WPBO

Return To Paradise

Hey there everybody! My name is Rich Couse, and I will be your friendly neighborhood hawk counter at the Whitefish Point Bird Observatory this spring. I'm back for my second spring hawk count for Michigan Audubon, and you can find me in the shack on the Hawk Deck way atop the sandy lakeshore dunes. [...]

2021-03-17T10:33:41-04:00March 16th, 2021|Migration Counts|Comments Off on Return To Paradise

October Big Day Is Saturday!

This coming Saturday, Oct. 17, is October Big Day! This is an annual project from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology to celebrate birds and birding. Participation is simple: see birds and record them in eBird. A goal of October Big Day is to have 25,000 participants. With interest in birds and birding quickly growing worldwide, this seems like [...]

2020-10-16T12:40:02-04:00October 16th, 2020|Migration Counts|Comments Off on October Big Day Is Saturday!

Lake-Watching 101

A surprise for many visitors to the waterbird count is how distant the birds are. While the handful of loons that pass overhead and chickadees that venture inside the waterbird shack defy this statement, they are few compared to the thousands of birds flying a quarter mile or more from the shoreline. How we identify [...]

2020-10-09T12:06:52-04:00October 9th, 2020|Migration Counts|Comments Off on Lake-Watching 101

One Month In!

September 15 marked one month since we started the waterbird count this fall. If you look at the data we’ve collected thus far, you might see some trends emerge. Some species have largely departed, some are beginning to show up in numbers. While a few of these changes happened quickly, like the gigantic flight days [...]

2020-09-19T10:12:58-04:00September 19th, 2020|Migration Counts|Comments Off on One Month In!

The Fall Waterbird Count Begins!

The first week of the Fall Waterbird Count is approaching its end, and let me say it has been an exciting one. Before we delve into the details, I’d like to introduce myself. My name is Steve and I’ll be the counter for this fall. I’m very excited to be in such a beautiful place [...]

2020-08-22T12:00:50-04:00August 21st, 2020|Migration Counts|Comments Off on The Fall Waterbird Count Begins!

WPBO late summer update

Seasons take on their own forms at Whitefish Point, but in the current progression of summer and advance of fall, the wild blueberries are coming on amidst the jack pines, mushrooms are beginning to push up from the lichens, and warblers, subdued in song and plumage, mill around the point while the new wave of [...]

2020-08-11T11:54:11-04:00August 11th, 2020|Field Notes|Comments Off on WPBO late summer update

Fledge Day; Grebe Day!

Here are three bits of exciting news from WPBO this past week: 1. We received three juvenile Piping Plovers from the Great Lakes Piping Plover captive rearing program! Since 1992, eggs from nests compromised by storm surge, parent plover mortality, or “side chick” situations (yes, that’s exactly what you think it is!) have been salvaged, [...]

2020-07-28T14:05:15-04:00July 28th, 2020|Field Notes|Comments Off on Fledge Day; Grebe Day!

Zombie Chick is Zombie Dad!

...and, he has been since July 3. Hannah (who you’ll recognize as WPBO's summer assistant bander) and I were enjoying one of those rare times of the day that we’re both awake with an afternoon beach walk. We paused at the nest exclosure; when I’d been out earlier that day, the adult plovers were still [...]

2020-07-21T17:13:37-04:00July 21st, 2020|Field Notes|Comments Off on Zombie Chick is Zombie Dad!

Early Migrations

The ephemerality of the shoreline at Whitefish Point is subtle, except to those who spend significant time there. Every windy day takes away some beach in exchange for new driftwood deposits--but if you did not walk here regularly, this would be difficult to discern. The passage of shorebirds contributes a further element to the changeability [...]

2020-07-16T14:02:57-04:00July 13th, 2020|Field Notes|Comments Off on Early Migrations

The Hatch

There are certain subjects that dominate conversation around WPBO. Weather, migrations, and our latest spoils from out-of-town grocery hauls are trusty standbys. I’ve noticed, though, that we’ve added some summer specials to the mix, like the tenuous relationship between black bears and bird feeders, and the mosquito hatch.  This is, actually, my first full summer [...]

2020-07-07T15:07:46-04:00July 6th, 2020|Field Notes|Comments Off on The Hatch
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