Requests for updates continue to come in daily so today's activity can be 
seen as encouraging.
This morning at the most easily accessed site, Westley's Point, the geese 
did not disappoint. No solid numbers are available but there are many tens 
of thousands still within view from this site with others certainly within 
a few kilometres downriver. This afternoon's activity was quiet with birds 
resting in massive flocks on the water, occasionally lifting off and 
returning.
At around 6:00 p.m., thousands left the river for the fields north of Hwy 
401. They usually go a few concessions north, feed until sunset, then 
return for the night, which means that the return flight is generally 
around 7:20-7:30. Both the exit and return flights are impressive as the 
birds drift out and back.
No assessment of real numbers will likely be made until sometime on the 
weekend at least but there are still plenty of birds to be an attraction 
for observers. If you are seeing a flock of 30,000 or 75,000 at one time, 
it's still an awesome sight. Rough weather is coming for the next couple 
of days which may just keep them tied down. The stimulus to migrate east 
is more likely to come when ice is more completely out and the weather 
warms significantly. With birds there are never any promises but it isn't 
over yet.

Some of the Greater Snow Geese will remain (75,000+ spread out across the 
counties to the Ottawa River) into the first week of May but at some point 
the very large number that shifted from their normal migration pattern in 
Quebec last week will head east along the St. Lawrence to Quebec City.

Brian Morin
Cornwall

Directions :
To access this area from the 401 take exit 814 (Lancaster cty rd 34) 
go straight ahead and follow cty rd 2/south service road eastward.
There are several viewing areas of the river along this road 
with the first prominent one being at Westley's Point. Park on the road, 
not on the field.
If you reach Westley's Point and see the birds further east, backtrack a 
short distance 
to Glengarry Park. You can walk down to the river.
Immediately further east there are several side lanes or streets worth 
checking, notably 78th 
Ave and 94th Ave. You can also check at the Quebec border.

Accommodation :
There are numerous motels in Cornwall accessed from Brookdale Ave. to 
Vincent Massey Drive.
Super 8 Motel is right at the Brookdale Ave. exit. Cornwall is 25 minutes 
from the birds.
There is a McDonalds, Tim Horton's, Dairy Queen and gas 5 minutes from the 
birds.



----- Forwarded by Brian Morin/NOTES/PC/CA on 03/30/11 11:12 PM -----



[Ontbirds] Greater Snow Geese in Eastern Ontario

Brian.Morin 
to:
Ontario Birding
03/27/11 08:04 PM


Sent by:
birdalert-boun...@ontbirds.ca






Wow. That doesn't even come close to expressing what happened today from 
Lancaster to the Quebec border on the St. Lawrence River. Adding up all of 

the birds (as Tyler Hoar did) this was the largest concentration of 
Greater Snow Geese ever in Ontario by a factor of almost five and adding 
in the other birds Tyler saw just inside Quebec, this represents 33% of 
the entire population of Greater Snow Geese. It will go down as a personal 

wildlife spectacle milestone and with the beautiful setting on a clear 
(but brisk) afternoon, it will be very hard to beat. For those who have 
made the trip to Cap Tourmente east of Quebec City for the spring goose 
flight, you could have saved your travel money today. Eastern Ontario 
topped it hands down. This was absolutely incredible.

The largest single group was likely the one present from Lancaster to 
Westley's Point. I spent the afternoon with other birders/photographers at 

one spot (out of the brutal wind) where the entire flock could be seen. I 
have yet to do a good count (digitally) but this alone should be 
comfortably 80,000+ and more likely well over 100,000 going as far as the 
eye could see. In flight the group was so massive that you couldn't get 
the entire flock in one shot. It took about four and much of it was at a 
distance. Rather than relocating from place to place to check out other 
areas, we could get our fill of the birds without moving because they 
rested on the ice edge for most of the afternoon, occasionally lifting off 

then returning.

At one point a lead opened up in the ice along the shore and the gap 
widened very quickly. This soon became an ice flow taking thousands of 
birds with it. They rode for a while (Snow Geese love riding ice flows) 
then returned.

There were only a few thousand in this area tonight but I don't know if 
they all just moved a bit further east to sheltered bays, out of the wind.

Yesterday, at this same location, a Golden Eagle put up a flock of Canada 
Geese from the adjacent field. The eagle dropped down to almost ground 
level before swooping up, scattering the spooked birds in all directions. 
No lunch for the eagle that time.

Directions
To access this area from the 401 take exit  814 (Lancaster cty rd 34) go 
straight ahead and follow cty rd 2/south service road eastward into Quebec 

(Hwy 338). There are several viewing areas of the river along this road 
with the first prominent one being at Wetley's Point. Immediately further 
east there are several side lanes or streets worth checking, notably 78th 
Ave and 94th Ave.
Very few birds headed into the fields in the afternoon.

Brian Morin
Cornwall

_______________________________________________
ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial 
birding organization.
Send bird reports to birdalert@ontbirds.ca
For information about ONTBIRDS visit http://www.ofo.ca/

_______________________________________________
ONTBIRDS is presented by the Ontario Field Ornithologists - the provincial 
birding organization.
Send bird reports to birdalert@ontbirds.ca
For information about ONTBIRDS visit http://www.ofo.ca/

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