Episodes

Sunday Jun 01, 2025
Season 3, Episode 3: Alberta Bider and Guide, Gavin McKinnon
Sunday Jun 01, 2025
Sunday Jun 01, 2025
Well, thank you once again for joining me on the Big Year podcast. As May turns to June, spring migration is coming to a close. I've been busy all the merry month of May, birding in Long Point Provincial Park, where we got to see a Summer Tanager, Rondeau Provincial Parks for a Mourning Warbler, and Point Pelee National Park for Prothonotary Warblers and a Yellow-breasted Chat and Hillman Marsh for a Neotropic Cormorant and American Avocets. I’ve taken trips to Toronto where I just saw a Western Kingbird at Humber Bay East and a Western Grebe at Colonel Samuel Smith Park, which was, for the longest time, my birding patch.
Now my birding patch is here in Branford, at a lovely spot called Gilkison Flats, along The Grand River. I do enjoy birding there, but it’s not quite the same as Colonel Sam. That was always my favourite spot to be during spring migration, and of course, that’s where the Whimbrels have passed through on the way to their nesting grounds in the far north. Alas, this year weather and other circumstances made it a disappointing Whimbrel Watch in Toronto, with much lower numbers than usual.
It might have been that they took a more westerly route this year. I got to see Whimbrels in Chatham-Kent not far from Rondeau Provincial Park, in the same field I had not long before seeing a Yellow-head Blackbird, back in April. And that was the same day I saw the Crested Caracara, which was probably the highlight of the season and Canada lifer for me. That adventure started on a Monday, spending most of the day cruising around Essex County and going home disappointed, driving through blinding snow that prevented me from seeing the Yellow-headed Blackbird too. On Wednesday the weather was much improved and I returned to Chatham for the Yellow-headed Blackbird, only to discover the caracara had been re-found only minutes from where I was. I ended up seeing both birds that day.
It’s now June 1, 2025 and the weather is perhaps, finally, hopefully, going to feel more spring like and I am going to enjoy birding without all the layers. Sue and I spent a chilly final day of May, layered up from the wind, at the Huron Fringe Birding Festival, and we got to see Brewers Blackbirds and Upland Sandpipers, two of their specialty birds. If you decide to go, you’ll discover why the Kincardine Sewage Lagoons,(yes sewage lagoons-really), are known as Pelee North. The difference is that in Point Pelee, the birds are migrating through, but at the Huron Fringe Birding Festival, you are liable to find lots of nesting birds and birds that you may have missed because you weren't in the right place the right time during spring migration.
In fact, for me, I'm embarrassed to say this, but somehow I have not seen a Wilson's Warbler this year, and that's a little bit frustrating. I was hoping to find one on Saturday, but no such luck.
But now it's time to get back to the podcast. And today we have Alberta’s own, Gavin McKinnon. He was the birder, who in 2022, gave me a few tips and tricks to get some specialty songbirds in southern Alberta, like the Lark Sparrow and Thick-billed Longspur. I noticed late in 2024 that he had passed 400 species for Canada for the year and I wanted to know a little bit more about him, not just because he helped me, but because he is such an expert about birding in Alberta. I will say we did chat before the end of 2024, after he had already passed 400 species, but I will follow up with him at a later date to find out how the year ended, and share it during an episode of "The Big Year Podcast: On the Road", in August. In fact, as of June 1, he’s once again the top birder in Canada with 324 species.
Now, please enjoy all the stories you are about to hear equally and please don’t show a preference for any one story, or birds will be removed from your Life List.
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