Recent Archive Gallery About Home For A Day
The Long Walk


Wednesday was notable for me in being, I think, the longest hike I've ever done. Certainly the longest uninterrupted hike I've ever done--there were brief stops for the purpose of bird-watching, of course, but no long rests, no meal breaks or snack breaks. Somewhere on the order of 12-13 kilometers. It was good for me psychologically as well as physically. Not to mention the pleasure of extended nature-watching.

The hike took me through Beaver Trail (after a 1.5km hike from the nearest 166 bus stop), Jack Pine Trail, Lime Kiln Trail, and portions of the blue and red Rideau Trails, all within Stony Swamp. Ironically, Jack Pine Trail--considered the creme de la creme of Stony Swamp birding by many--produced exactly zero of the many interesting sightings that day!

Six different species of warblers--Yellow-Rumped, Magnolia, Nashville, Tennessee, Black-Throated Blue and Pine--a little surprising for late September, when warbler migration is supposed to be thinning out. Bands of Golden-Crowned Kinglets everywhere, which was not at all surprising. I was pleased by the tameness of the birds along Lime Kiln Trail (which I'd never been to before). They were foraging low in mixed flocks, and even species I normally expect to be fairly shy, like creepers and warblers, were allowing me close-up views. This is a great place to go if you want to feed birds by hand. Even the Red-Breasted Nuthatches were acting ultra-tame, hovering in front of my face to try to get my attention.

One of the biggest pleasures of the day was a Snowshoe Hare. I see them seldom and it's always a treat when I do. So different from dainty cottontails, as soon as they see me, they tear through the woods at breakneck speed to get away. They're much wilder and much warier.

I'm on a break from photography, so the pictures you'll be seeing in the next week or so (and the ones you've been seeing for the past few days) are all old--though new to you. I seldom process all my photos at the time I take them. A backlog builds up, and so I go sifting through it and pulling out the winners on rainy days.


Little Wood SatyrBits Of Sunshine

Comments

Gillian
October 10th, 2010 at 7:24 pm
I've never took that long of a walk before, so kudos for you for doing it! I'm surprised Jack Pine Trail didn't have any interesting sightings. I had a Hermit Thrush, tons of Juncos, and an American Wigeon there yesterday. Oh, and the Red-breasted Nuthatches are not just tame they are aggressive! Once you hold your hand out to them they claim all territorial rights over what's in it!

I only visited Lime Kiln once, and was bored by how straight it was. I didn't get very far. But your description of the close-up views entices me to try going back some day.

Suzanne
October 13th, 2010 at 12:17 am
"I'm surprised Jack Pine Trail didn't have any interesting sightings."

It was unusual, mind you. I generally see more there.

I do think the Rideau Trail loops at Stony Swamp are underrated when it comes to birding. There's a lot to see, even in migration. In summer I've found breeding Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-Breasted Grosbeaks and Black-Throated Green Warblers on the red loop. There's some respectable tracts of wetland that I have yet to fully explore. My fondest hope is to find breeding moorhens somewhere!

Tomorrow's quest, though, will be to try to re-find the Black-Backed Woodpecker that Bruce Di Labio recently saw at Mer Bleue...