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Village Squire, 1974-06, Page 20VI vast nesting grounds reaching beyond the •Arctic coast. Spring flights during April and May have produced a chorus of 100 species at a single sunrise. Peak days have produced counts of 650 whistling swans and 20,000 white -throat- ed sparrows. The Pelee hawk migration in September is a memorable experience for the autumn visitor who would normally seldom see these lordly hunters in such numbers. Continuing eastward along the Ontario shore of Lake Erie there are a number of proven birding areas such as Rondeau Provincial Park near Ch am, Long Point and Turkey Point ne imcoe and Presqu'ile Park south of Trenton on Lake Ontario. Seabird ffrrciers will find that Canada's east coast offers rich rewards for little effort. The great gannet rookery on Bonaventure Island near Quebec's Gaspe coast is an experience to be re -lived again and again. Accessible by small boat from the village of Perce, the first-time visitor to Bonaventure is invariably awed by the sheer rock cliffs rising from the gulf (St. Lawrence) waters and by what one observer described as "being enveloped in a sea of sound". The gannet is a strikingly large bird, white with black wing tips and yellowish head. Formerly known as "sea geese", a cast of thousands is overpowering. Nova Soctia's Bird Islands, accessible during the summer months via cruise boat from the Sydney Mines area of Cape Breton Island is home base for large colonies of puffins, cormorants and razorbill mures and a variety of gulls. The comic -opera puffin with his oversized multi -colored bill and white shirt is a favorite among costal birds. Birders touring Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta will be well rewarded if they take their time. Stop frequently and look around. The great plains offer unobstructed viewing for great distances and you should chalk up an increasing number of hawk sightings. Roadside sloughs contain a variety of ducks and the small black -headed Franklin gull is common if near water along with that western dapper -Dan the magpie. The huge fall migratory flights of ducks and geese pouring down from the northern breeding grounds are a relatively common sight on the prairies, but it's the great gangling sandhill crane that provides the extravaganza for bird watchers. The main viewing area is the sandhill crane refuge on the north end of Last Mountain Lake, about 75 miles north of Regina. Peak periods are between mid-August and early September when three or four thousand birds may drop in on a single day. Seasoned bird watchers and professional ornithologists SCHMID'S JEWELLERY AND CHINA OWNERS — W. JOS. and DEAN E. AGNEW Diamonds — Watches — Clocks — Silver — Bona China Spode, Wedgewood Royal Crown Derby Royal Albert Royal Doulton, Paragon and Ironstone WATCHMAKER — DIAMOND SETTER — Jk:w>!,LLER 34 Lucknow CALL 528.3532 OR QESIDENCE 528-3940 8, VILLAGE SQUIRE/MAY 1974 agree the spectacle has to be seen to be believed. In the Rockies the mountain wanderer will eventually come in contact with the rascally Clark's Nutcracker. Like the wider ranging Canada Jay, the Nutcracker is not adverse to dropping in, invited or otherwise, to break bread with a well provisioned bird lover. The Rifel Refuge is a privately operated bird sanctuary on Westham Island in the Fraser delta about 20 miles east of Vancouver. A small admission charge assures viewing of a captive flock of waterfowl which is greatly increased . by wintering flocks of lesser snow geese, black brant widgeons and pintails during October. Clover Point, on Vancouver Island near Victoria, affords close range viewing from your car window of seabirds feeding along the shore. • Canada's spring and fall seasons offer birders colorful birds in springtime and brilliant leaves in autumn with large flocks. A field guide to NOrth American birds, field glasses and you're in •business...anywhere in Canada and at any time of the year. For more information contact the Canadian Government Travel Bureau at 150 Kent Street, Ottawa, Ontario K1A OH6 The Shzdow Box presents their new line in bridal bouquets - created in matching fabrics to compliment the gowns of the bride and her attendants - a lasting remembrance. THE SHADOW BOX CLINTON PHONE 482-9494 18 Albert St