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2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - October Update

Details
Last Updated: November 04, 2022
Long-billed Curlew_wikimedia
Long-billed Curlew - Image courtesy of Wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

As frequently happens, the September and October period of fall migration brought a few new species to Cowlitz County for our year list. This year it was a total of six new species giving us 203 for 2022. Surf Scoter and Pectoral Sandpiper are annual or nearly so, while Semipalmated Sandpiper is a little less frequent but not a huge surprise. Both of these sandpipers are a bit unique in that they are very rare in western Washington in spring migration, but are expected to pass through in the fall. 

The biggest surprise of the period was the county's second record Long-billed Curlew found on a sandbar in the Columbia River in the Woodland Bottoms. Unfortunately it was only seen by a few before being displaced by the incoming tide and disappearing, not to be relocated.

The late September through early October migration of Turkey Vultures along the ridge line east of I-5 north of Woodland has been attracting more counters the last few years. This year the biggest day was October 8th when 1014 passed by. Counters also added Lewis's Woodpecker to the year list with single individuals seen on two different days. There's only been a handful of previous records of this woodpecker. Five years ago when vulture counting started our first record of Broad-winged Hawk was seen in Cowlitz County. This year three different birds were seen and that makes it four out of the last five years they have been seen migrating through. 

Download the pdf here.

 

Vaux Swifts Fall Migration in full swing

Details
Last Updated: February 08, 2023

Your browser does not support the video tag, please check back using a updated browser.

Several years ago, Darrel Whipple and crew removed the grating covering the smokestack at Riverside Community church in Rainier OR.  The purpose was to attract Vaux swifts during their twice-yearly migration. 

The southward migration of the swifts from all over the Northwest usually starts in September, affording us more opportunities to view thousands of them entering the chimney. The success was greater that possibly imagined.  One Sunday night in early September last year saw 19,514 birds enter the chimney before dark.  Similar counts happen each night during the 2-3 weeks of migration.  You can watch them and meet our volunteers from the corner of W D St and W 3rd St near Fox Creek in Rainier, Ore.

Larry Schwitters of Vaux’s Happening recently sent out the rankings for the top 14 roost sites on the flyway for the northbound migration Rainier's Riverside Community Church ranked second or third in all three categories! Enjoy the video from the previous chimney and come and see the spectacle at the new location in person. 

The birds can be unpredictable but, in general, if the weather is relatively calm, they begin entering the roost around an hour before sunset and conclude half an hour after sunset.

The count on Monday, September 12th, was 24035, they started entering the chimney at 7:30pm and finished by 8pm.

 

2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - August Update

Details
Last Updated: September 12, 2022
Common Tern_wikimedia
Common Tern - Image courtesy of Wikimedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

With a week to go in August I thought we'd have no additional species to report for the last two months.

Then in the last four days we added two species. Both Baird's Sandpiper and Common Tern were found at the mouth of the Kalama River on the gravel bars at low tide. Baird's Sandpiper is a species seen in Cowlitz County during fall migration, but only about one out of every three years. Common Tern is seen even less frequently as this is only the third ever record for the county, all in August or September.

With fall migration in high gear now we hope to make a few more additions in the next couple months..

Download the pdf here.

Fall 2022 Whistler is available

Details
Last Updated: February 27, 2023

Click to Download the pdf

 

The Fall 2022 Whistler is available now.

 

Read more of its content: 

  • Names and Identification - Letter From Alaska - Presidents message
  • Membership Form
  • NW Birding Events
  • Wildlife Center of the North Coast
  • Children’s Discovery Museum reopens
  • ACOW is back
  • Vaux Swifts Fall Migration
  • Threatened Legacy Forests of Southwest Washington

 

Summer 2022 Whistler is available

Details
Last Updated: February 27, 2023

Click to Download the pdf

 

The Spring 2022 Whistler is available now.

 

Read more of its content: 

  • The Struggle for Survival - Presidents message
  • Annual Picnic Invitation
  • Membership Form
  • NW Birding Events
  • Gambles’ White-crowned Sparrow Mystery
  • Earth Day, 2022 review
  • Vaux Swifts Spring Migration
  • Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Refuge reopened in May 

 

2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - May Update

Details
Last Updated: June 04, 2022
Red-necked Grebe - Image courtesy of the USFWS
Red-necked Grebe - Image courtesy of the USFWS

By Russ Koppendrayer

May was a fun month for birders in Cowlitz County as the cool and especially rainy weather caused many birds to stop off here during their migration. For a number of species this meant we got to enjoy many more individuals of the species that pass through. The rarest find was a single Dusky Flycatcher which was the 6th record for the county. I noticed it shows as a code 5 species on the list while it should be a code 4. Hopefully we can get that updated for next year's list.

A more interesting occurrence in May was the first ever record of a couple species in that month. Red-necked Grebe is a fairly regularly occurring species in the lower Columbia River from fall through early spring. Typically they are gone by the end of March with a few April records. To have one in full breeding plumage spend a few days in May in the river near Kalama was a nice treat. The second unique May appearance was a Say's Phoebe. An individual or two of this very early migrant headed for arid areas east of the Cascades will put in an appearance in our county most years. Typically this is in very late February or March. By mid April a few of us were saying that we had likely missed them this year, when one showed up in the Woodland Bottoms during May and spent a few days to be enjoyed by numerous birders.

Download the pdf here.

 

2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - April Update

Details
Last Updated: May 02, 2022
Vesper Sparrow - Image courtesy wikipedia
Vesper Sparrow - Image courtesy of Wikipedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

Spring migration has really been heating up in late April as usual. I'm always impressed by the number of new species being reported in the county, especially towards the end of the month. A quick scan of the list showed that thirteen new species for the year were logged in the last seven days of April. That is some impressive influx of birds. Some of these birds are arriving to nest in the county, while others are just passing through.

The rarest species for here was a Vesper Sparrow found along Barlow Point Road. There were only two previous records in Cowlitz County for this species that nests in grassland and shrub-steppe habitats. Surprisingly both previous records were in 2018 in April and May just over a month apart on their way to some breeding spot.

Download the pdf here.

 

Cowlitz PUD Osprey Cam 2022

Details
Last Updated: April 03, 2022

 

The Cowlitz PUD Osprey cam is live again for 2022. 

They provide a free children’s guide (PDF) built around Osprey Migration and Electrical Safety. See the videos on YouTube: Camera one has a view from above, and camera two from the side with the audio. 

  

2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - March Update

Details
Last Updated: April 02, 2022
Non breeding Caspian Tern - Image courtesy wikipedia
Non breeding Caspian Tern - Image courtesy Wikipedia

By Russ Koppendrayer

We were able to add nine species to our year list in March as migrants continued to trickle in. Nothing was particularly rare as all these species are expected in Cowlitz County. The arrival of Caspian Terns at the mouth of the Kalama River was a mild surprise as we typically don't expect them until early April, but what I found more interesting was that these appeared before any reports at the mouth of the Columbia River. Off the top of my head I don't recall that happening previously. The Ruffed Grouse of course is a year round resident that had escaped detection during the first two months of the year.

As April continues and we get into May migration will really ramp up and we'll add species at a faster pace. So get out there and enjoy migration from your yard or by checking more habitat types. 

Download the pdf here.

 

Northern Shrike seen at Hemlock Creek

Details
Last Updated: February 06, 2023
Northern Shrike seen at Hemlock Creek on Feb. 16th - Image courtesy of Steve H.
Northern Shrike seen at Hemlock Creek on Feb. 16th - Image courtesy of Steve H.

 

  • 2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - February Update
  • 2021 Wahkiakum CBC Results
  • 2021 Willapa Bay Christmas Bird Count Results
  • 40th Cowlitz-Columbia CBC Results
  • Spring 2022 Whistler is online
  • 2022 Cowlitz County Bird List - January Update
  • 2021 Cowlitz County Bird List - Final
  • Winter 2021 Whistler is online
  • 2021 Cowlitz County Bird List - October Update
  • Common Winter Birds of Western Washington Class
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Upcoming Events

Sep 01-30;
Vaux's Swifts Migration in Rainier Ore
Sep 13;
WHAS 50th Anniversary Celebration
Sep 21;
Vaux Swift Dinner and Viewing
Oct 25;
WHAS Regular Board Meeting

Audubon WA News

  • Willapa Hills Audubon Society Celebrates 50 Years of Birding, Community, and Conservation
  • Are there Still Greater Sage-grouse on Private Lands in South Central Washington?
    Audubon partners with WDFW to survey private lands in the Toppenish Ridge management Area
  • Is Estuary Habitat Restoration Increasing Bird Populations?
    Audubon Washington's Coasts Manager joins the Salish Sea Estuaries Avian Monitoring (SSEAM) program for avian surveys at Billy Frank Jr. Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge
  • "Elevation" Program Shapes the Next Generation of Environmental Leaders
    The Seward Park Audubon Center wraps up its first season of the "Elevation" teen engagement program
  • Western Snowy Plover Recovery at Leadbetter Point National Wildlife Refuge
    Audubon Washington Coasts Program Manager Anna Vallery joins WDFW's plover surveys

National Audubon News

  • Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary is the Place to Be for Fall Migration
    Get your binoculars and field guide ready! Fall migration is underway. For some birds, this annual odyssey starts as early as July. At Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary, volunteers and visitors reported...
  • Birders and Scientists Unite for a Celebration of Saline Lakes Across the Hemisphere
    By: Max Malmquist and Marina Castellino Nestled at the base of the Sierra Nevada Mountains and overlooking Mono Lake sits the quaint town of Lee Vining, California, home to the annual...
  • Sleepy Birds Are Lousy Singers, Study Finds
    Late at night in Auckland, New Zealand, researchers Juliane Gaviraghi Mussoi and Kristal Cain shuffled quietly around a dimly lit room with 13 caged Common Mynas. Everyone was sleepy—especially the...
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