Show some love for the birds this Valentine’s Day
Valentine’s Day is
just a week and a half away. No doubt, you’ve been thinking about how to spend
some time with your loved one. While you are booking that dinner date, make
sure you also book some time that weekend with something else you love – birds.
Birds on the Niagara
An extraordinary annual
event is taking place along the Niagara River from February 12th to
the 16th. Birds on the Niagara is North America’s only winter
birding festival. It features a variety of activities such as guided walks,
spotting stations, social events and art workshops, all of which can be
researched at bird-niagara.org
The keynote event is
a presentation by Corina Newsome called “Flock and Forage: Loving by Nature.”
Corina is one of the most recognizable and dynamic individuals in the
conservation movement, as an ornithologist, communicator, and co-founder of
Black Birders Week. She’ll be speaking about the connection between community
and conservation and how birds, science, and people are aligned. You’ll even
experience that first-hand when you meet with fellow birders on the trail or at
lookout areas during the weekend.
This binational celebration
exists to highlight the natural wonders of what is a Globally Significant Bird
Area. The Niagara River ranks right up there with the Everglades, the Amazon
basin, and the Galapagos in that regard because of the sheer number of birds,
in both species and quantity. Every winter, hundreds of thousands of birds
spend their time at the Niagara River as its open waters and abundance of small
fish provide nourishment to gulls and waterfowl from all over the world. You
could see as many as 19 different species of gulls and, if you are lucky, you
can add some local rarities to your life list, such as the gorgeous harlequin
duck.
If you want to learn
more about this event and see the passion behind it, visit the on-demand
section of the Lockport Community Television website (LCTV.net) and check out
the February 4th episode of WNY Tonight in which I interview Birds
on the Niagara vice-president Marcus Rosten. His energy is contagious.
The Great Backyard Bird Count
If the Niagara River
corridor is too long of a drive for you (especially if you are among my
Allegany County readers), there’s also the Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC)
that weekend. And, the GBBC is everywhere.
Launched in 1998 by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon
Society, the Great Backyard Bird Count was the first fully online
citizen-science project to collect data on wild birds and to display results in
near real-time.
Last year, nearly
840,000 people of all ages and walks of life worldwide joined the four-day
count to create an annual snapshot of the distribution and abundance of birds. It’s
an easy way to help the scientific community track bird movements, populations
and trends.
It’s a simple
project: For at least 15 minutes on one or more days of the count, which is
February 13 - 16 this year, simply tally the numbers and kinds of birds you
see. The data can then be entered and viewed at the GBBC website
(birdcount.org). You can count from any location, anywhere in the world, and
for as long as you wish.
Despite the moniker of “backyard” it is more than that. You could count birds there,
but you could also observe them at any forest, field, or waterway. A project
like this is nice because it gives some folks who are otherwise shut-ins in the
winter months a little nudge to traipse outdoors, hiking, snowshoeing, or
skiing to count birds.
I strongly encourage all birders – even those who count themselves as beginners
– to explore the region during the GBBC; you’ll be amazed at the diverse
wildlife that still calls this area home even during the most brutal of winters.
Last month, for example, I counted 35 species in Niagara County during my
regular travels and a few hikes. That number certainly would have been much
larger had I watched gulls and ducks in the Niagara River.
Birding is one of the most popular hobbies in the US – around 96 million people
observed, photographed or fed birds last year. You were probably one of them.
If you are looking to add to that experience and battle the winter doldrums, experience
the joys of the Birds on the Niagara or help advance ornithology with the
Backyard Bird Count. Show some love for our feathered friends this Valentine’s
Day.
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