Camera Icon
H Aziz

Trip Highlights

Check out highlights from previous field trips. Not all field trips are represented.
Photos are provided by participants. Click on each for a better view.

Search the Archives

Search by any content you desire!
Year, location, leader, bird type and more!
Reset
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Showing
0
out of
0
results.

Longmeadow Flats

April 2016

April 23, 2016

Janet Orcutt

The morning walk at Longmeadow Flats was attended by nine birders who saw 31 species.  We began the walk under overcast skies and the light was not great for birding.  It cleared up within an hour and we started seeing a good number of “first of the year” birds.  There were two Yellow Warblers, a Gnatcatcher, at least seven Palm Warblers, and two Towhees, the last at close range.  We found two Red-headed Woodpeckers in the usual area, one of which was persistently checking out a nest hole.  The Tree swallows put on an aerial show for us and a Rough-winged Swallow joined in as well.  We counted seven Great Blue Herons, four of them hanging around together near the woodpeckers.  The most common bird was the Yellow-rumped Warbler - at least a dozen.  It was a nice beginning to the spring migration.

Breakfast & Upriver to Turners Falls

April 2016

April 16, 2016

Seth Kellogg

Only six came to the scrumptious breakfast at Sylvester’s, and the first birding idea was to check out the Wilson’s Snipe behind one of the malls in Hadley.  We parked and walked along a wet gully until the birds jumped and flew farther along one at a time, with five seen.  Also there was a Killdeer.  A run through the Honeypot on the way to Rte. 91 north got us only a singing Brown Thrasher.  We met up with two more people at Riverview Road, where the sun off the water at Barton Cove was blinding.  We still managed to note three Double-crested Cormorants and a few Mute Swans.  A small group of Tree and Rough-winged Swallows circled low over our heads.  From Barton Cove we spotted a pair of Ring-necked Ducks, more swans, and better looks at the eagle on its nest.  We drove to the Rod and Gun Club to find more swans and some circling Turkey Vultures.  The airport had two Kestrels, a Bluebird, and 2 singing Field Sparrows.  On the Power Canal there was only a female Bufflehead diving constantly, and in the trees overhead a singing Pine Warbler.

Woodcock Watch, E. Longmeadow

April 2016

April 14, 2016

George Kingston

Ten participants were treated to watching evening American Woodcock courtship display!.  There were a grand total of six woodcocks.  Other birds of note were a Hermit Thrush, five American Robins, and one Great Horned Owl.

Longmeadow & Agawam

April 2016

April 2, 2016

Seth Kellogg

There were 15 participants on the trip to Longmeadow and Agawam.  Pynchon Point had pair of Wood Ducks going to a nesting hole in a big tree where they had nested many years ago.  Bondi’s Island had a few Ring-billed Gulls.  Mute Swans were nesting on Emerson Pond near the road and another single was at Pondside.  Also there was a pair of Ring-necked Ducks and a few Tree Swallows.  A bluebird was seen and heard singing from Tina Lane.  We walked into Bark Haul and found two adult Red-headed Woodpeckers and a pair of Bluebirds together.  On the way some of us glimpsed a Pied-billed Grebe in the pond along the road.

Walk and Wok trip to Turners Falls

March 2016

March 26, 2016

Steve Svec

Seven students and a new family of four joined eight members for the trip to Turners Falls.  A third Bald Eagle joined the nesting pair as almost constant companions during our stay at Barton Cove.  On the water from three viewpoints we found 12 Ring-necked Duck, 4 Mute Swan, 3 Hooded Merganser, 85 Tree Swallows.  Two flocks of Cedar Waxwings numbered more than 200, one group mostly seen on the ground beneath a fruiting tree at close range.  The Conte Power Canal had only a few Mallards, but a Turkey flushed from a pine tree overlooking the main river.  Upriver, the Rod and Gun Club had 2 male Bufflehead, 12 Common Mergansers, 3 Hooded Mergansers, 2 Mute Swans, and 3 Wood Ducks.  The nearby airport had a Kestrel fly overhead and a Killdeer that posed near the parking lot.  A luncheon at the China Gourmet in Greenfield followed the morning’s birding.

No results found, please try different search terms.
Got to top of page