Around 8am on May 4 Gord Gallant and others heard a "it isn't a Chipper, it 
isn't a Pine" song--in a tree was a WORM-EATING WARBLER. For the next 3 hours, 
and, no doubt, beyond, this bird concentrated on feeding within maple flowers 
and dead red oak leaves at heights of 3 to 5+ metres, never on the ground. It 
moved many times, staying along the east-west most southerly path of Thickson's 
Woods. Several of us "mastered" a crude triangulation procedure to zero on 
where the song was coming from.

The previous day's rains brought in some other good birds, for those who 
periodically broke away from the W-E W.

Here is a partial list-- 
Wood-Warblers--Am.Redstart, Nashville, Black-throated Green, Black-throated 
Blue, Ovenbird, Yellow-rumped, Palm, Pine, Blackburnian, Black-and-White, 
Worm-eating;   
Flycatchers--Great Crested, Least, E.Wood Pewee;
Baltimore Oriole, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Wood Thrush, Hermit Thrush, Brown 
Thrasher, House Wren, Bank Swallows, Blue-headed Vireo, Swamp Sparrow, 
ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAKS, E.Towhee, WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW (a few), very many 
White-throated Sparrows.

>From the west, exit the 401 at Thickson Rd., go south down toward the 
>lakefront, turning onto a roadway which parallels the marvelous White Pine 
>forest.

Doug Lockrey, Whitby,ON
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