Sunday, May 10, 2026

Five recent birds - and a butterfly

 

A breeding pair of mockingbirds are showing off at Black Oak as of late.

We are in the midst of a wonderful time of year. To witness bird migration and see it unfold between April and May is pretty amazing. This year, I have not really left Windsor --- with the price of gas I have decided to just stay a little more local. I might treat myself to a trip still to pelee though... who knows.

I typically try to go birdwatching after work - maybe at 4pm. Its not the most ideal time to go... but you take what you can get. 

I could probably list out many birds I've seen but the following made the cut for this posting.

Sunday May 10th - backyard- Orange Crowned Warbler! I turned on merlin and this songster was the first to be ID'ed!


May 10th - Scarlet Tanager along the edge of ojibway park. The road - Broadway st. cuts along the north edge of the ojibway park forest and can be surprisingly good. Its like drive through birding. 




Thursday May 7th - Golden Winged Warbler

Ojibway park (Black oak) was eerily quiet as I walked into the park but a small pocket of wablers gave looks at Cape May warbler, along with some other common warbs. This golden winged was present for a brief moment and boom. I had lost sight of it. It wasnt singing.



Bird #4 - American Woodcock during the day!

This might be the first time I've seen one, during the day-  without instantly flushing, in my many years of birding.


Bird 5 - A bunch of seasonal warblers and vireos: 







Ok - so the butterfly sighting that I mentioned in the title is pretty exciting (in my opinion). On Friday May 8th, after work at 4pm - a friend and I walked into black oak heritage park and we flushed up an orange-brown butterfly. It landed after a moment and to my amazement - it was a Harvester!!! 

I have been a butterfly watcher since 2011 - and never even imagined seeing this species in Windsor! (Ihad seen it once at the pinery many years ago).

Carnivorous Cutie - Harvester Butterfly at Black Oak

Then, the following morning (Saturday).... A second Harvester at a nearby spot!


I was quite amazed at seeing this butterfly again and I had looked closely at both photos and they seem to be two different specimens. I had a chat with chatgpt and it suggested that this sighting is not a migrant, its a local colony! I asked chatgpt about the Alder hostplant and aphids and it suggested that Oak and Hickory have suitable aphids that this butterfly can dine on as well. Both seemed to enjoy the sandy soil pathway... but this is dangerous as many bikers and dog walkers could hurt this little lepodopteric gem.

So  --- I was pretty stoked to find this butterfly and to perhaps come to realize a small colony exists here. I am finding some good birds close to home even though I will likely miss out on the premium rarities that can be found at pelee.  My time and fuel budget are keeping me closer to home this season and I'm ok with that.


Good Birding!

Dwayne



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