Sample of Birder Specific Letter on the Grays Harbor Crude Oil Terminals

Tonight at the relatively sparsely attended ABC meeting Bruce discussed the proposed crude oil terminals, and barge and ship transportation of crude oil out of Grays Harbor across the Westport bar, and off to refineries.  The potential for catastrophic oil-spills impacting the whole west coast shorebird populations at this key migration stopover is sickening to me.  Here is a birder-specific letter you can modify to write to oppose this now during the key “scope of impact” considerations. Copy, paste, modify & improve, and personalize this and mail to

 

Westway and Imperial Renewables Expansion Projects

710 Second Avenue Suite 550

Seattle, WA 98104

Dear City of Hoquiam and Washington State Department of Ecology:

I strongly oppose the construction of crude oil terminals in Grays Harbor.  Gray’s Harbor mudflats are one of 5 major migratory shorebird staging sites in North America.  For several species of shorebirds a very large proportion of the world’s population pauses in their northbound flight from wintering grounds south of here en route to arctic breeding grounds to rest and feed on the extraordinarily rich marine environment of Grays Harbor and Bowerman Basin.  These species include Western Sandpiper, Red Knot, Short-billed Dowicher, Least Sandpiper and Semipalmated Plover.  Moving oil on ships or barges over the treacherous bar on entering or exiting Gray’s Harbor has a real possibility of a significant oil spill.  If such a tragedy occurred at a critical time with impact on the spring stopover of these birds it could decimate the world’s population of several of these species.

Grays Harbor is such a crucial and unique environment in the life-cycle of these species that risking this type of accident is unthinkable.  I beg you to include the impact on these shorebirds, as well as the rest of this key west-coast flyway habitat in the scope of the Environmental Impact Statement for both the Westway and Imperium projects.

Edward Pullen

3106 28th Place SE

Puyallup, WA 98374

edwardpullen@gmail.com

253-905-5662

 

Edward Pullen MD

The deadline for these is the end of this week, so please do this ASAP.

Thanks.

 

Ed

ABC Vashon Field Trip April 29, 2014

ABC Vashon Field Trip: Ed Swan, author of “The Birds of Vashon Island,” led a full field trip to Vashon Island on April 29, 2014. He reported on the field trip to Tweeters thusly: Had beautiful weather for the Tahoma Audubon ABC group on Vashon yesterday. Numbers of individual species, especially the new incoming warblers, seemed really low and slow, but adding up the species seen I was surprised to find the species list reach 70. A few of many of the saltwater birds were still present as well as the incoming migrants. We had a few good highlights. At Pt. Robinson, we saw a first of season Western Tanager in the trees at the base of the bluff. On the radar towers, Steller’s Jays bunched up to attempt migrating across the channel to the mainland but gave up part way out each time. Yesterday there were only 10-12, but in some years I’ve seen as many as 30-40 trying it. At this time of year, migration means Pt. Robinson can have just about anything might show up, especially if the weather has birds on the move. Yesterday was beautiful but so calm it kept the birds pretty quiet. At Tramp Harbor, a female Black Scoter was still present and a leucistic crow that was a very pale light brown latte color. I’ve been getting lots of calls about this bird over the last couple of months but saw it myself for the first time yesterday. At Fisher Pond, one of the Pied-billed Grebes sat on a reed nest, a first time view for many on the field trip. ***************************** Click on Photos to enlarge. Leucistic Crow by Richard Smethurst, the remainder by Diane Yorgason-Quinn. That warbler is an Orange-Crowned, and the butterfly is a Pine Elfin:

ABC Theler Wetlands Walk 5/1/14 report

THELER WETLANDS – May 1, 2014: On May 1st, John Riegsecker and Faye McAdams Hands led a walk around Theler Wetlands in Belfair on the hottest day of the year. They were joined by Diane Y-Q and Rosanne Becker and later by photographer Larry from the Kitsap Sun who did a photo spread featuring us and other users of Theler that day. A few winter stragglers helped pad out the count to 51. Two of us had an Osprey just after leaving to add to the count. **************************************** The Kitsap Sun photo spread is here: http://www.kitsapsun.com/photos/galleries/2014/may/01/scenes-from-theler/42501/#section_header **************************************** Highlights were 2 Virginia Rails, one seen well by all, plus a Marsh Wren in the process of housebuilding right in front of us. ***************************** Click on photo to enlarge it. Marsh Wren in nest by John Riegsecker, the remainder by Diane Yorgason-Quinn.

ABC Meeting Report April 24, 2014

ABC MEETING – April 24, 2014: We had trip reports on Shep’s walk at Swan Creek from Laurel Parshall and Ken Brown’s trip to Colorado and surrounding states with Ed & Kay Pullen where he actually got life birds (Prairie Chickens!) and ran into birders from home! Then a short side show of the recent lunar eclipse as seen by Diane Y-Q from Utah (clouded out in this neighborhood). Ryan Wiese then presented the film, “My Life as a Turkey,” a beautifully photographed saga of naturalist Joe Hutto’s experiment with having himself imprinted as the “mother” of an incubator full of turkey chicks. You’ll never think of Turkeys as dumb birds again or as Joe Hutto as a normal human being again. He’s apparently just finished living for several years with Mule Deer as one of them. **************** Next ABC meetings: May 19 July 24 **************************

ABC FIELD TRIP REPORT – Feb 22-23 2014

ABC FIELD TRIP REPORT:  Feb 22-23, 2014

***************************************
Ken Brown planned to lead a 2-day field trip to the Hood Canal area, but the Strait of Juan de Fuca had so many rarities happening that we chased those for much of the time.  The weather was crummy including SNOW!  But we got some of those rarities!  Harris Sparrow and Bullock’s Oriole!  We missed several others we chased, but in the process found MANY Long-Tailed Ducks, Brant, Harlequins, and Oystercatchers came right up to us!  Thanks for a fun weekend twitching! 
****************************
Pat Damron’s photos are here:
http://share.shutterfly.com/share/received/welcome.sfly?fid=57c37fb4104113f4&sid=0AcNHLJq2bNmbFOg
***************************
Laurel Parshall’s photos aren’t posted yet, but will be soon.  Look for that set at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/llp_unesolitaire/sets/

Below are a couple of Diane Y-Q’s photos showing Geese in the Snow and our group.

ABCThanks Diane for the report.

Ed Swan Author of Birds of Vashon Presents at ABC Birding Meeting

Ed Swan, author of Birds of Vashon, new and enlarged second edition, gave a well-received report on the status of birds on Vashon Island, as well as the necessary conditions for them, and the history of both. It was especially interesting to hear how the first edition of his book several years ago made so many of the islanders into birders, which along with the advent of eBird and other citizen science, vastly improved the data set for this new version. While waiting for Tahoma Audubon’s bookstore to procure copies of the book, you may order them from: www.theswancompany.com.

ABC Feb 24 2014 EdSwan

Bird Trax Working Again

Since iGoogle went bye-bye a few months ago I’ve had trouble making Bird Trax work, but today had time to figure it out. Now the ABC site has pages for the latest rarity sightings for not just WA, but several counties key to we Western WA birders as well as several neighboring states and British Columbia.

Hope you find these to work for you and of use.

Good birding.

Ed

ABC Meeting, January 23, 2014 – BIG YEAR!

ABC Meeting – January 23, 2014 – BIG YEAR! ************************************ Ryan Wiese was fresh off the plane from Arizona where he did nothing but twitch, but with great success (all of the Thrashers!). ********************************* Mike Charest managed to find just about every bird that landed in Pierce County in 2013 plus more! It all started at a prepossessing industrial site called Gog-Le-Hi-Te… His Flickr site is: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mikecharest/ ******************************** Laurel Parshall didn’t know she was doing a big Washington year until suddenly she realized how close she was to 300 and set her sights on that number! Swamp Sparrow caught her eye just as time was running out! Her Flickr site is: http://www.flickr.com/photos/llp_unesolitaire/ **************************** Brian Pendleton really twitched towards the end of the year and hit the big time, reaching 350. It takes someone who knows their Gulls! His Flickr site is: http://www.flickr.com/photos/brianpen286/ **************************** These birders are all accomplished photographers as well. What a combination! A great program! Click on photos to enlarge:

Puyallup-Orting Half-Day Field Trip Report

The Tahoma Audubon Society Field Trip to Puyallup and Orting was remarkable for the great weather and the number of participants.  Likely due to the PR in The News Tribune, with both Sunday and Friday notices in the activities section, we had 29 participants.  Of these only 7 were TAS members.  The TAS members were primarily ABC birders.The day started under bright sunny sky trying to pick the waterfowl on Bradley Lake out of the glare of the rare bright yellow thing in the sky.  We managed to get a perspective showing beautiful scope views of 8 Hooded mergansers along with a Ringed-neck duck, American Wigeon, Mallards, and Double-crested cormorants as a male Belted kingfisher rattled at the end of the lake. In the nearby forested area we had 4 woodpecker species.  Downy, Pileated, Red-breasted sapsucker and Northern flicker were seen or heard by some.  On the way back to the car a nice winter mixed flock of songbirds responded well to Ken Brown’s Pygmy Owl whistle, and we tried but failed to find a Hutton’s vireo among the 30 or so Ruby-crowned kinglets mixed with good numbers of Golden-crowned kinglets, Black-capped chickadees. A Brown creeper gave everyone a close look at its typical tree trunk climbing feeding behavior.We headed for Orting as a 7 car caravan, leaving only a few Puyallup-only birders behind.  The winter’s flock of 87 Trumpeter swans was compliant and we studied them and failed to pick out a Tundra swan at the corn field at Pioneer Way & Hwy 162.  On the way to our next stop a Merlin atop a fir tree stayed for us to see in the scopes, and we headed on with only a minor traffic hassle. Next was a short stop by the Puyallup river behind Orting Middle school where adult and young Bald eagles roosted, we saw and heard Song and Fox sparrows, another Sharp-shinned hawk (juvenile this time) was sighted, and a pair of Gadwall swam in the collection ponds.

At the farm loop off Calistoga Road just across the Puyallup River we finished up our morning by finding an American kestrel, getting everyone great looks at Sooty Fox Sparrows, and seeing another Red-tailed hawk.

Everyone seemed to have a nice time. Many saw parts of our county they had not visited before.  I was thankful for pleasant company, the birds, and most of all the sunshine. Life does seem a bit better after a day birding in the sunshine in Washington.

Day’s totals:  29 human participants, 40 species, and no accidents.

For those interested I also started an e-bird user called TASFieldTripLists.  If trip leaders share their e-bird lists to that user name we will be able to have an ongoing record of field trip sightings that may be helpful in considering what trips may be good to repeat and as a tool for data keeping.

 

E-bird Trip List

Report Details
Date range: Jan 4, 2014 – Jan 10, 2014 Total # of Species: 47
Total # of Checklists: 6
Location(s):   Bradley Lake; Mounts Road – Nisqually Tribe Site Turnout; Orting Farm Loop; Traveling Hwy 162; behind Orting Middle School; corner of Pioneer and Hey 162 Orting
Summary
Jan 4 Jan 5 Jan 6 Jan 7 Jan 8 Jan 9 Jan 10
Number of Species 47
Number of Individuals 898
Number of Checklists 6
Highest Count for a Species   (sample size)
Species Name Jan 4 Jan 5 Jan 6 Jan 7 Jan 8 Jan 9 Jan 10
Trumpeter Swan 87
(2)
Gadwall 2
(1)
American Wigeon 14
(1)
Mallard 12
(4)
Green-winged Teal 12
(1)
Ring-necked Duck 1
(1)
Bufflehead 2
(1)
Hooded Merganser 8
(1)
Double-crested Cormorant 8
(2)
Great Blue Heron 1
(3)
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
(2)
Cooper’s Hawk 1
(1)
Bald Eagle 8
(4)
Red-tailed Hawk 1
(3)
American Coot 4
(1)
Western/Glaucous-winged Gull 4
(2)
Glaucous-winged Gull 1
(1)
gull sp. 8
(2)
Rock Pigeon 20
(3)
Eurasian Collared-Dove 2
(1)
Mourning Dove 2
(1)
Belted Kingfisher 1
(1)
Red-breasted Sapsucker 1
(1)
Downy Woodpecker 1
(2)
Northern Flicker 3
(3)
Pileated Woodpecker 1
(1)
American Kestrel 1
(1)
Merlin 1
(1)
Steller’s Jay 2
(1)
Western Scrub-Jay 3
(3)
American Crow 200
(6)
Black-capped Chickadee 8
(4)
Red-breasted Nuthatch 2
(1)
Brown Creeper 1
(1)
Pacific Wren 2
(1)
Marsh Wren 8
(1)
Golden-crowned Kinglet 20
(1)
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 30
(4)
American Robin 16
(2)
European Starling 30
(5)
Spotted Towhee 6
(4)
Fox Sparrow 4
(2)
Song Sparrow 30
(4)
Golden-crowned Sparrow 2
(1)
Dark-eyed Junco 12
(4)
Brewer’s Blackbird 30
(1)
House Sparrow 8
(1)

Biking for Birds – Not Me. A Blog to Watch

I just found a blog following Dorian Anderson who is doing a fundraising green big year. He started yesterday on a “zero-petroleum” for transportation big year, by bike and foot.  Amazingly his first two birds were snowy and short-eared owls by bike in Massachusetts.  I plan to follow him at http://bikingforbirds.blogspot.com   I’m sure our Eastern WA class trip will be relatively balmy compared to his Jan 1 day biking for birds in MA at 8 degres F.  I though some of you might enjoy this.