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Meeting location: Nubble Light, York
- Start and end times subject to change.
- FMI: Dave Doubleday (207) 205-4041 (C)
Southern Coast
Field trip with Mike Windsor, naturalist at Maine Audubon.
Meet at Nubble Light in York at 8 am and be prepared to carpool to hotspots along the southern coast—the Nubble, Cliff House, Marginal Way—continuing to Fortunes Rocks and Biddeford Pool if time permits.
Contact Pat Sanborn.
Marie’s No-Melt Peanut Butter Suet
This is great food for the birds that can be put out all year.
Ingredients
- 1 Cup Lard (shortening may work if you cannot get lard)
- 1 Cup Peanut Butter
Melt in pot large enough to stir in the following:
- 2 Cups of Oatmeal (regular – not instant)
- 2 Cups Cornmeal
- 1 Cup Flour
- 1/3 Cup Sugar
- Optional: Bird Seed
Pour into a pan (8×8 is good) and refrigerate to solidify.
Easier to remove if you line pan with wax paper then run hot water over bottom of pan to help it release.
Cut into fourths to place in a feeder – or a different shape to fit easily into your suet feeder.
Freeze extra till needed. I make a second batch before cleaning the pot!
CBC Biddeford-Kennebunkport
The 2011-2012 Biddeford-Kennebunkport CBC will be held December 31. If you are interested in joining us, please contact count compiler Marie Jordan at 207-799-1408.
CBC York County
The 2011-2012 York County CBC will be held December 19. If you are interested in joining us, please contact count compiler Pat Moynahan at 284-5487.
Sanford Sewage Treatment Facility: October 16, 2011
Ten of us joined leader Andy Aldrich at the sewage ponds for a busy 3 hours of birding under mostly cloudy skies. It was breezy but warm as we ambled around the productive property.
Highlights included pipits in the scope, a large movement of robins, several Pectoral Sandpipers, a remarkable 31 coots, and a scaup challenge.
- Canada Goose 15
- Wood Duck 4
- American Black Duck 1
- Mallard 100
- Blue-winged Teal 4
- Northern Pintail 6
- Green-winged Teal 150
- Ring-necked Duck 120
- Greater Scaup 1
- Bufflehead 1
- Hooded Merganser 8
- Ruddy Duck 22
- Pied-billed Grebe 2
- Double-crested Cormorant 30
- Great Blue Heron 4
- Turkey Vulture 1
- Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
- American Coot 31
- Greater Yellowlegs 1
- Pectoral Sandpiper 5
- Ring-billed Gull 3
- Herring Gull 1
- Downy Woodpecker 1
- Northern Flicker 12
- Blue Jay 2
- American Crow 11
- Common Raven 4
- Black-capped Chickadee 1
- American Robin 75
- European Starling 1
- American Pipit 15
- Palm Warbler 1
- Yellow-rumped Warbler 30
- Savannah Sparrow 12
- Song Sparrow 12
- Swamp Sparrow 1
- Dark-eyed Junco 2
- American Goldfinch 2
The Harlequin, Autumn 2011
Download the Autumn 2011 issue of our quarterly newsletter, The Harlequin.
Rarity Roundup
Join Derek Lovitch for the annual Rarity Roundup in southern York County. Meet at the I-95 Kennebunk southbound rest area.
FMI call Pat Moynahan at 284-5487.
Sanford Sewage Treatment Facility Field Trip
Meet Andrew Aldrich at the plant office.
FMI call Scott Richardson at 698-4461.
Scarborough Marsh Field Trip
Join Doug Hitchcox at the trailhead south of the Audubon nature center.
FMI call Al Hodson at 324-4528.
Hamilton House: June 2011
On June 18, five of us set out across the dewy field above South Berwick’s Hamilton House. Along a path mown up the gentle rise, we stopped to inspect a singing indigo bunting, enjoyed a clear view of a newly fledged bobolink, and scoped a talkative yellowthroat perched for a long while up in a tree. We returned on the trails of Vaughan Woods State Park, which abuts the Historic New England property, a route that allowed us to hear a few wood warblers and see a close-up pileated woodpecker. We finished with a green heron stalking across the mud flats of the Salmon Falls River. As a surprise send-off, Historic New England’s Peggy Wishart invited us to the gardener’s shed for muffins, scones, and hot tea.
Quest for 300, 2011
This year’s Quest for 300 lists have been updated, with 261 species seen so far and 60 others not yet seen from the master county list (per eBird). Here are five we expect should already have gotten a 2011 tick…
- Common Gallinule
- Sandhill Crane
- Caspian Tern
- Common Murre
- Cape May Warbler
Video: Birding in York County
Before Audubon: The Life and Work of Alexander Wilson
Member meeting, Wells Reserve at Laudholm
We laud John James Audubon for his remarkable work painting and describing all American bird species known in his era, but he was not the first person to undertake such a project. In this program Paul Wells of West Kennebunk will present an overview of the life of Alexander Wilson, whose own efforts to compile a comprehensive survey of American birds immediately preceded Audubon’s, and have been forever overshadowed by them. Wells will illustrate his talk with examples of Wilson’s art, as well as brief musical excerpts of tunes that Wilson — who is known to have played the flute — might have known.
Birds of Monhegan Island
Member meeting, Wells Reserve at Laudholm
Located 12 miles off Mid-coast Maine, Monhegan Island has become a top destination for birders because of it beauty, amazing avian diversity and magnetism for rare birds. Join local birder Doug Hitchcox as he talks about how to bird the island and shares pictures tied to amazing stories from his experiences on the island.
Oystercatchers!
As the coordinator for the American Oystercatcher Recovery Project, Shiloh Schulte is responsible for working with diverse partner organizations to identify and foster reserach and management programs that will aid the recovery of beach nesting species. His program will illustrate this exciting work.
Audubon Camp at Hog Island
The Friends of Hog Island are working to keep the much beloved Hog Island Camp thriving and to prevent the island from being sold to a commercial group. Anyone who has been to Hog Island knows it is a very special place that has changed lives including mine.
Hog Island is many things to the people who have attended sessions there. When asked, some mention specific adventures such as the study of tide pools, the fantastic world renowned staff, the birds, etc. Others say “My life has been so much richer since I attended” or “The experience of Hog Island lasts a lifetime” or “provides an unforgettable experience.” These accolades could go on and on as thousands of campers have been touched deeply by the Hog Island experience. A visit to Hog Island is an inspiration to anyone who cares about conservation and living things.
Each and every donation will help provide life-changing experiences and inspire future generations with the educational mission, ideals, and environmental responsibilities learned at Hog Island. The YCAS Board supports this 501(c)(3) and hope you will donate. Checks should be made payable to Friends of Hog Island and sent to PO Box 242, Bremen ME 04551 or you may donate online.
On the Board: Paul Wells
Paul Wells is a musician, writer, and photographer who retired to West Kennebunk in 2010 after serving for 25 years as the founding director of the Center for Popular Music at Middle Tennessee State University, in Murfreesboro. He grew up on a farm in Cummington, Massachusetts, and credits his late father, Francis, for instilling in him a lifelong interest in birds and the natural world in general.
While in Tennessee he was active in the John W. Sellars chapter of the Tennessee Ornithological Society. In addition to being an active birder Wells has a strong interest in the history of ornithology and wildlife painting, with a particular focus on the life and work of Alexander Wilson and John James Audubon. He maintains — somewhat sporadically! — a birding blog, “The Morning Thrush.” He lives in West Kennebunk with his wife, Sally, who is also an active birder.
Songbird Superhighway
Adapted from an article by Jessica Bloch. Rebecca Holberton was the presenter at our 2011 Annual Meeting.
It was 8:10 on a mild, clear October 2009 morning on Metinic Island in Penobscot Bay, and a group of University of Maine researchers was already several hours into a shift collecting, banding and analyzing songbirds migrating off the Maine coast.
During the fall and spring migration seasons University of Maine graduate student and bird bander Adrienne Leppold lives on Metinic Island off the Maine coast, conducting research there as part of the Northeast Regional Migration Monitoring Network. Through her research, supported by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge, Leppold made the important discovery that the island is a major flyway for songbirds – a songbird superhighway.
Rebecca Holberton, one of the nation’s top bird biologists, had arrived several days earlier, joining Leppold, who oversees banding operations on Metinic and is a key member of Holberton’s Laboratory of Avian Biology. Leppold had already been on the island several weeks, going through a daily routine that included waking up before dawn, setting up nets, capturing birds, taking measurements, and banding the leg of each before release, and then retreating to a small cabin to analyze data and repeat the process the next day.
That morning, Leppold was busy banding under a tent when Holberton called to her to come outside. Look up, Holberton told her. What Leppold saw was shocking and thrilling at the same time – multiple flocks each made up of hundreds of birds moving west-southwest over the island. One flock of about 150 yellow-rumped warblers stopped and hovered briefly over the treetops west of the banding tent before splitting, with half the flock coming down to land in the trees and the other half continuing on.
“I could almost feel them thinking. It was a moving experience,” Leppold says, recalling the moment. “Most of these birds are nocturnal migrants, and this was 8:10 a.m. And there was the same insanity on the ground around us. Up until that point I hadn’t noticed such movements, but I also wasn’t really looking, as banding demands on-the-ground attention. I think at that moment was when it hit me that this was something huge.” Huge, indeed. What Holberton noted visually that morning, Leppold was able to substantiate on Metinic Island — that the Gulf of Maine serves as a sort of superhighway for songbirds migrating between Canada and South America. It was a major find not only for Holberton’s lab, but also for an international effort to document the movements of migrating songbirds.
The Northeast Regional Migration Monitoring Network, a cooperative of Canadian and U.S. nonprofit organizations, government agencies and university researchers such as Holberton and her research team, has spent the last two years trying to determine how migrating species use the Gulf of Maine’s complex network of islands and coastal areas. Using a combination of decades-old monitoring techniques and newer technologies, Network researchers are examining migratory movements made by both large groups of birds and individuals. “We’re combining techniques and technology for tracking small birds,” Holberton says.
Researchers from UMaine and Acadia University in Nova Scotia are involved, along with U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service biologists at the Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge, the National Park Service and several established bird banding stations such as the Atlantic Bird Observatory in Nova Scotia, Appledore Island Migration Station in the Isle of Shoals, and Manomet Bird Observatory in Massachusetts.
Network researchers are now collecting data about the species and numbers of birds captured on the migration highway, as well as where they come from and where they’re going. Scientists are hoping to have as clear of an understanding as possible about the gulf’s migrants because current and emerging issues such as climate change, loss of habitat through development of inland and coastal areas, and alternative energy initiatives along the Maine coast will inevitably affect the mass migrations.
“We’re at the northern end of their spring migration, so of course the birds that we get would be breeding north of us,” says Holberton, who also is part of the ecological monitoring team working on UMaine’s Deep Wind offshore wind power initiative.“ Those are the habitats that are really going to be the first and fastest to go in response to global climate change. If we don’t have some idea of what we’ve got now, we won’t have a feeling for how quickly population change is happening. And we certainly don’t want to exacerbate it by increasing mortality or making it more difficult for birds to reach their destinations.”
Land development along the coastline could change how birds use their stopover sites and limit the successful migrations of millions of birds annually. So far, Holberton and her researchers have determined that Petit Manan and Seal offer critical places to rest, while Metinic hosts longer fueling and recuperation stops. Both of these are vital links along migratory flyways.
In the 1960s, scientists began basic research into the study of bird movements using surveillance radar in the Gulf of Maine, with studies documenting the directions in which birds were moving and the density of those flocks. With so-called orientation release tests, first used in the Gulf of Maine by one of Holberton’s former graduate students, the researchers now capture birds during the day and glue to the birds’ back a small, clear capsule filled with fluid that glows brightly in the dark. The birds are released after dark and their chosen direction is recorded by watching the movement of the capsule, often for up to two miles. The capsule falls off in 3-4 hours, after which time the bird is well on its way. Acoustic data are also incorporated in the research.
“Maine desperately needs a comprehensive, long-term plan for coastal and offshore development that takes into account not only our region but those north and south of it,” Holberton says. “These birds that travel well beyond the Gulf of Maine are very good at what they do, but it might not take much more than one thing, such as loss of critical migratory habitat in addition to loss of wintering and breeding areas, to push them over a threshold at which they can no longer sustain their populations. That’s the issue.”