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Woodcreeper On The Road: POINT PELEE FESTIVAL OF BIRDS DAY 2
Today is my second full day at Point Pelee National Park in Ontario and will kick off as it did yesterday, with me leading a walk looking for migrants throughout this historic spring hotspot. But before that, let’s look at the radar and see what was going on overhead during the night.
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Upper Midwest waits for the next front, while the rest of the U.S. marches on
High-pressure-driven northwest winds across the Great Plains and Midwest kept migration activity low for the interior U.S. last night, but otherwise birds were on the move for the rest of the country.
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Strong front brings many birds and regional fallouts to the eastern U.S.
Trans-Gulf migrants continued to arrive along the Texas/Louisiana coast late yesterday, followed by heavy nocturnal migration along the latest front to march eastward across the U.S. This front, extending from South Texas to the Gulf of Maine, triggered heavy migration and caused localized fallouts across several regions. Parts of the Texas coast, the Mid Atlantic U.S. and New York State should see evidence of migrant fallout this morning. A smaller pulse of migration was also evident across parts of the Upper Midwest as a second front moved through overnight, and migration continued up the Pacific Flyway from California to Washington State.
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Woodcreeper On The Road: BIGGEST WEEK IN AMERICAN BIRDING DAY 3
Todays is my last day in Ohio, and will be my first evening in Ontario as I head north to join the Festival of Birds in Point Pelee National Park. Before I head north, though, I’m going to check out the birds that await us on the Magee Marsh boardwalk. Judging by the radar it should be awesome this morning!
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Birds push north as some serious storms pound the central flyway
Migration was hot and heavy last night, starting with trans-Gulf arrivals to the Texas and Louisiana coasts yesterday afternoon. Birds could be seen heading up the East, Mississippi and Central Flyways with the heaviest migration over south Florida, the Mid Atlantic, and west of the Appalachians. Heavy precipitation across East Texas and the Upper Midwest caused localized fallouts where they intercepted migrating birds early this morning. Migration was moderate throughout the western U.S. including the entire Pacific Flyway.