If you were to leave Detroit and head south what's the first foreign country you'd come to? Trick question, it's Canada!
Did you know Point Pelee National Park is the southernmost point in Canada. Specifically Middle Island south of Pelee Island. But the farthest south in Canada I'll probably ever get is the tip of Point Pelee.
Which is where we were headed this morning because that's where the birds make first landfall after their night flight over Lake Erie. We'd been told the songbird migration was pretty much over but the shorebirds were still arriving.
It was 20C when we got up so I threw caution to the wind and wore shorts, which I would live to regret.
The shuttles weren't operating yet so we hiked down to the spit. We arrived to a crowd of 20 people jostling for a view
Of the jostle of pelicans, gulls and shorebirds.
Checking the photos later we found dunlins and a Caspian tern, both new species for our trip.
Everyone was waiting for a neotropical cormorant to show up. Unfortunately there was a mass of relentless what-they-called stableflies attacking us, apparently impervious to Deet, that kept biting our bare legs, and I had to call time out so we took the shuttle back to the visitor centre. (Sorry, but we've seen neotropical Cormorants before, been to Mexico, been to Florida, been to Costa Rica.)
Changed into long pants, hopped back on the shuttle and went back down to the tip.
Most of the birds had moved on but still a few pelicans around.
We walked to the so-called sparrow field, where we were hopeful we'd find some eastern sparrows, but no sparrows at all. Where are all the sparrows in Ontario?
No sparrows. Just the ubiquitous yellow warblers and red-winged blackbirds.
The highlight of the day was coming upon a feeding frenzy of mergansers and Bonaparte gulls feeding on what must have been a school of fish.
Our next stop was the marsh boardwalk. By now it was really hot and we walked around the boardwalk. But there were hardly any birds to be seen.
Except for lots of barn swallows nesting under the tower.
Lastly we visited Kopegaren Woods, a small tract of untouched forest in between the agricultural fields.
It was fairly quiet but at least cooler than in the open. And we spotted a red-bellied woodpecker.
Later in the evening when it cooled down we walked around Wheatley campground where we found a beautiful wood warbler and listened to its
lovely song.
Bird of the Day
We also saw this eastern cottontail.