We’re all looking forward to our annual picnic scheduled for Saturday, August 8, Covid-19 willing. And we’re excited by two recent events and hope to share these with picnic attendees: First, our resident ospreys have hatched three chicks. The nest is visible from the yard and a telescope puts you right in the nest. The noise from the talking parents can be heard for blocks! I guess they’re happy parents! Second, we have a pair of red-breasted sapsuckers nesting somewhere near-by. I can’t find the nest but we see them regularly. This siting makes 63 species found at our home!
Read more: WHAS Annual Picnic Invitation
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Category: Bird Lists
By Russ Koppendrayer
For the month of June we only added a half dozen species to our Cowlitz County year list, however two of them were quite unusual. A female Acorn Woodpecker put in a morning appearance on 6/11 at a feeder on Pleasant Hill Road and was photographed, only to never be seen again. This supplied the fifth record for the county and an exciting lifer for the home owners.
The very next morning on 6/12 an adult male American Redstart was found singing on some Port of Kalama property that is accessible to the public. This first ever record for Cowlitz County was joined by a female a few days later and both birds persist at that location until this writing at the end of June and have been seen by numerous birders. No evidence of nesting at this point, except for the presence of the pair. I consider this an "about time" find as we are the thirty-fifth out of the thirty-nine Washington counties to record this species. However the vast majority of counties have only records of migrating birds, especially in the fall, so having a pair on territory is a special treat. We'll try to keep a watch on this pair to see if there are further developments.
Be healthy and safe out there.
Download the pdf here.
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Category: Bird Lists
By Russ Koppendrayer
This has been the spring to find flycatchers migrating through Cowlitz County that will do their nesting on the east side of the Cascade Mountains. We started with our unprecedented numbers of Western Kingbird sightings. While this species appears annually in Cowlitz County during spring migration, this year there were numerous records including one of ten individuals in one small area of the Woodland Bottoms. The previous record size for one group was six last year, and there were many fewer occurrences that year.
Next a Dusky Flycatcher made an appearance in the Woodland Bottoms producing the third county record for this species. Dusky Flycatcher always makes spring migration appearances in a few western Washington locations, but our bird seemed to be one of an abnormally high number of sightings.
Lastly a Gray Flycatcher was found along Barlow Point Road giving Cowlitz its first ever record for this species. Much more rarely seen in western Washington, our bird was also part of a bigger than usual count. Thurston and Pierce counties to our north also saw their first ever records of Gray Flycatcher. This species has been making a big population increase as a breeding species in eastern Washington in the last couple decades which may account for a few more using this side of the Cascades for a migration route, or the bonus sightings may have been an outlier. Time will tell.
Enjoy the breeding season and be safe and healthy.
Download the pdf here.
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Category: Previous Programs
Kyleen Austin's presentation "Exploring the Waters Of The Pacific Northwest", that was canceled in March, has been rescheduled as a live-streamed event on Youtube at 2 PM, June 28, 2023.
The YouTube channel can be found here.
It is the story with photographs of Austin's epic journey kayaking from Alaska to Washington during Summer, 2023.
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New species at our farm
Spring Migration of Swifts documented at Rainier Church
Membership Form
Program: Exploring the Waters of the Pacific Northwest
Volunteer Opportunity: Purple Martin Count and Banding
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Category: Volunteer Opportunities
Randy Hill, along with Cindy McCormack, will be banding and counting purple martins again this summer at various locations in SW Washington.
They will likely have 3, possibly 4 banding sessions in July and August, about 10-14 days apart. “Everyone will have a chance to see up close and handle nestlings, learn aging comparing nestlings to representative photos of plumage, feather emergence and patterning. As with band searches and attempts to ID we will sex and age adults and yearlings.” Locations include Ridgefield NWR, Julia Butler Hanson NWR and Indian Jack Slough, the Columbia Land Trust property near Cathlamet, as well as others.
Randy says that birders are welcome to count birds at gourd and nest box locations themselves, following guidelines he can provide interested parties. He recommends having 2 scopes and several spotters from different spotting angles for accuracy. These counts can begin at any time.
For more information and to volunteer to help with banding This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - April Update
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Category: Bird Lists
By Russ Koppendrayer
I'm amazed at the size of our list at the end of April. As migration gets really going in earnest it is usually a month of lots of new species, but with the shelter in place rules I thought we'd struggle a bit this year to see them all. Our composite list does not seem to reflect that however.
With the reporting of birds found on personal property and folks getting out a bit to get some exercise we seem to have found a very nice selection of birds. However, even our most avid birders seem to have seen a smaller percentage of the species on this list than in a typical year.
While we had a few species found in April that are less than annual in Cowlitz, even those were not particularly rare, but seen in most years. Hopefully we can all continue to enjoy the ongoing migration and stay safe and healthy at the same time.
Download the pdf here.
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Category: News
By Larry Brandt
We know how bored and upset kids can get at times when their activities are restricted. Perhaps we have an answer for parents and grandparents caring for grade school kids during the covid-19 pandemic. We have seven pages of things for kids to do at home. Of course, they are conservation, outdoor and environment related. Hopefully, they will provide your youngsters with hours of entertainment.
All pages were developed by Suzy Whittey, a long-time member of Willapa Hills Audubon. Each comes as a .pdf file that you can open (and download) by clicking the image. Then just print them and you are set.
Bird Color Page
Bird Word Search
Color Annimals of the NW
Spy in the Woods
Wetland Word Search
Wildlife Homes
Match Animal Tracks
2023 Cowlitz County Bird List - March Update
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Category: Bird Lists
By Russ Koppendrayer
We only added 9 species to our year list in March. Two things would seem to account for this; first that we found many of the early arriving migrants on the last week of February leaving few for March, and second the coronavirus pandemic which has naturally caused much less birder action in the field.
Our mega vagrant from February, the Siberian Accentor, was last seen on March 26th giving it at least a fifty day stay. Whether it has left or just not seen because no one is making thorough efforts is unknown. A phenomenal visit in either case.
Two species that are less than annual put in brief appearances in Cowlitz County this month. A Say's Phoebe was seen in the Woodland Bottoms and a Mountain Bluebird passed through Willow Grove. I know that migration will begin to pick up steam as spring advances, but above all stay safe and healthy.
If you do find new species at home of safe forays out please document to eBird, Tweeters or send me a personal note.