Spring Migration Bird Count Event, 7 May 2022

Gold Finches. Cortes Island Spring Bird Count, 7 May 2022. Photo Christian Gronau
Gold Finches. Cortes Island Spring Bird Count, 7 May 2022. Photo Christian Gronau
Gold Finches. Cortes Island Spring Bird Count, 7 May 2022. Photo Christian Gronau

Cortes Island Spring Count – A Success!

The weather on May 7 was very favourable for the approximately 20 birders that partook in the Cortes Island’s Spring Migration Birding Event organized by the Cortes Island Museum. A total of 14 lists with species names were collected and just over 90 species tallied. It is an impressive list too.

The Cortes and Mitlenatch environs are very diverse, and it is reflected in not just the number of species but in their variety as our archipelago is a major stopover zone for the multitude of birds, some with nesting sites as far north as Alaska and all the lands between.

Pacific Golden Plover, Spring Bird Count, Cortes Island, May 2022. Photo John Sprungman
Pacific Golden Plover, Cortes Island Spring Bird Count, May 2022. Photo John Sprungman

Highlights of the event include two very rare shorebirds: the Golden Plover at Sprungman’s (the day before the count, see posting in the Tideline Gallery) and Autumn and Cory’s Solitary Sandpiper at Linnaea, at the restored Dillon Creek wetlands. (The wetlands were restored by Friends of Cortes Island, FOCI. Check our their website for more information about FOCI programs.) Also, eleven finches, seven warblers, six waders (sandpipers), four grebes, four woodpeckers (and we know the missing Hairy Woodpecker is out there somewhere), sixteen ducks/geese (and we know the Wood Ducks at Kw’as pond were hiding).

Solitary Sandpiper. Cortes Island Spring Bird Count, May 2022. Photo Autumn Willow
Solitary Sandpiper at the restored Dillon Creek wetlands. Cortes Island Spring Bird Count, May 2022. Photo Autumn Willow

Not all birds on the list are migrants as many of the birds recorded are summer and year-round residents. There are still birds out there on their way to Cortes; not everyone is here… Swainson’s Thrush, Olive-sided Flycatcher, and of course, our lovely “sound of summer” – the Nighthawk – last to arrive in the first week of June.

Do have a look at the list posted on our bird page and get a feel for the variety.

Big thank you to all the volunteers who just had plain old fun BIRDWATCHING and submitted their observations.

Take some time now to listen to the chorus that we are treated to, in the next two months in particular, as the birds have come a long way to make Cortes their home!

And be on the lookout as new birds are coming every day — today (May 17) our glorious singer, the Swainson’s Thrush arrived!

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