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An Exceedingly Rare Heron by the Lake: May 2021

We are used to seeing the Black-crowned Night Heron in Toronto during the warmer weather months:

Black-crowned Night Heron

Its southern cousin, the Yellow-crowned Night Heron, has been exciting birdwatchers at Col. Sam Smith Park for the past few days.

Yellow-crowned Night Heron

Yellow-crowned Night Herons breed in tropical and subtropical regions. Toronto is far from their normal habitat.

Yellow-crowned Night Heron

According to the only information that I could find (from 1985), one was seen at Lake Erie in May 1954, another in 1964 and another in 1974. There is a previous Toronto record from August 1898. Birders at Col Sam remember one from 2014.

Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-crowned Night Heron with Ring-billed Gull
Yellow-crowned Night Heron with Ring-billed Gull
Yellow-crowned Night Heron with Ring-billed Gull
Yellow-crowned Night Heron with Ring-billed Gull

MYSTERY BIRD

I will identify it at the end of the post. (I love this comment: I love the mystery bird photos you post. I am scoring about 20%).

I was at Col. Sam Smith Park at dawn and spent two hours searching for Whimbrels. None for me so far. I wasn’t alone even at that hour.

Better luck tomorrow I hope.

Other birds:

European Starling (juvenile)
Mute Swan
Great Blue Heron
Red-winged Blackbird (male)
Great Blue Herons
Eastern Kingbird
Great Blue Herons
Double-crested Cormorants
Eastern Kingbird
European Starling (juvenile)
Ring-billed Gull
Eastern Kingbird
European Starlings (juvenile)
Ring-billed Gull
Tree Swallow
European Starling juvenile and parent
Ring-billed Gull
Double-crested Cormorants
Mourning Dove
Ring-billed Gull
Common Grackle
Song Sparrow
Ring-billed Gull
Song Sparrow
Blackpoll Warbler (male)
Ring-billed Gull
Yellow Warbler (male)
Blackpoll Warbler (male)
Yellow Warbler (male)
Spotted Sandpiper
Barn Swallow

MYSTERY BIRD

Olive-green above, yellowish below and two white wing bars identify this as a female Orchard Oriole.

Orchard Oriole (female)

MAILBOX

NATURE POETRY

Hard is his herte that loveth nought
In May, whan al this mirth is wrought.        – Geoffrey Chaucer (1343–1400)

Miles Hearn

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