The Ring-necked Duck is often unknown to new birders whose first look at the dramatically plumaged male brings a shot of awareness that is surprising that such a lovely duck could have not been known to them before this first observation.
Pacific Northwest Birding Festivals for Spring 2023
Pacific Northwest Birding Festivals for Spring 2023
Written by Andy McCormick
Birding festivals are a booming. Several Washington State festivals have been held annually for more than 20 years. Birding publications a full of ads for festivals. Some birders love them and will travel around attending them over the course of a year. Some birders tend to avoid them. It’s a matter of taste. The festivals bring birders of all skill levels together to focus on an aspect of birding such as shrub-steppe habitat, a bird species such as the Sandhill Crane, or a migration hotspot such as the Olympic Peninsula.
Costs for festivals vary and some of the popular events have higher fees for the field trips and registering early is important. Typically, there is a registration fee and a charge for each field trip. Lodging and meals are not provided, and these add to the cost of attending a festival. Some festivals have camping facilities nearby. Most festivals offer field trips led by a local birder and limit the number of participants, so groups do not get to large. Most festivals run for a three-day weekend and may be worth a special trip to participate in them. The one-day festivals are smaller affairs and may be worth attending only if you are in the area already. The following 9 Pacific Northwest festivals are listed chronologically between March and June in 2023.
Wings Over Water Northwest Birding Festival , March 17-19, Blaine Middle School, Blaine, WA
This festival requires a registration fee and offers many free birding field trips and birding cruises for an extra charge. Guest speakers present on aspects of birding and often on seabirds. This festival is in its 20th year.
Othello Sandhill Crane Festival, March 24-26, McFarland Middle School, Othello, WA
The Sandhill Crane festival is in its 25th year. It is a large and popular festival that provides many workshops and field trips ranging in price from $20 for a half-day trip to $80 for premium photography trips. They provide bagged lunches for $20. However, general admission is only $12 and you can attend as many of the lectures as you want. Accommodations range from camping to bed and breakfast to hotels in Moses Lake, a 20-minute drive from Othello.
Tundra Swan Festival, March 25, 9:00 am to 4:00 pm, Camas Center for Community Wellness, Cusick, WA
This is a one-day event to celebrate the migration of Tundra Swans through the Pend Oreille River Valley. It is organized in conjunction with the Kalispel Tribe. If you are in the northeast Washington area at the end of March, it would make a vrey nice additional stop on your trip. You can learn about the swans and the Kalispel community.
Olympic Birdfest, April 13-16, Dungeness River Nature Center
This is another popular birding festival which attracts birders from around the country. In fact, most attendees live outside Washington. This festival is a partnership of the Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society, the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, and the Dungeness River Nature Center. It offers many field trips around the Northern edge of the Olympic Peninsula including the Dungeness Spit and a cruise around Protection Island. Field trips run about $30 each and some classes are $40. Special full-day trips led by famed Olympic leader Bob Boekelheide are $95 per person. It’s worth it. At this writing in early February, some trips are already sold out. This is lovely area for birding, and I recommend a visit in spring even if you don’t attend the festival.
Grays Harbor Shorebird and Nature Festival, May 5-7, Grays Harbor NWR, Hoquiam, WA
This is long-running festival that uses a do-it-yourself model. Registration is only $10. There are no field trips or presentations. Festival volunteers are available on the Sandpiper Trail at the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge to assist with bird viewing. Festival volunteers also provide information on best birding times based on the Aberdeen tide charts. This tide schedule can be downloaded from the festival website and functions as a guide to birding spots around Grays Harbor and Pacific Counties. This is definitely a hotspot for shorebird viewing whether you participate in the festival or not.
Yakima River Canyon Bird Fest, May 12-14, Helen McCabe Park, Ellensburg, WA
This year’s 24th festival has the theme “Get Intimate with Shrub-steppe Habitat.” There is no extra change for field trips, which focus not only on birds, but also geology, sage country habitat, and a special event to get onto the Department of Defense Yakima Training Center, an area of protected sagebrush habitat. A DOD background check is required for this event. Some events require a payment, but the amount is not available without going to the registration page. This is a special and declining habitat in Washington and the Kittitas Environmental Education Network (KEEN) of state, county, federal, and non-profit organizations is committed to preserving it. The event kicks off with a bonfire on Friday night and goes on from there!
Leavenworth Spring BirdFest, May 18-21, Wenatchee River Institute, Leavenworth, WA
This festival is in its 21rd year and it all comes together around World Migratory Bird Day. The festival offers pre-festival field trips in the $8 to $25 range and many more trips on the festival days. Art workshops run $30 to $40. Historically, the festival has involved many members and businesses in the community and the brochure has been printed in Spanish and English. A youth art program continues to be a focus of the festival.
Meadowlark Nature Festival, May 19-22, Penticton, British Columbia
Information about the 2023 festival is not available at this time. However, the 2022 schedule is available on the website. Field trips cover a wide range of habitats from valleys to high elevation locations. Prices range from $20 or $30 up to $150 for birding in South Okanagan with Richard Cannings, co-author of Birds of the Pacific Northwest: A Photographic Guide, which I reviewed for Northwest Science. He is probably the most knowledgeable person about birds in British Columbia. This festival sounds like it would be a great introduction to birding in the Okanagan Valley in BC!
Dean Hale Woodpecker Festival, June 1-4, Creekside Park, Sisters, OR
This annual event accesses U.S. Forest Service lands on the Eastern slope of the Cascades in Oregon. Habitats include Ponderosa pine forests, riparian areas and high elevation meadows and lakes. Although the focus is on woodpeckers, field trips, which range from $20 to $45, seek out bluebirds, flycatchers, owls, and shorebirds. Register through the East Cascades Audubon Society website.
OTHER BIRDING FESTIVALS TO EXPLORE
There are three other festivals in the PNW, but I could not locate any details about them. You might find better information in March.
Annual Harney County Migratory Bird Festival, April 13-16, Burns High School, Burns, OR
Annual Ladd Marsh Bird Festival, May 19-21, Ladd Marsh Wildlife Area, La Grande, OR
Tualatin River Bird Festival, May 20, Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge, Sherwood, OR
FESTIVALS IN OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD
If you want to go far afield you can locate birding festivals all over North America and beyond at the All About Birds website from Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
Enjoy spring birding wherever you decide to go!
President's Letter
Snoqualmie Falls Bird Survey Underway
Snoqualmie Falls Bird Survey Underway
Written by Andy McCormick
The Snoqualmie Tribe and Eastside Audubon have begun a year-long, once-a-month bird survey of the area around Snoqualmie Falls. The survey team is comprised of Tribal Government employees, some of whom are Tribal Members, and the local Audubon chapter. This work is the first joint bird count in the Snoqualmie Falls area. Parcels in the area were recently purchased by the Snoqualmie Tribe and the Audubon group has often had birding groups in the area. The collaboration grew from a mutual interest in studying the birds around Snoqualmie Falls. The tribe is working with the Audubon to provide appropriate access to some of their land for the survey team.
By meeting once-a-month to cover the same area, the team will learn which birds are year-round residents and when they are joined by migrating birds in spring and fall. The survey will also help determine which bird species are breeding in the area as nesting birds are observed in spring and summer. The knowledge gained during the survey will be helpful with habitat protection for birds and other wildlife, which is a goal shared by both the Tribe and Audubon.
The first survey morning was held on January 19. During the three-hour survey the team located 17 species of birds. It was a winter morning with overcast skies and temperature hovering around 40. Birds which winter in this area are hardy and many were busy feeding, and a few sang during the morning.
Song Sparrow by Andy McCormick
Flocks of Cackling Geese and Canada Geese got the day started as they flew over the area early in the day. Around the upper parking area across from the Salish Lodge, a large flock of Dark-eyed Juncos was foraging in the grass. The shrubs around the parking lot were alive with Golden-crowned Kinglets and Ruby-crowned Kinglets, a Spotted Towhee, and some Song Sparrows. Steller’s Jay, Red-breasted Nuthatch, and Varied Thrush were heard calling. In the trees near the gift shop, which is being remodeled, the team found Black-capped Chickadees and one Chestnut-backed Chickadee, and more kinglets and towhees.
A pair of Mallards made their way along the Snoqualmie River below the falls and three gulls patrolled the area until a Bald Eagle flew in and perched on a snag across from the confluence of Tokul Creek. From the bridge over the creek three American Dippers were seen hopping into and out of the water as they foraged upstream. Dippers have been nesting in the Tokul Creek area for many years and it was good to see them.
Here is the list of birds and how many were seen and/or heard:
Brown Creeper by Andy McCormick
Spotted Towhee by Andy McCormick
25 Cackling Geese
4 Canada Geese
2 Mallards
3 Western X Glaucous-winged hybrid gulls
1 Bald Eagle
1 Steller’s Jay
3 Black-capped Chickadees
1 Chestnut-backed Chickadee
4 Ruby-crowned Kinglets
10 Golden-crowned Kinglets
1 Red-breasted Nuthatch
1 Brown Creeper
3 American Dippers
1 Varied Thrush
19 Dark-eyed Juncos
5 Song Sparrows
3 Spotted Towhees
Christmas Bird Count 2022
Eastside Audubon held its 39th Christmas Bird Count (CBC) on Saturday, December 17, 2022. The count was part of the 123rd CBC sponsored by the National Audubon Society. In total the teams found 94 species of birds on Count Day and a review of eBird postings for Count Week, which includes the three days before and three days after Count Day.
Ring-necked Duck
Gardening for Wildlife 101
Gardening for Wildlife 101
Written by Claire Waltman
If you think gardening for wildlife isn’t that important or is just too hard to do, I’d like to change your mind. Urban and suburban areas are expanding despite the movement to increase density within cities. Every lot that is cleared for a new home or business removes wildlife habitat. The birds pushed out of that lot need to go somewhere and many of them would be very happy in your backyard. In Welcome to Subirdia, John Marzloff discusses his data about bird species in suburban areas. He found a surprising variety and density of birds sharing the suburban environment with us.
A panel of university researchers funded by the National Science Foundation and working with the National Wildlife Federation Community Wildlife Habitat program have documented the success of gardening for wildlife. A webinar about their results can be viewed here. Doug Tallamy’s recent book Nature’s Best Hope underscores the extent of the impact that individuals can have by planting native plants in their own backyard. So, what are you waiting for? It’s easy. It’s fun. Here’s how to do it.
The basics requirements for wildlife habitat are simple. (To be honest, I’ve taken this directly from the NWF backyard certification webpage.)
Food:
A birdfeeder is not required to provide food to birds. Seeds, berries, and nuts are common food sources, but perhaps the single most important source is insects.
Water:
Birdbaths are an excellent source of water for birds and a source of entertainment for birders. Even rocks with small indentations that hold rainwater can provide a hydration station.
Cover:
Birds need a place to shelter and to hide from predators. American Robins and European Starlings might be happy with your lawn, but most other birds prefer a more complex environment. Designing a landscape with layers of trees, shrubs, and groundcover provides a range of places suitable for a wider variety of species.
Places to raise young:
Providing nesting sites does not require bird houses. Trees, shrubs, and snags are natural nesting sites.
Sustainable practices:
One of the key elements of gardening for wildlife is the avoidance of pesticides. Insects are a primary food source for birds and, of course, bees are a primary pollinator for our gardens.
These elements are easily provided in home gardens no matter how small. The National Wildlife Federation will even certify a balcony as wildlife habitat if it includes the necessary elements. You don’t have to think big, think small, and move forward.
A word about native plants. Yes, native plants do provide the optimum habitat for local species, but many of the native plants in our Pacific Northwest forests are just not appropriate for use in urban/suburban gardens. They are too big, too invasive, or require too much water for use in gardens. In the next newsletters, I will highlight some our native plants that provide excellent habitat for birds but also fit into small gardens.
So, if you want to start gardening for wildlife. Sure, you could hire a landscape architect, rip out all your current garden, and start over. Or you can take the gentle, let’s not call it lazy, approach and gradually work toward a more bird-friendly garden. Maybe you can take out a little lawn or expand a current bed to add a few native shrubs. When updating a bed or planting a tree, you can think first of natives. Don’t feel like you have to be a purist to provide for wildlife. Every step helps, every native plant, every pesticide-free yard. And many nonnative plants benefit birds. For example, fuchsias are not native to our area, but the hummingbirds and the humans love them. So, have a cup of coffee, sit down by the window, look out onto your garden, and think about spring and what you could do to support our avian friends.
Here are some resources for getting started.
National Audubon Plants for Birds webpage has an extensive database of native plants searchable by 5-digit zip code. Plant descriptions are brief but are linked to a list of birds that may be attracted to each plant. The Buy Now button is of limited value.
National Wildlife Federation has had a program of certifying backyard habitats as well as community habitats for years. Their website details how to provide the essential elements needed by wildlife. The $20 fee to certify a home garden supports a wide variety of programs.
Encyclopedia of Northwest Native Plants for Gardens and Landscapes by Robson, Richter, & Filbert is indeed encyclopedic. The 500-page tome provides photographs of every plant and detailed descriptions of native plants including cultivation and native range. It is available at the King County Library.
The Washington Native Plant Society (WNPS) website has links to a number of resources for gardening with native plants. In addition, WNPS chapters have native plant sales with a wider selection of native plants than can be offered by most commercial nurseries.
King County has an excellent website with an extensive list of native plants. The website includes sample landscape designs by area such as dry, shade or moist, sunny.
Photo of the Month: November and December
Gary Luhm and Jay Galvin Are the Latest Photographers of the Month
Long-time Eastside Audubon Photography Group members Gary Luhm and Jay Galvin are the latest Photographers of the Month award winners.
Harlequin Duck by Gary Luhm
Photo details: All photos were shot on a Sony A7 IV camera with the following settings:
Lens 100-400 mm | 1/2,000 of a second at f/5.6 | ISO 1000
Gary Luhm, a long-time member of the Eastside Audubon photography group, was again named in November the Photographer of the Month for a shot of a Harlequin duck taking off.
Luhm, an expert kayaker, shot the image from a kayak on Chuckanut Bay south of Bellingham.
“Harlequin Duck are frequently found there, and on this day, I captured several portraits of both males and females”, he said.
“I hadn't captured a flight shot of a Harlequin Duck in many years. Pushing the bird to fly is unethical, and unwise as well because they will fly away from you and you rarely get another chance,” he added.
“In this case, I was crouched low in the kayak and got some portraits, but some approaching kayakers drove the bird toward me because they were likely oblivious to the bird. I stayed still and crouched low, and this male Harlequin chose to fly right past my side to ‘safer’ waters. I was very pleased that the camera's bird-eye focus stuck with the bird as it launched. “
Harlequin Duck by Gary Luhm
Photo details: All photos were shot on a Sony A7 IV camera with the following settings:
Lens 100-400 mm | 1/2,000 of a second at f/5.6 | ISO 1000
To see more of Gary's work, including dozens of photos and kayak tips, go to his website at www.garyluhm.net
Harlequin Duck Taking Off by Gary Luhm
Photo details: All photos were shot on a Sony A7 IV camera with the following settings:
Lens 100-400 mm | 1/2,000 of a second at f/5.6 | ISO 1000
Jay Galvin is the December Photographer of the Month
Coot by Jay Galvin
Photo details: Canon 5D Mark IV | Tamron 150-600 mm lens | 1 /640 of a second at f/9 | ISO 800
Jay Galvin, a talented, long-time member of the Eastside Audubon Society photography group, was selected as the Photographer of the Month in December for his series of photos of Coots he shot in the Auburn area.
“The North side of the pond is bordered by huge Cottonwood trees which make for a beautiful background in the fall,” he said.
“This pond attracts many species of waterfowl in the fall and winter including cormorants, common mergansers, widgeon, blue herons, cackling geese, kingfishers, and shore birds,” he added.
Jay also won the award in July for a series of Virginia Rail photos. More of Jay’s work is available on Facebook.
Coot by Jay Galvin
Photo details: Canon 5D Mark IV | Tamron 150-600 mm lens | 1 /640 of a second at f/9 | ISO 800
Coot by Jay Galvin
Photo details: Canon 5D Mark IV | Tamron 150-600 mm lens | 1 /640 of a second at f/9 | ISO 800
About the Eastside Audubon Photograph of the Month Award
The Photo of the Month award was instituted to recognize the work of the Photo Group Members. The group members meet monthly to show their latest photos and videos as well as share their knowledge of photography and wildlife. To attend the meetings, please join the group’s announcement list.
Ospreys Differ in Foot Preference in Stance While Carrying Fish
In a study of Osprey published in Brain and Behavior, Seattle neurologist Michael Doherty, MD and a team of observers learned that over half of the Osprey observed in analysis of online photographs preferred keeping their left foot forward when carrying fish prey.
Osprey
EAS Offers College Scholarships
EAS Offers College Scholarships
Do you know a senior in high school who meets our criteria for a college scholarship?
Our Education Department offers a $5,000.00 award to a senior in our area (School Districts: Northshore, Lake Washington, Bellevue, Issaquah, Snoqualmie Valley, Riverview). The criteria include the following: keen interest in the environment/nature; involvement in extra-curricular activities based on this interest; college plans; teacher or counselor recommendation. Applications are due by the end of March. The application can be found on our website here.
If you have questions, please contact Mary Britton-Simmons at marybs98272@gmail.com.
Photo of the Month
Gary Luhm and Jim Avery are the Latest Eastside Audubon Photographers of the Month
Gary Luhm and Jim Avery are the latest members of the Eastside Audubon Photography Group to be honored for their work.
Pied-billed Grebe by Gary Luhm
Gary Luhm, a long-time member of the group, was named Photographer of the Month in September for a series of Pied-billed Grebe photos shot from his kayak.
Luhm, an expert kayaker, has birded while paddling in environments as varied as Alaska and Baja, Mexico. The grebe images were shot on Union Bay in Seattle.
“All summer I'd been observing this Pied-billed Grebe family near Foster Island in Seattle, both by kayak and from shore,” he says. “This was the parents’ second successful brood, which at the time had three one-month-old chicks. I was parked close by in a kayak when I was alerted by the sound of begging chicks and then saw a parent approach with a catfish. A youngster grabbed it, had difficulty swallowing it, and several times the adult snatched the fish back, crushed the skull, and eventually broke its neck. All the while I stayed low by resting the camera lens on the kayak deck and shot short bursts of the action.”
Pied-billed Grebe by Gary Luhm
Gary’s love of bird photography started in the 1990s at about the same time he took up kayaking. “It started with trips to locations like Tongue Point, where the Harlequin Duck became my spark bird. I took up sea kayaking in 1992. In 2001, I started shooting with a 500 mm f/4 lens from a kayak. Together, the kayak and big lens confer a wonderful low-angle bokeh.”
To see more of Gary's work, including dozens of photos and kayak tips, go to his website at www.garyluhm.net
Photo details
All photos were shot on a Sony A7 IV camera with the following settings:
Lens 100-400 mm | 1/400 of a second at f/5.6 | ISO 1600
Pied-billed Grebe by Gary Luhm
Jim Avery, a new member of the Eastside Audubon Photography Group, was named Photographer of the Month for a series of photos of a Golden Crown Kinglet.
The shot was taken at Juanita Bay near the bottom of the hill sloping down from the parking lot at 98th and Forbes Creek.
Photo details
Shot on a Sony Alpha 1 camera with the following settings:
Lens 600 mm | 1/2000 of a second at f/8 | ISO 125
About the Eastside Audubon Photograph of the Month Award
The Photo of the Month award was instituted to recognize the work of the Photo Group Members. The group members meet monthly to show their latest photos and videos as well as share their knowledge of photography and wildlife. To attend the meetings, please join the group’s announcement list.
Register for the Christmas Bird Count
Register for the Christmas Bird Count, Saturday, December 17
Written by Andy McCormick
Registration for the 2022 Eastside Audubon CBC is open and there are still openings for volunteers to join on some CBC teams and feeder watching. Go to https://www.eastsideaudubon.org/christmas-bird-count to become a feeder watcher, join a field team, and join the Zoom celebration. We will have 15 field teams this year.
ACCEPTING VOLUNTEERS AGAIN
For the past two years under COVID-19 pandemic conditions, Eastside Audubon has conducted the Christmas Bird Count (CBC) with very small teams of one or two people. We were able to maintain continuity in our data collection, which was important, but we missed having full teams in the field. Now, we are resuming having more volunteers join birding teams for this year’s Christmas Bird Count Day on Saturday, December 17.
The CBC is the world’s largest and longest-running community science data collection project. The 2022-2023 count period from December 14 to January 5 marks the 123rd CBC sponsored by the National Audubon Society. It will be Eastside Audubon’s 39th CBC.
JOIN THE COUNT FOR FUN AND SCIENCE
The EAS CBC is an all-volunteer endeavor and we have three ways for you to participate. Our chapter has 15 teams being led by experienced birders who are accepting 3-5 volunteer participants. We also support at-home feeder watchers who count birds at their home feeder or other location within the 25-mile diameter circle centered on Beaver Lake in Sammamish. Everyone, whether birding or not, is invited to join the Zoom celebration after the count.
FOLLOWING COVID-19 PROTOCOL
Eastside Audubon wants to have more people involved in the CBC, but we also want to be careful to protect everyone from possible spikes in COVID-19 and flu infections. We will keep the field teams to 4-6 participants, and we will require wearing of masks while driving in a car for vaccinated people. We are going to postpone the after-count dinner for one more year and will host a Zoom celebration online.
Whether you participate by joining a field team, watching your feeder at home, or sharing in the experience of the day via Zoom, you can register for the event you want to join here. Registration closes on Dec. 10.
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper
Most sightings of this Eastern Hemisphere sandpiper in North America are of juveniles in fall migration. One such visitor spent more than two weeks on the mudflats on the Seattle side of the SR 520 bridge from September 22 to October 10, 2022, sparking a newspaper story and interest from birders and nonbirders.
End of Year Letter 2022
End of Year Letter 2022
By Lori Danielson
Dear Friend,
Red-breasted Nuthatch by Mick Thompson
My time as a member of Eastside Audubon has given me a new appreciation of the birds around us. I first joined to simply learn how to better identify them, but I've gained so much more. Birds amaze me with their beauty, their presence in our neighborhoods, parks and natural areas, the long migrations that some make twice a year, and their unique behaviors for finding food and raising young. Birds can teach us so much about the world and our impacts on the environment.
I've also come to realize that it's very important that we share our love of birds with as many other people as possible, whether it's with politicians in order to shape policy that will benefit birds and people, or with those who haven't had the opportunity to experience the joy of birds firsthand. That's why our chapter is starting the effort to make Eastside Audubon activities more welcoming and accessible to people who perhaps haven't previously thought of connecting with Audubon or learning about birds.
During the pandemic our Board worked with a National Audubon Society consultant to learn about implementing concepts of equity, diversity, inclusion and belonging to our organization. With that knowledge, we created an Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and Belonging Committee and Board chair position. Two high school students were added to the Board as youth members. To make our meetings more accessible we’re using closed captioning in our online meetings. We are reaching out to new followers with our new high school social media intern. We’ve partnered with the Snoqualmie Tribe and Youth in Focus to help folks learn about responsible recreation on public and tribal lands. And we hosted our first LGBQTIA+ birding trip at Marymoor Park. We’re planning on making our activities and events welcoming spaces where everyone belongs!
Mandarin Duck by Margaret Larkin
Eastside Audubon has been sharing our passion for birds for 42 years with our friends, neighbors, family, and community. We’re continuing our education programs with local schools, field trips, online classes and program night lectures. Our conservation and advocacy programs build broad support for actions to help bird populations recover and preserve the habitats they need to thrive.
We depend on your support, so please make your annual donation by the end of the year. In 2023 we’re focusing on bringing the joy of birding to all of Eastside Audubon’s empowering education programs, committed advocacy efforts, and expert on-the-ground conservation initiatives. We all belong together to learn about and protect birds and the places they need. Please join us!
With gratitude,
Lori Danielson
Board President
PS. Make a gift to Eastside Audubon before midnight on December 31st to be an advocate for birds. Visit eastsideaudubon.org/donate or mail your donation.
Northern Pintail
The Bird Gallery Has Been Updated
The Bird Gallery Has Been Updated
The Eastside Audubon Bird Gallery is a repository of 27 years of Bird of the Month columns written by Hugh Jennings and Andy McCormick. To date there are 206 articles and photos of your favorite birds from Washington sprinkled with a few from other places. We have updated the gallery by reorganizing the bird categories and included more photos from the EAS Photo Group.
The new gallery has been divided into 12 categories to help you find birds more easily. Birds are not in traditional taxonomic order but are grouped by the types of birds you might see together or by habitat. Here are the categories with the number of birds in each category in parentheses: Shorebirds (26), Birds of Prey (25), Hummingbirds and Doves (7), Grassland Birds (7), Woodpeckers and Jays (11), Finches (7), Sparrows (14), Seabirds and Gulls (23), Marsh Birds (15), Waterfowl (26), Woodland Birds (26), and Warblers and Flycatchers (19).
The Bird of the Month column has been a popular feature in the chapter’s monthly newsletter The Corvid Crier since 1995. Begun by Hugh Jennings, who wrote articles until early 2009, the regular column has been written since then by Andy McCormick. Both writers have had a good knowledge of birds and enjoy passing on their experience in an engaging manner with identification tips, natural history, and conservation information about each bird species. Almost all of the birds can be found in Washington, but occasionally a rare or newsworthy bird is featured.
The Bird Gallery will continue to grow as each Bird of the Month column is added to the collection. The gallery is available to anyone who visits the website here. Check it out and enjoy reading about the birds of our wonderful State of Washington.
Thanks to Hugh and Andy for their writing, Tyler Hartje for improving the website, Penelope Kipps and other previous editors of The Corvid Crier, and Amanda Leon, the chapter’s current Executive Director for keeping it all organized.