Great Lakes Information Network

GLIN==> Press release: Great Lakes byway becomes flyway for spring migration

Kara Dunn karalynn at gisco.net

Tue Apr 13 16:26:53 EDT 2010

PRESS RELEASE: April 13, 2010
Contact:  Teresa Mitchell, Great Lakes Seaway Trail, 315-646-1000; Gerry
Smith, ornithologist/author, cell: 315-771-6902

Great Lakes byway becomes flyway for spring migration
 
Great Lakes Seaway Trail, NY and PA ­ From now into early June, the Great
Lakes Seaway Trail byway, with 518 miles of open water, feeder streams,
backbays, and diverse shoreline habitat, becomes a fabulous flyway for
spring bird migration.
 
Ornithologist Gerald Smith says, ³Spring migration in the Great Lakes Seaway
Trail region is exciting because of the intensity with which the birds head
north to their nesting grounds.²
 
Smith should know. A professional birdwatcher, Smith has spent a lifetime
studying the birds and their migration, nesting and breeding habits along
the shoreline route that encompasses the St. Lawrence River, Lake Ontario,
the Niagara River and Lake Erie in New York and Pennsylvania.
 
³There is always something in the air over the Great Lakes Seaway Trail
whether it be warblers in the spring or raptors in the depths of winter to
warm the cockles of a birder¹s heart,² Smith says.
 
This spring Smith suggests one ³look up for diurnal migrants and check even
unlikely sites for extraordinary rarities that have appeared in unexpected
places on the byway.²
 
The best time to view the greatest number of birds and different species is
dawn to mid-morning.
 
Smith is author of the new, fully-illustrated Birding the Great Lakes Seaway
Trail field guide published by Seaway Trail, Inc., the nonprofit
organization, based in Sackets Harbor, NY, that promotes travel and tourism
along the route that is one of America¹s Byways.
 
Here are some tips from the guidebook for spring birdwatching on the Great
Lakes Seaway Trail byway-flyway:
 
·      Duck Run Ravine at the 540-acre Erie Bluffs State Park is one of the
few places the Cerulean Warbler may still nest along the Seaway Trail
Pennsylvania shoreline ­ look closely in late May through early June, but
quietly so not to disturb the nesters. The park is 12 miles west of Erie,
PA, near Lake City.
 
·      Tifft Nature Preserve in the Buffalo metropolitan area is one of the
largest remaining marshes in Erie County, NY. The area is popular with land
bird migrants and wetland breeding birds and is a fine example of the
benefits of reclaiming former landfill areas.
 
·      The far western end of Lake Ontario has several New York State Parks
(Four Mile Creek, Wilson-Tuscarora, Golden Hill, and Lakeside Beach) that
fill with melodic warblers by the end of April. The colorful Neotropical
long-distance fliers are seen here in May.
 
·      From mid-April to early June, sites near Lake Ontario can be abundant
with migrant songbirds. Many species of warblers, vireos, thrushes and
flycatchers feed here in preparation for a nocturnal crossing of Lake
Ontario. Keep a sharp out in such areas as Sodus Bay and the Lake Shore
Wildlife Management Area.
 
·      A perennially favorite Great Lakes Seaway Trail byway birdwatching
spot along the eastern shore of Lake Ontario is Derby Hill, east of Oswego,
NY. Smith calls Derby Hill ³one of the finest areas for observing spring
migration in all of North America.² He says Derby Hill can match such Great
Lakes birding hot spots as Point Pelee and Whitefish Point and, on spring
days when the wind is out of the south-southeast, gives Cape May, New Jersey
and Hawk Mountain, Pennsylvania a run for the birding tourism dollars.
 
·      May and June are marvelous months for birding from Henderson Bay to
Chaumont Bay along the Great Lakes Seaway Trail. Watch for rare and
declining grassland breeding species such as Henslow¹s Sparrow and Upland
Sandpiper. Farther east, along the St. Lawrence River, the grasslands at
Hammond and Lisbon provide habitat for Bobolinks, Eastern Meadowlark,
Savannah Sparrow, Horned Lark and Sedge Wren.
 
As you travel the byway-flyway also watch for a series of 18 birding-theme
Great Lakes Seaway Trail ³outdoor storyteller² interpretive signs that offer
fascinating facts about the birds and the byway habitat that attracts them.
Find the locations of the signs online at
http://www.seawaytrail.com/interpretivepanels.html.
 
A Great Lakes Seaway Trail birding itinerary and fact sheet are posted
online at http://www.seawaytrail.com/birding.html. The Birding the Great
Lakes Seaway Trail field guide and an audio tour CD are available for sale
at www.seawaytrailstore.com or call 315-646-1000. #
 
Great Lakes Seaway Trail birding attractions include:
·      Presque Isle State Park
·      Asbury Woods Nature Center
·      Ripley Hawk Watch
·      Jamestown Audubon Society
·      Roger Tory Peterson Institute of Natural History
·      Dunkirk Harbor
·      Artpark at Lewiston
·      Braddock Bay Bird Observatory
·      Owl Woods and Raptor Banding Station
·      Chimney Bluffs State Park
·      Sterling Nature Center
·      Oswego Harbor
·      Mexico Point Town Park
·      Black Pond Wildlife Management Area
·      Cape Vincent Grasslands
·      Wellesley Island
·      Indian River Lakes
·      Chippewa Bay
·      Wilson Hill Wildlife Management Area # # #


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