Beach Migration Observatory (HBMO) (founded in 1986) is a
non-profit, volunteer organization formed to promote the study and
protection of migrating birds. Activities focus primarily on fall
migration of raptors and other species. This site is in Essex County,
Ontario, on the north shore of Lake Erie near the Detroit River. In 1988,
HBMO persuaded Detroit Edison to donate a 40 foot Hawk Tower which is now
at the site. 

Southwestern Ontario has a funneling effect on migrating raptors due to
the geography of the nearby lakes and the reluctance of most raptors to
cross large bodies of water. Birds gain altitude over the flat farmland to
the north and east, rising easily with the thermals that such areas provide
in abundance. As the birds head south they meet Lake Erie and, reluctant to
cross it , turn west. With appropriate wind and weather conditions, birds
pile up along the lake shore and move west until they reach the narrow
crossing at the Detroit River (or island hop within the river mouth). 



Directions to site:
See http://hbmo.org/directions.php

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