Birders return to the South Coast in September
Birders
return to the South Coast in September
CHARLESTON — The 29th
annual Oregon Shorebird Festival, from Sept. 4-6, will place South Coast birds in
focus through a full weekend of activities in Charleston.
Anywhere from 60 to 100
birdwatchers, or birders, flock to the coast each year to enjoy the feathered
wildlife that can be found around the area.
Dawn Harris, Visitor
Services manager for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said this festival is
the perfect size for novice birders to sample the hobby.
“This isn't a festival where we have
hundreds or thousands of people. It's a nice, small, intimate group,"
Harris said. "So, you have an opportunity to work one-on-one with your
field trip leader and to meet other people who have an interest in birds and
nature.”
Activities include several
field trips, by land or sea, including trips to Bandon Marsh National Wildlife
Refuge, New River and sites around the Coos Bay area.
The Cape Arago Audubon
Society started the Oregon Shorebird Festival almost three decades ago to give
fans of all skill levels the opportunity to watch the migrating birds that stop
over in the estuaries of Coos Bay and Bandon.
“It's a wonderful opportunity for you to
learn about birds that you see when you walk the beach, or are at a wetlands,”
Harris said. “Partly, because you are going to be with people who are, like
yourself, just learning. But also because there will be a lot of intermediate
and expert birders, and they love sharing this passion for birdwatching. They
love nothing more than helping someone else get excited about birds.”
Tens of thousands of
shorebirds migrate along the Oregon coast in the fall, using beaches and
estuaries as stopover habitat to feed and ready themselves for the journey
south.
Yet, one of the more
popular birds to get spotted each festival is one that is always here.
Although, it can be very difficult to find.
“It's always special for people who have
never seen a Western Snowy Plover, and so we will definitely go and see that
bird because it is a threatened species,” Harris said. “Snowy Plovers are one
of the few shorebirds that is here year-round on our beaches.”
She said another
crowd-pleaser, though, is one of the birds that rarely makes an appearance. It
is a bird called the Wandering Tattler.
“That is a bird that drops in and likes to
use the jetty rocks, at the south or north jetty, and it moves in and around
the rocks looking for little bugs and invertebrates that live in there. They
are only here on that short migration. And they just aren't all that abundant,
so we are lucky if we see four or five of those at all. And who doesn't want to
say that they've seen a Wandering Tattler,” Harris said, with a laugh. “It's a
great name.”
It's not the only great
name, though. Other birds in the area during the festival include the Western
and Least Sandpiper, Dunlin, Long-billed Dowitcher, Semipalmated Plover and
Black-bellied Plover.
While you are invited to
bring along your best binoculars for birding to try and spot them, the item is not
vital to being able to enjoy the Oregon Shorebird Festival.
Harris said the guides
will have spotting scope for birding with them to help people spot the birds,
even from a distance.
“The purpose is to let everybody look
through them. So, even if you don't have compact binoculars at home, we are still going to have optics
that you can use that will allow you to see the bird. You will still have a
great time, even without binoculars, and you will still be able to see birds up
close and personal.”
The three-day event also
includes some informative speakers in the evenings. After a day of bird-watching,
the attendees are invited back to the Oregon Institute of Marine Biology.
On Friday, Sept. 4, they
will listen to a talk from the Bandon group called Washed Ashore. The nonprofit
group will discuss its mission of educating and creating awareness about marine
debris and plastic pollution through art.
On Saturday night, Sept.
5, Daniel Roby, professor of wildlife ecology at Oregon State University's
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, will speak about the Double-crested
Cormorant ecology and management in the Columbia River estuary.
“If you want to come to a festival that is
small and intimate, and a lot of fun, this is the one,”Harris said.
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