Fall 2018 Whistler is online
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The Fall 2018 Whistler is available now.
Read more of its content:
- Program: Birding Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
- Save the 2018 Christmas Bird Count Dates
- Presidents Message: Where the Birds Roost
- Membership Form
- NW Birding Events
- The Marbled Murrelets Need You This Fall
- 2018 Cowlitz County Bird List update
- Yellow-breasted Chat Song
- Hannah Cargill builds artificial chimney for Vaux's Swifts
- Programs and Field Trips
Video of Vaux's Swift in Rainier Ore
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WHAS is actively monitoring the population of Vaux's Swifts by counting the birds as they enter their regular stopping places during the northbound migration in May and the southbound migration in September.
Check out this video (click on the image) taken on September 20 by Diane Yorgason-Quinn:
Don’t miss the show at Riverside Community Church, lower parking lot in Rainier, Oregon. The first birds entered the chimney around 7:30pm on September 20th.
The Marbled Murrelets Need You This Fall
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By Maria M. Ruth, Black Hills Audubon Society
Next month, Washington State will be seeking public input on important decisions on the fate of this endangered seabird. The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will release its Revised Draft Environmental Impact Statement (RDEIS) for the Long Term Conservation Strategy for the Marbled Murrelet. This strategy will be implemented on 1.4 million acres of state forest for the next 50 years.
This is a critical time for the endangered seabird whose population in Washington has declined 44% since 2001. DNR manages 213,000 acres of land in western Washington where mature and old-growth coastal forests provide the murrelet’s preferred nesting trees. These forests are public lands and you have a voice in how they are managed.
Many of you submitted comments on the previous draft of the Environmental Impact Statement in early 2017. Your comments sent a strong message to DNR that it was not doing enough to protect the murrelets on our state lands. For that we thank you!
Now we need your help again. There will be a 60-day public comment period this fall that follows the release of the RDEIS. Our goal is to guide DNR to select an alternative that makes a significant contribution to the recovery of the endangered murrelet.
The Marbled Murrelet Coalition will be analyzing the RDEIS, and will provide background information and issue talking points—scientific, legal, and economic—for you to consider including in your public comments. We’ll also provide you with press releases, action alerts, short articles, images, and graphics you can use in your newsletters, social media, and other outreach to your membership.
Your voice. Your public land. Your trees. Your wildlife.
Follow Murrelet Survival Project on Facebook for news and updates. Check this website later for an announcement about the RDEIS as soon as it is published.
The Marbled Murrelet Coalition includes Conservation Northwest, Defenders of Wildlife, Olympic Forest Coalition, Seattle Audubon Society, Washington Environmental Council, and Washington Forest Law Center.
2018 Cowlitz County Bird List - June Update
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2018 is half over and we have seen birds in winter, in migration and in breeding season. This means further additions will be slow, but usually of the unexpected variety for the last six months.
Easily the highlight of the last couple months was a Dickcissel showing up at a bird bath on Pleasant Hill Road between Castle Rock and Kelso where it made use of the facilities and was never seen again. It certainly does pay to have a water feature in the yard. This first ever record for Cowlitz County was not only noticed by the residents, but well photographed. Assuming this bird is accepted by the Washington Bird Records Committee it will be the sixteenth record for the state. With the excellent photographic documentation we would expect no problem with acceptance.
Download the pdf here.
Summer 2018 Whistler is online
- Details
The Summer 2018 Whistler is available now.
Read more of its content:
- Summer Picnic invitation
- Presidents Message: In the Verge
- Membership Form
- NW Birding Events
- Photographic Transformation of a Harris’s Sparrow
- Birding Adventures in the Palms
- Children’s Discovery Museum: We’ve Got Our Wings
- WHAS Takes Position on Columbia River BiOp and HB 3144
- Skookumchuck Wind Turbine Project
- WHAS Booth at Earthday 2018 Recap
- Board Notes and Updates
- Programs and Fieldtrips
Osprey Watch Cam at University of Oregon
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The University of Oregon School of Law now has a camera showing an Osprey nest. You can watch it live 24/7.
2018 Cowlitz County Bird List - April Update
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We arrive at the end of April during the heart of migration with new species arriving in the county daily. It's fun to be out there looking for them or just kicking back and seeing them arrive at our feeders.
The most exciting April sighting for a number of us was the second Cowlitz County record of Vesper Sparrow. This one day wonder was found foraging right at roadside along a fence line in the Woodland Bottoms and was seen by numerous birders for the rest of the day. Despite a number of people searching for hours, the bird could not be relocated the next morning as it had likely moved on.
Vesper Sparrow is a grassland species that is common in appropriate habitat east of the Cascades in Washington, with small nesting populations in a couple west side locations, notably Joint Base Lewis McChord and a beach area on San Juan Island. A few migrating birds are found annually in other western Washington spots and this one was a treat for some local birders.
Download the pdf here.
2018 Cowlitz County Bird List - March Update
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Migrants continued to trickle in during March and we also found a few year around residents that had been missed in the first couple months of 2018. There was one bird that didn't fit either of these categories however. That was the female Tufted Duck found in the Columbia River at Woodland in a Greater Scaup flock on 3/24 and was still being seen daily as of this writing on 3/31. Most Tufted Ducks winter in Asia with western Washington seeing two or three in a typical winter.
For some reason this is the first one seen in Washington in 2018 and created quite a stir with all the state big year listers coming to find this bird to add to their year list of birds. Add that to the newly avid birders for whom this was a life time first as well as other local birders and there has been quite a few folks who have seen this individual.
This is the third record for this species in Cowlitz County and the first female, although all three have been in the Columbia River at Woodland. In 2013 there was a first winter male that was present for about three weeks and in 2015 an adult male was seen for only a few days.
Download the pdf here.
Midwinter Survey Turns up 26 Eagles
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By Darrel Whipple
Looking for a little white dot on a forested hillside...
Pretty soon you get good at that, especially if you are lucky to be counting eagles with Steve Hemenway of Castle Rock.
Steve and I conducted WHAS's Midwinter Bald Eagle Survey on Monday, February 5, 2018, from 7:30 am to 3:00 pm. The survey covers two latitude-longitude blocks along the Cowlitz and Columbia rivers, originally assigned to WHAS as part of a nationwide study of eagle populations that ran from 1979 to 1989, coordinated by the National Wildlife Federation.
But, what the heck! Why quit a perfectly good survey? Right?
So, here I am with my umpteenth Midwinter Bald Eagle Survey on the same .............. 120-mile vehicle route, which basically covers the territory between Longview and the I-5 bridge over the Cowlitz in the morning, and the area from the Port of Kalama to Longview in the afternoon.
Despite the lackluster smelt run that is just barely waking up the sea lions on the docks at Astoria, and not yet appearing in the Cowlitz, we sighted a survey record of 26 Bald Eagles. We had 21 adults and five sub-adults. (The north block yielded 17 eagles and the south block had nine.)
That's a welcome result considering that our 1979 survey turned up just one eagle -- one adult near the I-5 bridge over the Cowlitz.
In addition to the 26 eagles, we checked off 43 other bird species, including 12 Red-tailed Hawks, a Cooper's Hawk, Kestrel, Northern Harrier, Western Meadowlark and Horned Grebe. We found only one Great Blue Heron: what's up with that?
2018 Cowlitz County Bird List - February Update
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We added a few resident as well as wintering birds in February that we had missed in January. At the end of the month the first of our spring migrants began to appear, with Tree Swallows, Turkey Vulture and Rufous Hummingbird all making an appearance. Barn Swallows were already seen in January, which was part of a wide spread presence of this species in western Washington this winter.
What was unusual about this was the quantity of the reports as we expect some winter appearance of Barn Swallows. After the last migrants leave in late October there may be no Barn Swallows seen until early January, then there will be random sightings until late February. Then another gap in reports occurs until the first spring migrants appear about April first.
This odd seasonal pattern has led some to theorize that the winter birds are not our local breeders trying to over winter, but rather birds from southern South America that have migrated north for the austral winter, then when it comes time to return south for nesting they mistakenly continue north and end up here, where they slowly succumb to the weather conditions. To the best of my knowledge this theory has not been confirmed by DNA research as of yet.
Download the pdf here.
- March Conservation Update
- Leadbetter Christmas Bird Count Results
- 2017 Wahkiakum CBC Results
- 2017 Cowlitz Columbia Christmas Bird Count Results
- Spring 2018 Whistler is online
- What You Can Do Today to Prevent Mining at Mount St. Helens
- 2018 Cowlitz County Bird List - January Update
- 2017 Cowlitz County Bird List - Final
- Winter 2017 Whistler is online
- 2017 Cowlitz County Bird List - October Update