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Rushton Migration Update

May 15, 2013 By Communications Team

Kentucky Warbler by Cory DeStein
Kentucky Warbler.  Photo by Cory DeStein
WAIT! If you’re a subscriber reading this in email format, before reading any further, please click on the title of the post right above in order to view the blog in the glory it was meant to have on the actual blog website.

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Tonight while you lay in bed before falling into the arms of Morpheus, picture an unrelenting stream of thousands of tiny wings beating feverishly in the moonlight, flowing steadily northward with thousands of wild eyes and hearts set on the stars and mysterious Earth forces to which we could only dream of being attuned.  Migration is now on, full speed ahead, and our nets are finally averaging 40 birds a day as of this week, which is much more satisfying than the 10-bird days we were having previously this spring.  Better come see the rainbow before it disappears!

Rose-breasted Grosbeak.  Photo by Dustin Welch.
Rose-breasted Grosbeak. Photo by Dustin Welch.

Banding Schedule

Our last bird banding days for this spring are tomorrow May 16, Saturday May 18 and next Tuesday May 21.  Visit anytime between the hours of 6am and 11am.  Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm is located just across the street from 912 Delchester Road in Newtown Square, PA.

Before you come, check out this cool Birdcast website for the regional migration forecast.  It uses new computer models to determine real-time migration intensity in our area and where fallouts are possible on any given day during migration.

Common Yellowthroat before release.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Female Common Yellowthroat before release. Photo by Blake Goll.

Family Day Open House This Saturday May 18

This Saturday, May 18, is the annual Spring Songbird Migration- Banding Open House at Rushton.  Adults, kids and families welcome!  The bird banding station will be operating from 6am until 11am.  You are welcome to come and go as you please to observe banding within that time frame, but we usually catch the biggest variety and number of birds earlier in the morning, as this is the time when the birds are flitting around the hedgerows refueling from their previous night’s journey.
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From 9-11am, there will be several learning stations for PA Young Birders  (kids around the ages of 7-12 years):
  • Bird banding- Observe and learn about the premier scientific process for studying bird populations.
  • Insect Exploration- Catch and identify bugs with nets, bug boxes and field guides.
  • Bird Art – Draw birds with colored pencils and learn artistic techniques.
  • Birding- Bring your own binoculars if you have them, but some will be available to borrow.  Learn from experienced birders!
  • Beauty in the Brambles- Discover the importance of shrub habitat for baby birds, see our demonstration shrub habitat, and create shrub leaf prints to take home!
Wear sturdy hiking shoes or sneakers and layers as it may start out chilly.  Watch your email as this event will be cancelled in the event of rain.  Bring binoculars if you have them.  Invite your friends!
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If you plan to bring Young Birders from 9-11am  please email me, Blake Goll, at bhg@wctrust.org to let me know you’re coming. This event has been hugely popular in past years, but there is no limited capacity of attendees.
No need to RSVP if you’re stopping by before 9am.  Early bird special!
NOTE:  This event will be cancelled if it rains.
Black-and-white Warbler being released by a child.  Photo by Blake Goll

DSCN0376

Willistown Conservation Trust’s Youth Birding Program Honored By Delaware Valley Ornithological Club (DVOC)

Great news!  This spring, we were awarded the annual Conservation Fund by DVOC, one of the oldest and most prestigious birding clubs in the nation.  Most of these funds are raised as part of DVOC’s participation in NJ Audubon’s World Series of Birding, but other donations towards this award come from people like YOU who care about building the next generation of conservationists by getting youth outside learning about birds, science and nature.  Please consider contributing to the Trust’s life-changing youth educational programs by clicking here for DVOC’s  Conservation Fund donation form.  Every little bit helps us connect more kids to nature.

Win Schafer banding a Black-and-white Warbler for school group.
Win Schafer banding a Black-and-white Warbler for school group. Photo by Blake Goll

Rushton Spring Migration at a Glance

The number of birds we are banding is just now starting to catch up to the number of young students we have been serving this spring!  School groups who have come to learn about the science of bird banding, see our feathered beauties up close and understand the importance of land conservation have included: Agnes Irwin 2nd grade, Goshen Friends Elementary, Saint James School of Philadelphia, Westtown-Thornbury 2nd grade,  Westtown 1st grade, and Harriton High School.

Ageing a Common Yellowthroat by primary covert feathers.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Ageing a Common Yellowthroat by primary covert feathers. Photo by Blake Goll.
High School intern with Tufted Titmouse before release.  Photo by Blake Goll.
High School intern with Tufted Titmouse before release. Photo by Blake Goll.

As for birds, this week we were thrilled to have spectacular Magnolia Warblers, Canada Warblers, Black-and-white Warblers, a breeding Yellow Warbler, and Wood Thrush  join our bread and butter catch of Song Sparrow, Gray Catbirds, White-throated Sparrows, Veery,  Common Yellowthroats, Ovenbirds and House Wrens.

Other banding highlights so far these past few weeks have included a Prairie Warbler, a White-eyed Vireo, a couple of Hermit Thrush, generous servings of Field and Swamp Sparrows, Eastern Towhee and a few Yellow-rumped Warblers.

The here-to-stay Indigo Buntings’ bright emphatic songs and Orchard and Baltimore Orioles’ flamboyant whistles monopolize the air at Rushton now so that we must strain our ears to hear the songs of the other migrants including Northern Parula, Black-throated Green Warblers, Kentucky Warbler, Blue-gray Gnatcatchers, Blue-winged warblers, Red-eyed Vireos, Warbling Vireos, Swainson’s Thrush and even a Prothonotary Warbler deep in the riparian woodland.  However, all of these tricky songsters have evaded our nets so far this season.

Prothonotary Warbler.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten.
Prothonotary Warbler. Photo by Mike Rosengarten.

I’ll let these pictures do the rest of the talking so I can start thinking about heading to bed.  The 4:30am rise time comes awfully soon, even for us banders who live for the spellbinding migratory procession of moonlit wings and golden feathers…It’s the stuff of dreams.

Prairie Warbler preening.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Prairie Warbler preening. Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Female Black-throated Blue Warbler.  Photo by Mimi Davis.
Female Black-throated Blue Warbler. Photo by Mimi Davis.
Saint James student with White-eyed Vireo.  Photo by Nat Hamilton
Saint James student with White-eyed Vireo. Photo by Nat Hamilton
Saint James students observe Northern Cardinal.  Photo by Nat Hamilton
Saint James students observe Northern Cardinal. Photo by Nat Hamilton
Veery being released.  Photo by Nat Hamilton.
Veery being released. Photo by Nat Hamilton.
Field Sparrow.  Photo by Justin Thompson
Field Sparrow. Photo by Justin Thompson
Child overcoming her fears to touch a Veery.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Child overcoming her fears to touch a Veery. Photo by Blake Goll.
Child sold on birds and conservation!  Photo by Blake Goll.
Child sold on birds and conservation! Photo by Blake Goll.
Adult male Magnolia Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Adult male Magnolia Warbler. Photo by Blake Goll.
Female Yellow Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll
Female Yellow Warbler. Photo by Blake Goll
Baltimore oriole.  Photo by Dustin Welch
Baltimore oriole. Photo by Dustin Welch
Spring beauty.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Spring beauty. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

Saint James students with Box Turtle shell in Rushton woods.  Photo by Kelsey Lingle.
Saint James students with Box Turtle shell in Rushton woods. Photo by Kelsey Lingle.

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: Baltimore Oriole, Bird banding, DVOC, warblers

Celebrate International Migratory Bird Day at John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge Tomorrow, May 11!

May 10, 2013 By Communications Team

Snowy Egret.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten.
Snowy Egret. Photo by Mike Rosengarten.

Join John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge friends and supporters on Saturday, May 11, 2013, to celebrate INTERNATIONAL MIGRATORY BIRD DAY! Activities highlight the spectacle of bird migration and the life cycles that guide our feathered friends across multiple countries, diverse habitats, and perilous migratory journeys.

Guided Bird Walks start at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 and 10:00 am, respectively.  A Wildlife Photography Walk and a Trail Tamers Volunteer Service start at 9:00 am.  A Spring Blooms Plant Walk begins at 1:00 pm.  All events are FREE.  Meet at Heinz Refuge Visitors Center in Philadelphia.  Walks last 2-3 hours. Bring binoculars, water bottles and work gloves, as appropriate.
Happy Birding!
Blake

 

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: International Migratory Bird Day, Snowy Egret

Don’t Miss Our BEAUTY IN THE BRAMBLES Workshops, Starting this Week!

April 23, 2013 By Communications Team

Whether you live in Willistown or nearby townships, there is much to learn about those hard-to-explain shrub habitats.  Discover the beauty in the brambles at one of our upcoming workshops:

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events

They’re Back….

April 12, 2013 By Communications Team

Magnolia Warbler.  Photo by Justin Thompson.
Magnolia Warbler. Photo by Justin Thompson.

Spring Songbird Banding at Rushton Woods Preserve Begins Tuesday April 16!!

Stay tuned…  LOTS more information to follow about banding and more!

And in the meantime, if you’re cooking up something to do for next Friday April 19, look no further.  Celebrate sustainable agriculture (which is good for you and the birds) at our Victory for Veggies event.  Victory Brewing Company will be there…will you?

Click on this link for more info and to register.  Hope to see you there!

~Blake

Emailable-Victory-for-Veggies-Flyer_700 (2)

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events

Valentine’s Day Fun: What Men Can Learn from Avian Romance

February 14, 2013 By Communications Team

Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)
Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)

The natural world is filled with romance, beauty and enchantment, and every day seems to be Valentine’s Day outside if you look around.  This time of year, in particular, the male waterfowl are beginning to perform their elaborate courtship displays on ponds and lakes in our area, as the handsome Hooded Merganser, pictured above, is doing.  Do you see any resemblance in his hairdo to heart throb Elvis Presley’s famous hair?  Guys, Elvis and mergansers may be on to something…Lesson # 1: A voluminous hairdo is sure to elicit female swooning.

Geese and swans are the ultimate romantics, with most pairs mating for life.  Dabbling ducks, like mallards, and diving ducks, like mergansers, are generally more promiscuous and consequently have a wider variety of male displays.  No matter their marital status though, all ducks and geese, like many other birds, spend a lot of energy on performing wonderfully ritualized mating displays to impress the females.  This is lesson # 2, guys: Put effort into impressing your woman every day!

Don’t get complacent about attracting her, even if you are already married or have been together for decades.  This could involve  you getting back into using that gym membership that keeps shamefully showing up on your billing statement each month, buying her flowers for no reason or some other grand display of affection.  If you’re having trouble thinking up something that will ‘wow’ her, take notes from this male Red-capped Manakin.  Borrowing some of his moves is sure to put the steam back into your relationship!

Youtube video of moonwalking Red-capped Manakin

Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com
Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com

If that’s a little too flamboyant for your style, observe the suave Emperor Penguin’s quiet, deeply romantic courtship ritual in the  “March of the Penguins” (a great date night movie!).  This is lesson # 3, guys:   Make time for and ritualize those intimate moments of romance.  

Emperor Penguins
Emperor Penguins

Jane Austen depicted this provocative avian display in the following love poem.  To spice things up, try reading this to your mate this Valentine’s Day over a glass of wine with Barry Manilow playing softly in the background:

“The Penguin” by Jane Austen

With a single indecorous groan

a glacier calves an iceberg the size

of a cathedral into the christening sea.

Along the icefoot, ritual courtship

flurries the frigid air into squawks

and plumage, the shuffled chase

that observers, stomping their feet for warmth,

call dance.  And after?

After a belle’s dance card filled twice over

and a wallflower wilted with watching

territory staked step by measured step,

and the pecking order of kisses?

After the final bow,

after swallow-tailed males swooped

over the shimmer, the shiver

of jewel-and-sweat-scaled females?

Up from the bed of lost feathers, 

the mating for life.  Under a sky

literate with M’s, littered

with scavengers’ winged W’s,

two months stand still on the ice for him,

egg cradled on his melting feet.

For her the miles to retreating sea

to feed, then the longer walk back.

O cotillions and calling cards,

clergy waddling in wedding vestments,

marriage of property to title, awaiting issue,

how roughly do you compare?

Lesson #4 can also be gained from the male Emperor Penguin:  Be sure to hold up your end of the parenting deal and then some! Check this out: clip from BBC’s “Planet Earth”.   A male Emperor Penguin may incubate the egg for up to two frigid months while the female travels hundreds of miles to sea to feed.  He loses up to half of his body weight while guarding the egg and fasting all winter, patiently awaiting her return in howling winds that can reach 120 mph.  How’s that for parental dedication?  Next time your wife asks to go on a vacation for two months while you watch the kids, remember the selflessness of the emperors and say yes!

Lesson # 5:  Let go of your inhibitions and macho inclinations and dance with her!  What woman doesn’t enjoy dancing with her man?  Take ballroom dance lessons with her if you’re unsure and need more confidence before stepping out onto the floor.  For a little avian inspiration,  watch this video from BBC’s “Life” of Western Grebes performing their beautiful courtship ballet.  If that doesn’t make you want to dance, I don’t know what will!

Clark's Grebe by Bob Dyer
Clark’s Grebe by Bob Dyer

And did you catch the other lesson in that video clip?  Shower her with fish!  Er, I mean gifts.  It’s probably not a good idea to shower her with raw fish unless she likes sushi.  Otherwise, surprise her every now and then with little gifts that make her feel special (Lesson # 6!).

I hope everyone has a wonderful Valentine’s Day filled with love and birds!

And don’t forget to show how much you care about birds and their conservation by participating in the 16th annual Great Backyard Bird Count this weekend!  Visit the website to register and for more information.  All that is required of you is that you identify and count birds for at least 15 minutes anytime from Feb 15-18 and enter your results online. 

Have fun!

~Blake

P.S.  Since Valentine’s Day is about love and all things precious,  be sure to read George Armistead’s excellent article about the top ten cutest birds in North America on the ABA blog! It’s sure to brighten your day.

Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)
Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)

 

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: ABA, Emperor Penguin, Great Backyard Bird Count, Hooded Merganser, Red-capped manakin, Valentine's Day, Western Grebe

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