Keep Calm and Bird On: November 2020
“If you don’t look, you don’t see. You have to go and look.”
-Edith Andrews
Hunting season is under way, but that doesn’t mean an end to birding. This is the best time of year to look for migratory birds and rarities. Archery season for deer, and gunning for grey squirrel, pheasant, and quail run until the end of November. But a few simple precautions will help keep everyone safe outside.
Number one: wear bright, reflective clothing. This is a must, as the days grow shorter, for both you and the dog, if you bird with a canine companion. Just as important: know your location. Many good birding spots are near paved roads; reflective gear makes you visible to drivers, too.
A few Nantucket Conservation Foundation properties are actually closed to hunting; check their website maps. Although we are all safer in fresh air, make sure you have your mask (as is now required by the Town of Nantucket) on narrow trails; your fellow birders will appreciate it. Now that birds have passed the breeding season you may find them “filling up the tank” during the day as they put on fat for migration, or to survive the winter.
The Land Bank property known as Lily Pond Park (see image above) has bordering trees and wetland providing shelter and food right through the winter. Species seen include Virginia Rails, Northern Waterthrushes, Ruby-crowned Kinglets, and Winter Wrens.
The Nantucket Conservation Foundation’s Squam Farm (see image above and below) has had rarities such as Western Kingbird and Ash-throated Flycatcher.
Remember that hunters were the original conservationists. Without them, we would have no national wildlife refuges, and would have lost many of our beautiful waterbirds. They are doing well now, thanks to careful monitoring and responsive regulation. So, buy a Duck Stamp! It’s for conservation too.
Just maintain situational awareness, and Bird On!
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