Posts Tagged ‘ Coastal Georgia Birding ’

Bird Education Network to Hold National Gathering on Jekyll Island

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009


 Beginning February 22, over 100 bird educators and enthusiasts from bird clubs, nature centers, school system, refuges and parks will be flocking to Jekyll Island for the 2009 Bird Education Network National Gathering. The Bird Education Network (BEN) Committee, along with the Council for Environmental Education and Flying WILD, chose Jekyll Island because of its exceptional birding and nature-based tourism opportunities.

Open to anyone with an interest in bird education and conservation efforts, the five day event encourages attendees to explore not only Jekyll Island but other nearby wildlife viewing areas as well. Guided field sessions include bird rambles on Jekyll Island, kayak trips in the intercoastal waterways, canoe trips through the Okefenokee Swamp and other outdoor adventures. Indoors, at the Jekyll Island Club Hotel, the gathering’s host hotel, speakers and exhibitors share their knowledge and experience on subjects such as urban-based bird education, climate change, and connecting families to nature.

“We are thrilled to be selected as the host hotel for Bird Education Network’s 2009 National Gathering,” said Patty Henning, Director of Sales at the Jekyll Island Club Hotel. “Jekyll Island has numerous opportunities for our guests to explore nature and it is gratifying to see these recognized in the birding community.”

As part of the Colonial Coat Birding and Nature Trail, Jekyll Island is home to over 250 bird species including Bald Eagles, Roseate Spoonbill, Painted Bunting, and Woodstorks. These species have attracted the attention of birders for years and are the reason for such annual events as Georgia’s Colonial Coast Birding and Nature Festival. The annual festival is held the second week of October each year. Jekyll Island was designated an Important Birding Area by the Audubon Society in 2001.

“We were drawn to Jekyll Island because of its reputation in the birding community,” said Geoffrey Castro, Manager of Operations and Marketing for the Council for Environmental Education and member of the Gathering’s planning committee. “Jekyll Island offers one of the best opportunities for our conference attendees to come within viewing range of so many magnificent species.”

Registration for the 2009 National Gathering is still open. Daily registrations are also available. For registration and a full conference agenda visit www.birdeducation.org/jekyllisland.

“With no less than 65% of the island protected as a natural sanctuary, Jekyll Island is the perfect setting for this bird education conference,” stated Jones Hooks, Executive Director of the Jekyll Island Authority.

Jekyll Island currently has seven hotels open and operating, including the nationally recognized Jekyll Island Club Hotel, the host hotel for the conference. Other hotels include the Beachview Club, Oceanside Inn & Suites, Quality Inn, Jekyll Oceanfront Clarion Resort, Villas By The Sea and the Days Inn & Suites. Rental cottages are also available through two local real estate firms. Trip planning information can be found at jekyllisland.com

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Salt Marsh Wildlife Viewing Platform Opens!

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

The Jekyll Island Salt Marsh Wildlife Viewing Platform officially opened on November 10, 2008. Located next to the Visitor Information Center on the Jekyll Island Causeway, the Wildlife Viewing Platform is a two-story structure built to provide the public with an extended view of the expansive salt marsh adjacent to Jekyll Island. By providing a better view, the platform will bolster an appreciation for this rich habitat. Among the many wading and shore birds that guests can view from this spot are the beautiful Roseate Spoonbill, Bald Eagle, Woodstork, and Clapper Rail.

“Providing non-invasive access to natural areas is a key component of the Jekyll Island Authority mission,” said Christa Frangiamore, Conservation Manager for the Jekyll Island Authority. “We are proud to have the Wildlife Viewing Platform as part of this mission.”

The Jekyll Island Salt Marsh Wildlife Viewing Platform is made possible by the monetary support and in-kind donations from: The Atlanta Audubon Society, The Coastal Georgia Audubon Society, Shearouse Lumber Company, The Georgia Ornithological Society, and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources – Wildlife Resources Division.

For more information on the Wildlife Viewing Platform, as well as other birding and nature walk opportunities on Jekyll Island, please call the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center at 1-877-4JEKYLL.

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Jekyll Birdchat Biophilia

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

By Lydia Thompson

It was a very interesting article. I stopped to read it because of the picture on the first page. There in the picture was a pale Red-Tailed Hawk sitting on a gray cement building. The bird was the only living thing in the picture on that page. There were no living plants, no blue sky, just the bird sitting on the gray hard surface. Pale Male, the Red-Tailed Hawk, is a celebrity. He became a controversial celebrity when he was evicted from his home. He had lived on that building for years but the people he lived with were not happy with the wildness of their hawk neighbor. After all, he was messy, but they had to live with him. The nest of this bird was protected. But with the loosening of an environmental law the nest itself could be removed when the bird was not using it for nesting.

So on December 7, 2004 Pale Male’s nest was removed from its exclusive address in New York City. The fact that Pale Male had lived and nested at this address for eleven years didn’t matter to this law. The only fact that mattered was that the nest was vacant. Never mind that for eleven years he was watched, monitored and cheered by a large group of admirers, some were birders, others were just fans of this wild bird in their large city. This group was stunned to see the nest heartlessly removed. Then Pale Male started coming back with sticks to rebuild his nest and those sticks would roll off the building. You see the neighbors had removed the pigeon guards as well as the nest. The pigeon guards are what held the nest in place. This incensed the group of admirers. The fight was on. The crowd of admirers had watched for years as this wild aristocratic bird sailed on and off this building. They had watched this bird bring sticks, then food, to this nest year after year. Each year the chicks would be watched and cheered as they left the nest.

This living symbol Pale Male had to reclaim this home. The result was, not only did Pale Male get his home back, he got an architect to build him a more stable structure to hold the nest. The article goes on to ask the question “why this particular bird”? While reading the rest of the article I stumbled on a new word for me. The word was biophilia. It is a fascinating new word. It was invented by Harvard etymologist E. O. Wilson in 1984. He uses it to describe an innate human yearning to connect with nature. This word is meant to describe what you can see, touch and be a part of. Not an abstract idea of nature. Pale Male is a bird that the crowd of admirers could see, not just a bird perched on a tower out in the country somewhere never seen or caringly watched. These city people had a connection to Pale Male.

“Wild America” is a book by Roger Tory Peterson and James Fisher published in the late 1940’s. In this book James Fisher concludes that with the new invention of the air conditioner for buildings that people would become more cut off from the out of doors. In doing more research on this word biophilia I came across a definition that includes and expands on James Fisher’s idea to say that this alienation started with the industrial revolutions, which moved more people indoors. With more people working indoors sealed off from the elements, rain, wind, cold, and hot, the connection with nature is suppressed, canned and we lost our sense of interdependence with our wild neighbors.

Here, on Jekyll Island, there is a unique opportunity to reconnect with our wild neighbors. In fact Jekyll is a little of both worlds. Jekyll Island can offer a comfortable place to stay and the opportunity for any person, to go outside. We can walk the beach, a trail in the the marsh. We can connect to that natural real world. Now nature isn’t clean and neat. It can be very hot. It can be cold. But a walk will also allow you to connect to creatures that that balances out those messy elements. This reconnection to the wild side inspires us, and renews us. Oh, by the way, on the facing page from the photo of Pale Male on the building was an out of focus area of greens and blues. The two pages seemed to be two separate images connected only because they were side by side. It was the living bird, Pale Male, that connected the shape edged, man made façade of building to the distant blurred greens of trees and blue of the sky beyond. It was an image of biophilia. The bird connected us back with nature.

If you would like to read the article on “Understanding Pale Male”, it is in November/ December 2005 “Bird Watcher Digest.” It was written by Paul J. Baicich. Paul Baicich has been one of the people who inspire me in the bird conservation work I do. Enjoy nature and take some time to watch birds while on Jekyll Island.

About Lydia
Lydia’s major focus is to intertwine her bird studies and her art. In 1983 she left her safe job and for over a year she traveled and learned about birds. She has traveled widely in US, Canada and Mexico. Now living in the Golden Isles of Georgia she continues her studies of birds & the art of the intaglio print. Preservation and Conservation of bird habitats are her major concerns. Visit Lydia on Wednesdays at the Wild Birds Unlimited Nature Shop in the Jekyll’s Historic District or visit her web site www.lydiabirdsinart.homestead.com. She is blogging at: www.coastalgerogiabirding-lydia.blogspot.com.You can also go on a Thursday Morning Bird Ramble from 8 am to 11 am. Seating is limited. Please call for reservations. 912-634-1322.

Photographs of Pale Male and Lola are courtesy of Lincoln Karim.

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Jekyll Island Celebrates the Opening of the Wildlife Viewing Platform

Monday, December 15th, 2008


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The Jekyll Island Salt Marsh Wildlife Viewing Platform officially opened on November 10, 2008.  Located next to the Visitor Information Center on the Jekyll Island Causeway, the Wildlife Viewing Platform is a two-story structure built to provide the public with an extended view of the expansive salt marsh adjacent to Jekyll Island. By providing a better view, the Platform will bolster an appreciation for this rich habitat.  Among the many wading and shore birds that guests can view from this spot are the beautiful Roseate Spoonbill, Bald Eagle, Woodstork, and Clapper Rail.  “Providing non-invasive access to natural areas is a key component of the Jekyll Island Authority mission,” said Christa Frangiamore, Conservation Manager for the Jekyll Island Authority. “We are proud to have the Wildlife Viewing Platform as part of this mission.”  The Jekyll Island Salt Marsh Wildlife Viewing Platform is made possible by the monetary support and in-kind donations from: The Atlanta Audubon Society, The Coastal Georgia Audubon Society, Shearouse Lumber Company, The Georgia Ornithological Society, and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources – Wildlife Resources Division. For more information on the Wildlife Viewing Platform, as well as other birding and nature walk opportunities on Jekyll Island, please call the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center at 1-877-4-JEKYLL or visit www.jekyllisland.com.

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