I forwarded the photos down to Beverly Kingdon, and here is her response.
Hi Everyone, I have such exciting news for all of you.
I have attached photos of your trumpeters that arrived here in Burlington in the west basin of Lake Ontario, at LaSalle Park Marina on the afternoon of Oct 29, 2008.
In the background of one photo you will see the Burlington Skyway Bridge. Look at the very left hand corner of that photograph and you will see a small white spot. That is a very tiny piece of E16’s tail. This swan arrived with your family. Our records indicate this swan was their cygnet two years ago.
I banded E17 (female) last winter here in Burlington and unsuccessfully tried to catch her mate, who has broken tags. He is 417 and will be given a new number with a lock-on matching band.
Two years ago I also banded their "after year two" yearling.
Tomorrow we are going out at 10:30 to try to catch either 417 or one of the new cygnets for banding.
It would be so great for our records if we knew the very latest date and time that these birds were last seen in your area.
We are doing an Ontario nesting site study for the trumpeters and discovering their nesting site would be extremely valuable information to us. (GPS) This pair has a very routine migration pattern.
They arrived last year on Oct 30th and have been returning here for years. We know they have stopped in South River on their way south.
They left here March 23, 2008. (Left March 25 the year before) This would indicate that they will be back in your area sometime around the end of March. When they are pleased with their nesting site they don’t desert it unless forced and will return year after year.
This has been a great way to start our winter swanning season. Thank you so much for sending everything.
January is the greatest time to visit Burlington as last year we had 200 trumpeters migrate here. We caught and banded 95. Winter sure goes fast here in the south.
It would be nice if a group of you could make a trip down.
Side note; I was born and raised in North Bay. Good northern blood lets me live out all winter with the swans. We (my husband Ray and I) volunteer 7 days a week, monitoring, feeding, rescuing, delivering and picking up sick and injured swans and banding them.
Cheers
Bev.


Isn't digital networking a great thing?