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Bare Root Trees Offered by the Carbon Capture Foundation

Details
Last Updated: August 16, 2023

As they have for the last several years The Carbon Capture Foundation (TCCF), a charitable organization sponsored by one of our own WHAS members, Norm Dick, is offering free bare root native tree seedlings to all WHAS members, their families and friends for planting on their property.  Primarily four species will be provided: Douglas fir, western red cedar, black cottonwood, and red alder.  However if other species are needed, that may be possible by special arrangement.  Generally the limit per household is 240 seedlings per year, but this limit may be exceeded by arrangement with TCCF.  If you, your family or friends wish to order seedlings you, your family or friends may contact  WHAS by This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.or phone at 360 425 0083.

The seedlings will be delivered to WHAS this next winter between late December and the end of February.  WHAS will be in contact with those requesting trees to coordinate delivery dates and times.  Tree recipients are responsible for making arrangements to plant their seedlings and maintaining them.  WSU Extension Foresters are available to help with questions online, by phone and sometimes in person.  Also materials on seedling planting, care and maintenance will be provided by TCCF when you pick up the seedlings.

The only limitations for receiving the free seedlings is that they cannot be used for commercial purposes, for replanting areas you have had logged, or for planting areas that you have to plant to keep your ground as forest land for tax purposes.  For planting purposes these trees should generally be planted about 12 feet apart.  And cedars are best planted in areas that tend to be wet or close to wet areas.  With our current drought conditions cedars are struggling to survive in dry areas that they formerly did well in.  


Home and farm owners should take advantage of this great offer.

2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - June Update

Details
Last Updated: June 05, 2023
 wesern kingbird from the fws
Western Kingbird - Image courtesy of the FWS

By Russ Koppendrayer

We've reached the halfway mark of 2023 with 198 bird species recorded in Cowlitz County through the end of June. This is the most ever for this juncture and it is a good place to compare years as we've seen winter birds, a full spring migration and all our breeding species are here. One reason may be that we have an ever increasing number of folks in the field as well as more people reporting what they see. Time will tell if this translates to a record number at the end of December.

During June we only added three species to the list. Both Common Nighthawk and Red-eyed Vireo were expected as these local nesters are late migrants that typically aren't seen until June each year. We also added Western Kingbird, which was a different story altogether. Although not staying to nest, these  flycatchers generally pass through in small numbers from late April through May, For no one to report one during their typical time was odd enough, but then for one to appear at the late date of June 11 added to the puzzle.  

Download the pdf here.

 

2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - May Update

Details
Last Updated: June 05, 2023
 Lark Sparrow from wikimedia
Lark Sparrow - Image courtesy of Wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

May saw the spring neotropical migrants continue to arrive and were enjoyed by many birders. For us in Cowlitz County the rarest to be seen were a couple of Lark Sparrows at the sediment retention dam on the Toutle River. For some reason this large sparrow with a striking appearance was seen in unusually large numbers in western Washington this spring. In our state they seem to prefer rocky slopes with some short grass east of the Cascade Mountains for breeding. Only the second record for the county consisted of the two individuals together foraging for seeds in the short grass on top of the sediment retention structure.

Dusky Flycatchers which appear as a code 5 species in the attached list were seen in two locations near Coldwater Lake in May. Code 5 means less than five records for the county and should definitely have been updated to code 4 last year. At any rate this species, formerly difficult to find in Cowlitz County, may have nested in the brushy slopes of the St. Helens blowdown area last summer and may be trying to do the same this year. Not all that surprising as they have bred nearby in similar habitat upslope around the mountain in Skamania County.

Download the pdf here.

 

Summer 2023 Whistler is available

Details
Last Updated: May 29, 2023

Click to Download the pdf

 

The Summer 2023 Whistler is available now.

 

Read more of its content: 

  • Bird Listening – President’s message
  • Birders Needed to Identify Marbled Murrelets
  • Vaux Swift Dinner and Roost Viewing
  • An Invitation to Explore the Legacy of John James Audubon
  • 2022 Willapa Bay CBC Results
  • Earth Day 2023 Recap
  • Birding in Oaxaca, Mexico
  • Invitation to the Annual Picnic

 

Birders needed to identify marbled murrelets

Details
Last Updated: May 22, 2023
 Volunteer Image

By Larry Brandt

Willapa Hills Audubon is looking for two to four volunteers with some very special birding skills for a May/June project.  We have an opportunity to stop the harvest of some legacy [near old growth] trees.  Lidar surveying indicates many to be as tall as 200-ft. The grove, consisting of douglas fir, hemlock, cedar and red alder, is located in the Grays river watershed north of Naselle WA.  This is Washington Department of Natural Resources managed forest.  No private property would be included in the survey. 

Determining the presence of marbled murrelet would cancel logging operations and preserve this habitat for murrelets, spotted owls and deep forest wildlife.  We learned of this cutting too late in the year to employ radar identification, hence, our need for feet on the ground. 

Volunteers must have some experience identifying marbled murrelets during their dusk and dawn flights between the forest canopy and the ocean.  Positive identification may include call recognition as well as visual sighting.    We propose to cove at least three day of observations (dusk and dawn) but any would be of benefit and more would be superb. 

An exceptional viewing location overlooks the entire site and then as far west as the Pacific ocean.  Access to the viewing location is via nine miles of unlocked DNR logging road off of highway #4 at Salmon creek east of Naselle.  Mile-by-mile directions are available including several formats of mapping.  Elevations range from 640-ft. to 1760-ft.  The viewing team may allow inexperienced birders wishing to learn. 

Interested birders please contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or phone 360 200 4580 . 

2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - April Update

Details
Last Updated: May 02, 2023
 Northern goshawk from wikimedia
Northern Goshawk - Image courtesy of Wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

April migration was fairly typical with a trickle of new species for most of the month and then a rush of new finds in the last week as migration started to reach its peak. Birds will continue to pour through the area for the next few weeks before tailing off again. No big rarities were found, just a few Code 4s, which means they have occurred in Cowlitz at least five times but are not seen annually. A Northern Goshawk seen at Canal Road was the most unusual of this group as we go numerous years between records of this species.

In early April I was made aware of an incredible bird found in Cowlitz County during February. An injured Laysan Albatross found at Willow Grove was captured and sent to PAWS (Progressive Animal Welfare Society) in Lynnwood, Washington to be rehabbed. Not only is this family of birds typically found over the open ocean, but this particular species is found in very low numbers off the Washington coast. The rehab was successful and with an assist from the Coast Guard the bird was released a few miles out into the Pacific Ocean. 

Download the pdf here.

 

2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - March Update

Details
Last Updated: April 03, 2023
 Clay-colored Sparrow from wikimedia
Clay-colored Sparrow - Image courtesy of Wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

As we continued into early spring in March the species list grew slowly, but some very interesting birds were found.  

A Chipping Sparrow in the Woodland Bottoms was either over a month early or more likely a bird that had over wintered in the area. A Golden Eagle in the Cascade foothills and Say's Phoebes at both Woodland and Kalama are species found in Cowlitz County most years, but not annually. A Pelagic Cormorant seen from the Longview waterfront flying upstream on the Columbia River was the fourth record for the county. Last, but certainly not least was a Clay-colored Sparrow found in the Woodland Bottoms. While this was the third record of this species in Cowlitz County, it was the first in twenty years, with the most recent being in November of 2003.

Here's looking forward to more excitement and much enjoyment as the summer breeders and migrants just passing through become more numerous over the next couple months. Enjoy!

Download the pdf here.

 

2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - February Update

Details
Last Updated: March 08, 2023
 Bonaparte's Gull from wikimedia
Bonaparte's Gull - Image courtesy of Wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

While we added some nice species to our composite year list in February, none of them fit in the rarity category.

The smelt runs up the Columbia River and its Cowlitz County tributaries is one of the great spectacles of nature. These tiny but highly nutritious fish attract hordes of predators as they come upstream, including many sea lions, hundreds of Bald Eagles and thousands of gulls. Typically during a large smelt run (this year was one) we find a few vagrant gull species as mixed with the huge flocks of the usual seven species. This year a single Bonaparte's Gull was the sole oddity found in spite of a fairly robust effort by knowledgeable birders. While not one of our regular seven winter species it's not quite a rarity as we expect to see a few during their spring migration in April. 
A middle of February sighting of Barn Swallow was also about two months early although winter records of the species are becoming more frequent. All other additions to the list were expected arrivals or resident species we happened to miss in January.

Download the pdf here.

 

Spring 2023 Whistler is available

Details
Last Updated: March 02, 2023

Click to Download the pdf

 

The Spring 2023 Whistler is available now.

 

Read more of its content: 

  • Renewal and Rebirth – Presidents message
  • WHAS Board Looks to Change Chapter Name
  • New Avian Interpretive Signs for Lake Sacajawea Park
  • Sparse results for the 2023 Midwinter Bald Eagle Survey
  • 2022 Breeding Bird Survey Summary
  • Volunteers Needed at Earth Day booth
  • Cowlitz Columbia Christmas Bird Count results
  • Membership Form
  • NW Birding Events

 

WHAS Board Looks to Change Chapter Name

Details
Last Updated: February 28, 2023

From the WHAS Board

At a special board meeting recently a majority of the board present voted unanimously to begin a process of investigation into a name change to the organization.   

By consensus a committee has been appointed to begin this process and the end result will most likely be a name change that won’t include the name Audubon but will honor our founding as a National Audubon chapter in 1975.

The board took this action after more than a year’s discussion of the issue and the special two hour meeting held on February 11, ending with the resolution to seriously look into a name change.

The discussion has been ongoing since at least 2021 when National Audubon began in earnest  to address JJ Audubon’s  flawed character and slave-holding past.  That discussion followed efforts to make Audubon more inviting  to a new and more inclusive generation of Americans, and evolved into a national debate on whether to retain the Audubon name.  

A decision on that discussion is expected to conclude soon.  Similarly, Seattle Audubon decided last year to drop Audubon from that chapter’s name and is expected to announce a new name sometime in June.  Several other chapters nationwide have also decided to change their names, and still others await the decision at the national level.

With all this in mind, and more, the WHAS board has decided to move forward but on our own terms.  We acted with a nod to the future and our ability to gain new members and also to be more impactful.  We noted that the organization was never primarily about Mr Audubon and his personal story but about birding and by changing the name we can move forward cleanly.  We also believe this can be done without striking off JJ Audubon’s achievements in ornithology, but by carefully re-examining him, and his history, with solid and nuanced scholarship.

We counsel care at the national and state level of Audubon, to move with a transition plan in place if the name is changed;  and for continuing cooperation with all current chapters, if not.  We want to emphasize the legacy of respect that the Audubon Society has built in the US and around the world, the citizen science and the conservation efforts to protect all bird species and their habitats.

Again, WHAS has benefited from our relationship with the wider world of Audubon and so the board is most concerned about this issue of transition here in Washington state, where the statewide Audubon WA is so effective.

The board continues to be open to comments from you chapter members, get in contact through our Contact page.  As of now, there is no timeline for action and any change will be the result of careful consideration and a continuing conversation with you.

 

  • 41st Cowlitz Columbia CBC Result
  • 2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - January Update
  • 2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - Final
  • Winter 2022 Whistler is available
  • 2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - October Update
  • Vaux Swifts Fall Migration in full swing
  • 2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - August Update
  • Fall 2022 Whistler is available
  • Summer 2022 Whistler is available
  • 2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - May Update
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Upcoming Events

Feb 20;
Living on the Edge: How Shorebirds Are Adapted to Shoreline, Estuary and River
Mar 20;
WHAS Board Election
Mar 27;
Board Meeting
Mar 27;
Annual Banquet
Mar 27;
Legs, Bills and Behavior: Cracking the Shorebird Code

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