WILLISTOWN CONSERVATION TRUST

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
DONATE
  • About
    • HOW WE WORK
    • WHERE WE WORK
    • OUR STAFF AND TRUSTEES
    • JOBS & INTERNSHIPS
    • VOLUNTEER
    • RUSHTON CONSERVATION CENTER
    • STRATEGIC PLAN
    • DIVERSITY, EQUITY & INCLUSION STATEMENT
    • FAQs
  • LATEST
    • BLOG
    • IN THE NEWS
    • PUBLICATIONS
    • PHOTOS
  • PROGRAMS
    • BIRD CONSERVATION
    • COMMUNITY FARM
    • EDUCATION
    • LAND PROTECTION
    • STEWARDSHIP
    • WATERSHED PROTECTION
  • NATURE PRESERVES
    • ASHBRIDGE PRESERVE
    • HARTMAN MEADOW
    • KESTREL HILL PRESERVE
    • KIRKWOOD PRESERVE
    • RUSHTON WOODS PRESERVE
  • EVENTS
    • EVENT CALENDAR
    • BARNS & BBQ
    • RUN-A-MUCK
    • WILDFLOWER WEEK
    • ECOCENTRIC EXPERIENCE
    • RUSHTON NATURE KEEPERS (RNK)
    • ACCESS Program
  • Support
    • WAYS TO GIVE
    • SPONSOR THE TRUST
    • CORPORATE PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM
    • JOIN THE SYCAMORE SOCIETY
    • LEGACY SOCIETY & PLANNED GIVING
    • DELCO Gives 2025
  • CAMPAIGN FOR KESTREL HILL PRESERVE

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.

______________________________________________________

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.
____________________________________________________________
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!
____________________________________________________________
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

Warblers, Thrushes, and Orioles, Oh My!

May 4, 2012 By Communications Team

 

Black and white warbler.  By Brianna Brigham
Black and White Warbler. Photo by Brianna Brigham

We were rained out of the banding station every day this week until Thursday, but it was worth the wait.  The past two mornings were chilly, foggy and gray, but the nets were hot, the woods and fields were alive with song, and the catch was colorful!

Here’s a quick  list of highlights and new (for the year) species banded this week:

  • 34 birds banded on Thursday, including 8 recaptures
  • 51 birds banded today, including 6 recaptures
  • Veery
  • Wood Thrush
  • Ovenbird
  • Indigo Bunting
  • Baltimore Oriole
  • Magnolia Warbler
  • Black and White Warbler
  • Common Yellowthroat
  • Chestnut-Sided Warbler
  • Black-throated Blue Warbler
  • Swamp Sparrow
  • Ruby-throated Hummingbird (not banded)
  • Willow Flycatcher
  • One net was closed for the season (to be relocated next week) because of proximity to an active fox den !
  • We placed 3 more bluebird boxes at Rushton!
  • We heard Scarlet Tanagers, Blackpoll Warbler, Black-throated Green Warbler and American Redstarts (all of which evaded the nets)
Male Chestnut sided warbler. Photo by Blake Goll
Male Chestnut sided warbler. Photo by Blake Goll
Second Year Male Common Yellowthroat.  Photo by Blake Goll
Second Year Male Common Yellowthroat. Photo by Blake Goll
Indigo bunting.  Photo by Blake Goll
Indigo bunting. Photo by Blake Goll
Young (both Second Year) Veery wing comparison.  Photo by Blake Goll
Young (both Second Year) Veery wing comparison. Photo by Blake Goll
Wood Thrush.  Photo by Blake Goll
Wood Thrush. Photo by Blake Goll
Willow Flycatcher.  Photo by Blake Goll
Willow Flycatcher. Photo by Blake Goll

Hope to see you at Rushton next week!  We will band as usual on Tuesday and Thursday morning, sunrise until 11am,  unless it rains.

~Blake

7th grader with Magnolia Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll
7th grader with Magnolia Warbler. Photo by Blake Goll

 

Filed Under: Bird Banding Tagged With: Bird banding, Rushton Woods Preserve, warblers, Willistown Conservation Trust, wood thrush

Spring has Sprung…And So Have Our Mist Nets

April 3, 2012 By Communications Team

Eastern Meadowlark by Alan Murphy
Eastern Meadowlark by Alan Murphy

That lovely green mist of ephemeral spring beauty has officially invigorated the land and awakened Mother Nature from her brief winter’s nap.  You know what that means…bird banders are also emerging from their winter hibernacula and eagerly throwing up their own mist in the woods.

Bloodroot from flowerinfo.org
Bloodroot from flowerinfo.org

Public bird banding sessions at Rushton Woods Preserve will begin next Tuesday, April 17, and we can’t wait!! 

We will be bird banding every Tuesday and Thursday this spring at Rushton Woods Preserve, weather permitting.  If it rains, we do not band in an effort to keep the birds safe.  Please feel free to come out any of those mornings to observe.  We start at sunrise, 6:30am, and take the nets down around 11 am.  Large groups should contact Lisa Kiziuk, (lkr@wctrust.org) for an appointment.  Anyone interested in becoming a regular volunteer should also contact Lisa Kiziuk.

Pine Warbler by Louis Agassiz Fuertes
Pine Warbler by Louis Agassiz Fuertes

This Spring is shaping up to be one for the records!  Red-winged blackbirds have already been back for over a month now, and (relatively) short-distance migrants like Eastern Phoebes, Chipping Sparrows, Eastern Towhees, Pine Warblers, Tree Swallows, Field Sparrows, Eastern Meadowlarks,  and Ruby-crowned Kinglets have been spotted earlier than usual  setting up shop or passing through (in the Ruby-crown’s case).   Some other interesting Chester County sightings this spring have included  Pine Siskin, Palm Warbler, and Wilson’s Snipe.  Dark-eyed Juncos and a few White-throated sparrows are still passing through.  Waterfowl peak migration has passed, but you still might be able to catch a glimpse of some stragglers; sightings on ponds in the area included Green-winged Teal, Northern Pintail, Ring-necked Duck, Hooded Mergansers and Common Mergansers.  Wood Ducks will enter the stage soon and begin nesting.

Ring necked Duck by Shawn Collins (PA Birders)
Ring necked Ducks by Shawn Collins (PA Birders)
Wood Duck looking for nest cavity.  Photo by Peter Quinn
Wood Duck pair looking for nest cavity. Photo by Peter Quinn

Look for the long-distance migrating songbirds (coming from Central and South America) to start showing up this month  including Baltimore Oriole,  Gray Catbird, Indigo Bunting,  Scarlet Tanager, Wood Thrush,  Ruby-throated Hummingbird, Ovenbird, Louisiana Waterthrush and the other wood warblers!  The warblers are my favorite, especially in spring, when they are in their finest plumage and lighting up the forest with their vibrant colors and songs.  However, warbler-ing can be overwhelming and therefore less enjoyable if you are not confident with your warbler identification skills.

Whether you are a novice or expert birder, I urge you to watch this youtube video, “Birding Warblers“.   It takes you on an exciting birding trip with Cornell experts to a woodlot in Rochester, New York at the peak of warbler migration and offers great birding tips and techniques.  Plus, you get a sneak peak at what is coming soon to a banding station near you. .. As far as I’m concerned, these amazing little warblers are our own birds of paradise, to be treasured and enjoyed right here in our own backyard.  I’m grateful I live in the Eastern U.S. rather than the West, which has far fewer warblers than we do!  (Click here, if you want to know why).

Palm Warbler by Gerrit Vyn (Cornell Lab of Ornithology, All About Birds)
Palm Warbler by Gerrit Vyn (Cornell Lab of Ornithology, All About Birds)

If you’d like to brush up on your warbler songs and ID for this spring, Cornell’s Macauley Library, the world’s largest archive of animal sounds,  is a great resource that offers downloadable audio guides and hundreds of free sound recordings and video clips.  The “All About Birds” website has another great warbler resource.   Spring is a great time to get to know these birds in all their glory.

Ruby-throated Hummingbird by Terry Sohl
Ruby-throated Hummingbird by Terry Sohl

Speaking of glorious birds and early migration this year, I have hung my hummingbird feeders already, just in case! There have actually been reports of Ruby-throated Hummingbirds in Pennsylvania already starting on March 19th, which is almost a month earlier than the first hummer sighting last year.  Check it out on the hummingbird tracker map, another great resource.

Trout Lily
Trout Lily

This year’s early spring has generated much discussion amongst the birding/ornithological community and could spell disaster for long-distance migrants, in particular, who are the last to know that spring is early up here in Pennsylvania.  The following is an excerpt on this topic from a “PA-Birds” listing last month by Scott Weidensaul, natural history writer, hummer and owl bander extraordinaire:

“The unusual weather, and unusually early migration, raise some interesting points about migrants and climate change that Drew and a few others have touched on.

  Phenology is the study of timing in nature, and there’s an extraordinary data set of weather and nature observations stretching back almost 90 years at the Mohonk Preserve in southeastern New York – the longest-running such data set in the country.

  In addition to keeping track of first bloom dates for flowers, leaf-out dates for trees and the like, they also tracked first arrival dates for birds – and it’s clear from an analysis of the Mohonk phenology is that birds are responding to climate change in different ways. Short- and medium-distance migrants like eastern towhees and eastern phoebes, for example, are arriving weeks earlier than they did in the early 20th century – just as wildflowers are blooming weeks earlier today than in the past (hepatica by 20 days, bloodroot by 13). Some species have simply stopped migrating in the region entirely, and are now year-round residents.

  However, the arrival dates for long-distance migrants like scarlet tanagers and black-throated green warblers have not changed significantly at all in the past 90 years. The difference probably lies in what triggers the migration in both groups of birds. Short- and medium-distance migrants primarily winter in the southern U.S. or Mexico; they travel north in short stages, each flight triggered by good weather and wind directions – like the strong, persistent southerly winds blowing up the center of the continent the past two weeks.

  Long-distance migrants coming from Central America, South America or the Caribbean, on the other hand, tend to fly in much longer, nonstop flights, and their departure is obviously not based on local weather conditions up here – a scarlet tanager in Colombia has no way of knowing it’s an early spring in Pennsylvania. They depart based on internal circadian rhythms and subtle changes in the daily photoperiod.

  Once they come north, of course, warm southerly winds will speed their movement north across North America, just as persistent cold, northerly winds will retard it. Ruby-throated hummers, for example, usually arrive in the Gulf region the first two weeks of March – and this year, many are hopping on the south wind train and being sped north far, far sooner than is normal.

  There is a real risk for bird riding the flow north so soon, of course, if the weather turns cold. But there’s also a serious risk for those species that can’t easily respond to the changing climate, like all those long-distance migrants. They are supposed to arrive early enough in spring to pair up, nest and hatch babies just as the early June explosion of soft-bodied insects (read: caterpillars) reaches its peak. With the leaves coming out weeks early, they may miss it. That’s already happening with trans-Saharan migrants in Europe, and with catastrophic consequences. Some species, like pied flycatchers, have seen a 90 percent population collapse in the last few years because their unchanging migration timetable means they’re now  disconnected from their food supply.” (Scott Weidensaul in PA Birds)

Yikes!  I hope those long-distance migrants can evolve new timetables faster than we think or adapt to different food sources.

Bluebird eggs
Bluebird eggs

On a more uplifting note, I have noticed that the early spring is benefiting Eastern Bluebirds in my backyard.  I have had a female sitting on 4 eggs for the past several days without having to worry about competition from the House Wrens, who have not yet returned from their southern sojourn.  Last year, by the time my bluebird pair was ready to set up house, Mr. Wren had already started a nest in both of my bluebird boxes!  He starts a stick nest in every cavity in his neighborhood to maximize the female’s options.  She then chooses one and “re-arranges the furniture”  and puts the finishing touches on the nest.  Then the male fiercely (and selfishly) defends all cavities in the area, which would have excluded the bluebirds last year.

House Wren at nest box by Adrian Binns
House Wren at nest box. Photo by Adrian Binns.

The Willistown Conservation Trust is reinvigorating the nestbox program to provide more vital homes for cavity-nesting birds in our program area.  This spring, we are focusing on bluebirds and have added 30 new boxes on our preserves: Ashbridge, Rushton, and Kirkwood.  We are monitoring the boxes weekly throughout the breeding season to determine nesting success.

Please contact me (bhg@wctrust.org) if interested in helping out! It’s a great way to get outside to enjoy nature, contribute to conservation, and see into the lives of these beautiful birds.  It’s also an opportunity to get involved with citizen science as all of our monitoring data gets submitted to The Bluebird Society of PA.  A big thanks to Ken Leister who gave an impassioned presentation about bluebirds last month here at the Trust and has donated his time and energy to building our 30 new bluebird boxes.  For those of you who didn’t get a chance to attend his fantastic lecture, I will do a bluebird blog in the future summarizing it, so stay tuned!  My favorite quote of his was,

“The more you learn about nature, the more complicated it becomes.”

Virginia Bluebells
Virginia Bluebells by Blake Goll

Winter and Early Spring Memories from WCT

The PA Young Birders met in November to learn about cavity-nesting birds and even made their own bluebird box!

Young Birders building nestbox.  Photo by Adrian Binns (pictured on right).
Young Birders building nestbox. Photo by Adrian Binns (pictured on right).

They reconvened in December for the Christmas Bird Count…

Young Birder with an Eastern Screech Owl borrowed for the morning from our partner, the Great Valley Nature Center.  Photo by Adrian Binns
Young Birder with an Eastern Screech Owl borrowed for the morning from our partner, the Great Valley Nature Center. Photo by Adrian Binns
Young Birders birding for the Christmas Bird Count
Young Birders birding for the Christmas Bird Count

In February, the PA Young Birders learned what it takes for birds to survive the winter…

Blake Goll showing Young Birders the structure of feathers
Blake Goll showing Young Birders the structure of feathers. Photo by Adrian Binns.

In March, our Young Birders discovered the importance of the rainforest and learned that our birds are actually birds of two worlds.  After a shade-grown/organic chocolate tasting, they learned what labels to look for on their chocolate to ensure that they are contributing to bird habitat conservation while buying chocolatey goodness…

Blake Goll teaching Young Birders about shade-grown chocolate.
Blake Goll conducting Young Birders shade-grown chocolate tasting. Photo by Adrian Binns.

Local birders and supporters of our Bird Conservation Program enjoyed “Woodcocks and Cocktails” in March during which we were thrilled to watch two male woodcocks performing their aerial displays across the darkening sky.

Waiting for Woodcocks
Waiting for Woodcocks at "Woodcocks and Cocktails".

Also in March, our innovative “Beer for Birds” annual lecture and Dogfish Head ancient ale tasting, featuring Patrick McGovern, the world’s foremost beer archaeologist, raised over $5,700 towards our Bird Conservation Program!

Patick McGovern, scientific director of the Biomolecular Archaeology Laboratory for Cuisine, Fermented Beverages, and Health at the University of Pennsylvania Museum
Patick McGovern, scientific director of the Biomolecular Archaeology Laboratory for Cuisine, Fermented Beverages, and Health at the University of Pennsylvania Museum.

Mark Your Calenders

The next PA Young Birder meeting will be held at Rushton Woods Preserve on Saturday, April 21st, from 9:30am to 11am.   All children, ages 8-12, are welcome to come learn about and experience spring migration!  Please RSVP to me (bhg@wctrust.org).

Young Birders at the Willistown Conservation Trust
Young Birders at the Willistown Conservation Trust

A guided spring Warbler Walk will be held on Sunday May 6th, 7:30am at Kirkwood Preserve (on Grubbs Mill Road).   This will be a great opportunity for birders of all skill levels to enjoy bright spring warblers at a beautiful preserve that offers grassland, riparian, and woodland habitats.  Please RSVP to me (bhg@wctrust.org).

Kirkwood Preserve
Kirkwood Preserve

Get outside this weekend if you can! Buds are bursting, trees are flowering, wildflowers are thriving on the forest floor before leaf-out, pollinators are abuzz, salamanders and other amphibians are depositing eggs masses in vernal pools and ponds, raptors are breezing by hawk watches, and the Easter Bunny is hopping about!

Happy Easter and don’t forget, there’s a lot going on in the woods…

~Blake

Spotted Salamander by Bob Ferguson (PA-Herps)
Spotted Salamander by Bob Ferguson (PA-Herps)

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: Bird banding, bird walks, early migration, Eastern Meadowlark, PA Young Birders, Rushton Woods Preserve, warblers

CONTACT

925 Providence Road
Newtown Square, PA 19073
(610) 353-2562
land@wctrust.org

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST

Copyright © 2025 · WCTRUST.ORG