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Participate in the Global Great Backyard Bird Count this Sunday!

February 12, 2014 By Communications Team

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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Evening Grosbeak.   Photo by Jon Mularczyk .
Evening Grosbeak. Photo by Jon Mularczyk .

Children, teens and adults of all ages are invited to join us this Sunday February 16 at the Willistown Conservation Trust from 9-11am for our  annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC)!            Contact Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org) if you’re interested in participating.

The  Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s GBBC is a global, 4-day citizen science event during which people from all walks of life tally birds in order to help scientists discover important population patterns about birds.   Last year, GBBC participants in 111 countries counted over 33 million birds on close to 138,000 checklists, documenting some 4,200 species, which is more than one-third of the world’s species!!

Carolina Chickadee. Photo by Adrian Binns
Carolina Chickadee on suet. Photo by Adrian Binns

This participation represents an incredible effort that helps answer questions like: Where are the birds now?  How is climate change affecting populations? What are the patterns of irruptive bird species (those like winter finches that flood south in some years but not others based on food availability)? How is migration timing different from year to year?  How are diseases like House Finch Eye Disease or West Nile Virus affecting populations?

Carolina Wren.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Carolina Wren. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

For example,  one sad pattern scientists have discovered through GBBC data is that Carolina Wrens seem to disappear from northern checklists in cold winters like the one we are having now. These adorable little mouse-like birds are actually a more southern species whose range has expanded northward in the past decades because of our mild winters.  However, they do not migrate and so often perish during harsh winters; it can take up to 10 years for the population to return to the north after such cold-weather die-offs.  Keep those feeders filled if you notice one of these charming  brown “butterballs” in your yard, for they may not be as hardy as they look.

Winter.  Photo by Justin Thompson
Harsh Winter. Photo by Justin Thompson

GBBC participants enter their checklists online at gbbc.birdcount.org, which is a fantastic resource for learning more about the GBBC and birds in general.  Here you can watch a real-time map during the count (February 14-17) of checklists as they are submitted along with excellent photos of birds.  There’s a great interactive section where you can actually explore data compiled from past GBBCs, including year-to-year comparisons of ranges both within and between species.  It’s fun to play around with!

Contact Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org) if you’d like to attend our Great Backyard Bird Count this Sunday!

Carolina Chickadee and Downy Woodpecker.  Photo by Adrian Binns.
Carolina Chickadee and Downy Woodpecker. Photo by Adrian Binns.

This is an especially exciting GBBC with the crazy weather we’ve been having and the historic avian events such as the Snowy Owl irruption or “Snow Storm” as it’s now affectionately called.   Because of milder arctic weathers, the tundra rodent population boomed this past summer, creating a bumper crop of Snowies that have flooded south for overwintering territories.  Check out my recent blog post to learn more, or visit Project Snowstorm to learn about the incredible research underway to track these Snowy Owls with solar powered transmitters.

Besides a Snowy Owl, you also might be able to add a seldom-seen grebe to your GBBC checklist this year!  Grebes are handsome little loon-like birds that are highly specialized for diving; with their stubby legs set so far back on their bodies, they need large bodies of water to takeoff and are pretty much immobile on land.  Red-necked and Horned Grebes normally call the Great Lakes their winter home, but the icy polar vortexes that have been lurking in the Northeast this winter have caused massive freezing of the lakes, more than we’ve seen in decades.

Horned Grebe released from rehab after it crashed onto frozen ground in Central PA.  Photo by Alex Lamoreaux
Horned Grebe released from rehab after it crashed onto frozen ground in Central PA. Photo by Alex Lamoreaux.  Check out his article about the grebes on Nemesis Bird

The displaced Grebes are forced to move south toward the coast, hoping for large bodies of water along the way.  This is a dangerous journey with the frequent snow and ice storms that have been berating our region.  Many of these poor night travelers actually get iced over as they are flying and crash to the ground in sometimes fatal “wrecks”.  The lucky ones  land in a soft pile of snow or in a body of water, so birders should be on the lookout for these birds!  If you see one, report it to eBird  so that scientists can track this movement.  And if the bird needs help (like if it’s stranded in a parking lot or field) gently pick it up in a blanket, place it in a box and call Tri State Bird Research and Rescue!

Hope to see you this weekend!

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

Hermit Thrush.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Hermit Thrush. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: Carolina Wren, Great Backyard Bird Count, Horned Grebe, Snowy Owl, winter birding

Historic Snowy Owl Invasion Hits a Willistown Backyard

December 6, 2013 By Communications Team

Snowy Owl photographed by Dave Hucker 12-4-2013 on Whitehorse Rd., Malvern PA.
Snowy Owl photographed by Dave Hucker 12-4-2013 on Whitehorse Rd. in Berwyn, PA.
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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In today’s electronically connected world, breaking news gets disseminated at mind boggling speeds, emails are read and responded to immediately and even seemingly old fashioned hobbies like birding have evolved into sophisticated, tight-knit communities of very connected people exchanging information at lightening speeds.  Wednesday morning’s Snowy Owl on a rooftop in our own neighborhood of Berwyn was discovered by a single birder whose excitement spread like wild fire through the birding community of Chester County.  Emails were shot out and hasty calls were made to birding friends , breakfast was skipped, business meetings were delayed, birders called in sick to work for the morning, and even non-birders caught the sparks of excitement and wanted to see the “Harry Potter Owl”.

Within less than an hour of the sighting over eight local birders were on the scene gazing breathlessly through binoculars at this rare six and half pound visitor from the arctic tundra, the embodiment of a wild world  where life comes simply one day at a time, surroundings are austere and uncluttered and the only schedule to answer to is that of the polar sun.

The Snowy Owl was in the Willistown Conservation Trust’s program area, so we were proud to add it to our 2013 Species Seen List.  As this year comes to a close, feel free to report to us any bird species you see that are not already on our list! 

The southward invasion of these large white owls with five foot wingspans has only just begun for this winter and already reports have been popping up all over the state:  one in Berks County, one in Lancaster County, a few in Centre County, two in Lebanon County, five or so in Erie County at Presque Isle State park, one at the Philadelphia airport at the southern end of the Girard Point Bridge and then the one that showed up this week right here in Berwyn on Whitehorse road!  Most of these birds were sitting on top of roofs, on fence posts, on utility poles or just right on the ground in the middle of fields or dunes.  As the largest owl in North America and a denizen of the open tundra, the Snowy is quite conspicuous  and not accustomed to hiding anywhere.  So keep your eyes peeled!

Snowy Owl.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten.
Snowy Owl. Photo by Mike Rosengarten.

If you do happen to spot a Snowy Owl (and not just a white grocery bag way out in a field), you should immediately report it to eBird, which is amassing one of the largest biodiversity databases in the world and revolutionizing the way birders, ornithologists, educators, and conservationists distribute and share information about bird populations.  Reporting bird sightings is easy; just set up an account and you’re ready to report your incidental checklist.  With eBird, you can explore all kinds of data like range maps for specific species.  For example, if you wanted to discover all the locations near you where Snowy Owls have been sighted this winter so far, you would type the search terms into this map  http://ebird.org/ebird/map/ .

Click here to see an up-to-date sightings map of Snowy Owls in PA this winter. Zoom in with your mouse and click on the points for specific location information.  Also be sure to check the box on the right that says, “Show Points Sooner,” if you want to see actual points instead of purple blobs.  Zooming out will reveal that the Snowy Owls have also been appearing in southern Canadian Provinces,  New England, Delaware, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia and even one in Bermuda!  Newfoundland is seeing an astounding 150 Snowy Owls at once!

While you are chasing down these regal visitors and enjoying their beauty this winter, keep in mind that these owls flew an incredibly long distance from the arctic to get here.  The reason they are here is because a lack of food (primarily small rodents called lemmings) up north drove them to migrate south.  The theory behind the invasion is that the lemming population was actually booming this summer and consequently the owls had many young.  Once this surplus of hungry owlets becomes a surplus of huge adult owls at the end of the breeding season, lemmings become scarce again and the owls (many hatch years) are forced south for food.  We have no way of knowing if the owls we are happily viewing are starving to death, which is a very real possibility as some of the young typically do not survive their first winter.  Therefore, it is of utmost importance that birders enjoy these birds from a distance so as not to disturb them and cause them to fly off, expending extra vital energy they are trying to conserve.

An invasion like this occurred in 2011, but the brunt of it was in the Pacific Northwest and Great Plains.   The Northeast U.S. and Atlantic Coast did not see the numbers then that they are seeing this winter, presumably because this year’s owls originate from the Eastern Arctic and Greenland rather than the central or western Arctic as in 2011.  Read more about this year’s and 2011’s invasion in the eBird article here.

Snowy Owl males are almost all white, while juvenile females have heavy dark barring all over.  Adult females and juvenile males fall somewhere in between  in terms of amount of black bars on their plumage.

Check out these website articles to see more photos and learn more about the Snowy Owl and this year’s invasion (also known as an irruption):

Stokes Birding Blog

GoErie.com (this one also has a video link of one of the Snowy Owls in Erie)

Nemesisbird.com  (for the 2013-14 Snowy Owl Irruption Watch)

wctbirds.com (an article I wrote in February 2012 about my first Snowy Owl experience)

And for all of you out there who have experienced the gut-wrenching, sinking feeling in your stomach when you realized that that heart-racing, big white owl-ish looking thing in the middle of the field was just a grocery bag, there’s even a website for you to report your stories of defeat and photos of things you thought were Snowy Owls.  It’s pretty funny.  Check it out here :  “That’s Not a Snowy Owl”. 

Snowy Owl??? Nope.  Just a Snow Man.  Photo by Justin Thompson
Snowy Owl??? Nope. Just a Snow Man. Photo by Justin Thompson

A fellow PA birder reminded me that Snowy Owls are a great species for getting people hooked on birding, especially children!  Here are a bunch of links of fantastic Snowy Owl resources that he suggested for kids (and kids at heart!):

National Wildlife Federation Kids   (Ranger Rick pages)

Oopik:  The Travels of  Snowy Owl (Children’s Book)

Review of Snowy Owls:  WHooo Are They?  (Children’s Book)

National Geographic Kids (Creature Feature)

Nature: Magic of the Snowy Owl (DVD.  You can also watch online at PBS Nature)

 Look for Snowy Owls and Ducks at the Willistown Conservation Trust’s second annual Duck Hunt

(with binoculars and scopes)

tomorrow December 7, from 8-11am.  Still Spots Left!

Hooded Merganser pair.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Hooded Merganser pair. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

Contact me if interested (Blake Goll, bhg@wctrust.org).  We will meet at the Rushton Farm Parking lot on Delchester Road and then drive around Willistown touring the ponds and lakes for migrant waterfowl like the Hooded Mergansers pictured above,  and of course Snowy Owls!  You never know what surprises a morning of birding may bring.

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

Snowy Owl photographed by Dave Hucker 12-4-2013 on Whitehorse Rd.
Snowy Owl photographed by Dave Hucker 12-4-2013 on Whitehorse Rd., Berwyn PA.

Filed Under: Bird Events, Owls Tagged With: birding, duck hunt, Snowy Owl, snowy owl 2013 invasion, Willistown Conservation Trust

Willistown Winter Family Bird Walk Tomorrow Morning

January 27, 2012 By Communications Team

Please join us tomorrow morning (January 28) from 8- 11am at Rushton Woods Preserve for some wonderful winter birding!   Adults and children of all ages welcome!

 Participants will get a chance to bird the rugged trails of the beautiful Rushton Woods Preserve as well as other private trails through pastoral scenes of Willistown not normally accessible to the public.

Dick Eales with Northern flicker
Dick Eales with newly banded Northern flicker just before release.

The walk will be led by the dynamic Dick Eales, our valued board member and head of our new Bird Conservation Committee, whose favorite past time is traveling the world on birding expeditions.  We already have quite a few people signed up, including expert birders , beginner birders and the ‘I-don’t-know-what-a-birder-is’ birders, but the more the merrier!  There is still time to sign up for this pleasant day of birding camaraderie; just email Lisa Kiziuk (lkr@wctrust.org).

We just visited the preserve this morning, and the place was teeming with birds and  MUD.  Please remember to bring your binoculars and boots!  There will be coffee and refreshments available in the farmshed after the walk.

Screech owl. Copyright Laura Erickson
Screech owl. Copyright Laura Erickson

Hope to see you in the field tomorrow! You never know what wonders winter birding may bring…

~Blake

P.S.  There may be a crooked caravan of Snowy Owl enthusiasts leaving straight from the walk at 11am and heading to Shippensburg to see the Cumberland County Snowy Owl, which has been spotted in a corn field there for the past month.  On the way, we might check out the Prairie Falcon, a large falcon of the arid American West, and Townsend’s Warbler, a Pacific Northwest breeder, both of which have also been hanging out in Cumberland County.  Anyone kooky enough is welcome to tag along  to round up these rarities!

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: birding, Cumberland County, Prairie Falcon, Snowy Owl, Townsend's Warbler, Willistown Conservation Trust

Another Chance to See a Snowy Owl!

January 13, 2012 By Communications Team

Snowy Owl painting by  Wesley Younie
Snowy Owl painting by Wesley Younie

Hi Folks!

Just a quick, timely update on the status of the Snowy Owls  I spoke of in previous posts…   According to the PA Birding List, there has been a Snowy reported in Cumberland County at Mud Level/Duncan Road at 10:45 this morning.  This bird was originally reported in the same area earlier this week, so it seems he/she is sticking around.

The following is the map location, taken from The Penna Birding report.

http://maps.google.com/?ll=40.101218,-77.492967&spn=0.01359,0.031457&t=m&z=1
5&vpsrc=6

The location is North of  Shippensburg but East of Pleasant Hall in Cumberland Cty, PA.  Google says it’s about 2 and 1/2 hours and 126 miles from here.

If you go this holiday weekend, good luck and remember to respect the bird’s personal space!   Maybe I’ll see you in the field as we triumphantly check off  ‘Snowy Owl’ on our life lists and perhaps shed tears of joy together while gazing upon the haunting beauty of this wonderful white wonder.  One can dream!
Snowy Owl from Cornell Lab of Ornithology "All About Birds" website.
Snowy Owl from Cornell Lab of Ornithology "All About Birds" website.
Watch this brief, lovely documentary from Cornell  about the 2011/2012 Snowy Owl invasion of which we are in the midst.
Purple Martin babies
Purple Martin babies at Willisbrook Preserve (Summer 2011) by Blake Goll.
Happy Purple Martin Day…er… I mean Martin Luther King Day!
~Blake
P.S.  Be sure to check out our new “Which Birds Are Here?”  list on the Willistown Conservation Trust’s website.  This is not only a forum for people, like you, to talk about birds they’ve seen, but also a resource for reporting and viewing bird species sighted in the Willistown area so far this year.  Help us keep track of the birds that are enjoying the beautiful land we’ve preserved!
American Kestrel by Adrian Binns
American Kestrel by Adrian Binns

Filed Under: Owls Tagged With: American Kestrel, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Owl art, Purple Martin, Snowy Owl, Willistown Conservation Trust

A Little Inspiration and Hope for the New Year

December 28, 2011 By Communications Team

Kirkwood susnet by Pete Kennedy
Kirkwood sunset by Pete Kennedy

The inspiration: This lovely video from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, capturing the joy of birds and the natural world.  I hope you are as touched by it as I was!

Lady White-breasted Nuthatch
Lady White-breasted Nuthatch by Blake Goll

And the hope:  Seeing a Snowy Owl this winter!  Believe it or not, one of these winter ghosts showed up right here in Chester County, in Spring City, several days ago.  The owl was spotted hanging around the PJAX Freight Service Building for a few days, the last sighting being Dec 24th before she apparently moved on.  Click here to see a Centre County observer’s wonderful photos of the magnificent bird, including one of it coughing up a pellet!

Snowy Owl image © 2005 Michael McDowell
Snowy Owl image © 2005 Michael McDowell

If your dream is to see one of these mythical Harry Potter creatures, then this is the year to go for it!  I suggest checking this birdingonthe.net website frequently to stay informed of any new Snowy Owl sightings near you.  This website lists all recent postings from the Pennsylvania Birding List, which is an authoritative email listserv used by many birders across the state.

Want more white? Click here to read an informative article in the Bangor Daily News about Snowy Owls, Snowy Owl invasions, and what to do (or not to do) if you spot one.

Happy New Year, and keep hoping for that Snow!

~Blake

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Owls Tagged With: Cardinal, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Nuthatch, Snowy Owl

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