Cook County News Herald

Annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count coming up





A regal chickadee sits atop a pine tree with what looks like nary a care in the world. Chickadees, and any other variety of bird that can be spotted, will be part of the 2016 Annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count that will be held on December 17.

A regal chickadee sits atop a pine tree with what looks like nary a care in the world. Chickadees, and any other variety of bird that can be spotted, will be part of the 2016 Annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count that will be held on December 17.

Both bird feeder watchers and walking/driving birders are needed for the 2016 Audubon Christmas Bird Count (CBC). The count will be held Saturday, December 17 for the Grand Marais CBC, which is a 7.5- mile radius circle from a point 3 miles south of the middle of Devil Track Lake.

The count circle covers Highway 61 to Lindskog Road and north, some of County Road 60, Gunflint Trail to the landfill road, Pine Mountain Road to the backside of Elbow Lake, Devil Track Road to Bally Creek Road, Ball Club Road to The Grade, Pike Lake Road, and Highway 61 west to Cascade Lodge, and all of the lakeshore between Lindskog Road and Cascade Lodge.

You can cover as much or as little as you’d like. You can be a novice to a professional since CBCs are open to birders of all skill levels. We can use both walkers/ drivers as well as feeder watchers that can identify birds and can count the highest number of a single species in an area as well.

We’ll also need any species of birds that you see in the count circle, but not on the count day. This “count week” happens for the three days prior and three days after the Saturday count day.

For count day, you will need a guidebook, binoculars, a scope for lake birding, warm clothes, warm boots/Yak Traks, a logbook to record your observations, and a keen and quick eye to count our winter rarities! If you are a feeder watcher, keep your feeders full through count day to encourage birds to be there on that day. Please have various foods available in feeders and on the ground to entice as many species as possible.

While Audubon’s National CBC effort began Christmas Day 1900, the first known Minnesota CBCs were conducted on Christmas Day 1905 in Minneapolis, and Red Wing. During those last 110 years, the Christmas Bird Count has been held uninterrupted in the state and has grown to include almost 70 census circles and involved more than 28,000 participants. Each and every year greater than 1,000 participants canvass the state to conduct the survey.

These members have logged nearly 77,000 total hours, traveling approximately 548,000 miles. The Minnesota CBC has tallied over 8.5 million birds of 201 species. Today, over 55,000 volunteers from all 50 states, every Canadian province, parts of Central and South America, Bermuda, the West Indies, and Pacific Islands count and record every individual bird and bird species seen in a specified area. Each counting group completes a census of the birds found during one 24-hour period between December 14 and January 5 in a designated circle 15 miles in diameter, about 177 square miles.

Please contact Jeremy Ridlbauer at sundew@ boreal.org or 370-0733 to notify us about what area you can cover or what feeder or area you will be watching.

We’d like to contact you or have you contact us on the count day to report results. We’ll meet at 4:15 p.m. at Blue Water Café on count day to compile results from anyone who can make it there at that time.


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