Subject: RBA Vancouver, BC - Mar 26, 2000
Date: Mar 27 11:54:23 2000
From: Libor Michalak - pieris at sprint.ca


This is the Vancouver, BC Bird Alert for Sunday March 26th, 11:00 pm
update.

Highlights Include:

PALM WARBLER
ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER

Other birds mentioned include:

American Kestrel
Brant
Sandhill Crane
Surfbird
Rock Sandpiper
Black Turnstone
Western Sandpiper
Dunlin
Sanderling
Horned Puffin
Rufous Hummingbird
Hoary Redpoll
Yellow-rumped Warbler
======================

Sightings for Sunday, March 26th

The PALM WARBLER was seen between 4:45 and 5:00 pm in its usual place in the
brush along the landward side of the Sea Island dike 40-80 m west of the
junction with Shannon Road. Two YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERS were also seen
there.

Two singing ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLERS in Campbell Valley Regional Park,
Langely were the first spring arrivals.

>From Vancouver Island comes word of a possible HORNED PUFFIN seen flying in
Georgia Strait off Columbia Beach and the Parksville Qualicum area. For
further information please call the Victoria Bird Alert at (250) 592-3381.


Saturday, March 25th

The HOARY REDPOLL fist reported on March 20th was seen briefly in the
morning on Sea Island. Still on Sea Island a PALM WARBLER and a
YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER were seen at the junction of Ferguson and Shannon Road
opposite fence gate #2. Plumage differences suggest that this may not be
the same PALM WARBLER that has wintered near the north end of Shannon Road.

On Iona Island a single WESTERN SANDPIPER was with DUNLIN and SANDERLINGS at
the tip of the south jetty.

A SURFBIRD and a ROCK SANDPIPER were with BLACK TURNSTONES at lighthouse
marine park in Point Roberts.

A SANDHILL CRANE was in the vicinity of Debolville Slough. Five hundred
BRANT were between the Tsawwassen and Coal Port Jetties. A party of 135
more BRANT off shore at the Beach Grove Lagoon Tsawwassen, contained 13 of
the grey bellied race.

An AMERICAN KESTREL was in Langely along 200th Street north of East Avenue.

RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRDS have been noted in several localities in the past ten
days.



END TRANSCRIPT
Please visit the Vancouver Natural History Society?s (VNHS) Web Page at
http://www.naturalhistory.bc.ca/VNHS/ for birding area locations mentioned
and other events.