DULUTH, Minn. _ The veteran birders said it was a slow morning, but after less than 90 minutes of walking around Park Point in Duluth, Minn., we had seen more than two dozen species of birds.
"I think that was number 24 or 25," said Shannon Robertson as she checked off a ruby throated-kinglet, bufflehead ducks and red-breasted mergansers on her bird list. Usually, the experts said, it would be at least 40 or 50 species in any given morning.
Robertson, a long time birder and repeat customer on these free birding field trips offered by the Duluth Audubon Society, said the morning count paled in comparison to the 80 species of birds she counted on the previous Wednesday morning on a trip in the Sax-Zim bog north of Duluth.
"But, considering how few warblers we saw, it's still a good morning," Robertson said. "I love group birding. You see more birds when you have more sets of eyes and ears ... And it's a social thing. It's fun to experience this with other people."
On a warm, sunny morning last week, Robertson was part of our group of 18 birders _ some newbies, some veterans _ to take part in the so-called Audubon "warbler walks." The walk, which started at the Park Point Beach House (and another like it each Thursday in western Duluth) is aimed at seeing the great northward migration of warblers, tiny passerines or songbirds that fly thousands of miles from tropical climates, many to nest in Northland forests.
As the little birds avoid flying over Lake Superior, they fly over land in Duluth. They move mostly at night. During the day they set-down in trees and shrubs to rest and feed. If the weather is very nice at night they will stop less and keep flying. But if the weather is at all foggy or rainy, they will set down and wait it out.
"That's really when the best days are when you see the most warblers _ when it's kind of dreary out and not good flying weather," said Kim Eckert, a renowned Duluth birder and author of "A Birder's Guide to Minnesota."
He said the unusually turbulent spring weather, with blasts of snow and cold, also has altered the migration this year.
Eckert was a substitute guide for this Audubon warbler walk. Each Tuesday and Thursday walk offers at least one birding expert and usually more. It's those experts that can spot what appears to be a distant brown or black spot and, using flight characteristics and what time of year it is, declare it a shorebird. In one such case last week closer blobs became sanderlings, by Eckert's declaration, a type of shorebird that was flying north in groups of a dozen or so, hugging the flat calm surface of Lake Superior just off the sand beach.
Eckert took a report of a distant duck on the bay side, focused his Swarovski 60-power spotting scope, and declared it a rare (for Duluth anyhow) white-winged scoter, a big sea duck that nests in the Arctic.
"We don't get many of those here," Eckert said, before turning his attention to a flock of greater scaup resting on the bay. As people took turns using Eckert's spotting scope to see the deep greens and purples of the drake scaup's head feathers, a large flock of black-and-white gulls flew by, just above the waves on the harbor.
"Bonaparte gulls!" Eckert bellowed. "They're close everybody, right in front of us."
Bonaparte gulls are smaller, tern-shaped gulls that pass through the Twin Ports but don't nest here. They are another spring fling species that help make field trips special at migration time.
We did eventually see a couple of yellow-rumped warblers, feeding and resting for their next fight that night. We also saw brown thrashers, loons, not-so-common terns, a merlin falcon, song sparrows, and hundreds and hundreds of blue jays, some in flocks of 100, winging north. That's on top of the more noticeable winged residents like crows, blackbirds, robins, Canada geese, cardinals and the ever-present ring-billed gulls.
At one point, along the harbor side of Park Point, Eckert trained his spotting scope on a tree swallow as the sun was shining on its iridescent top feathers and highlighting it's snow-white lower half. The bird seemed to be posing for us, perched on the tip-top branch of a lone tree. It wasn't rare. It wasn't a warbler. It wasn't even migrating; it lives here. But it was still special.
"It's a nice looking bird," Eckert said.
Marcia Kyle, a retired biologist, was soaking it all in on the warbler walk. A Texas native who now lives in Norway, said she never knew the Northland was such a hot-spot for birding. A retired biologist, Kyle said she has been a recreational birder since she was a small child.
"I feel so lucky to have ended up here. We've seen so many things here. It's really an amazing place to see birds," said Kyle, who tagged along for the six months in Duluth while her husband was on sabbatical here. "We've done the Hawk Ridge (spring) migration and the Sax-Zim Bog. You are so lucky to have all this here."
Local Audubon revival?
Josh Bailey, who leads the Thursday warbler walks and who serves as president of the Duluth Audubon chapter, said the group is trying to revive its ranks and its mission. They want more people not just to enjoy birding and nature but also help preserve and protect birds and their habitats in the Northland.
Eckert said the Duluth chapter has been struggling to draw new members in recent years.
"This chapter, and I think a lot of organizations, are struggling to attract new people," Eckert said. "It used to be that if you wanted to learn about birds, if you wanted to find out where the birds were around here, you had to go to Audubon meetings and listen to the members. ... Now, you can just click on a website or go on social media and it's all there, free. You don't have to get involved in a group."
Bailey said the chapter's goals toward revival are threefold. The first is to perform more on-the-ground conservation, like a post-2012 flood project Bailey headed to restore 20 acres of forest along Kingsbury Creek uphill from the Duluth Zoo. The project transformed a tract of stunted aspen and birch and planted maple, white pine, red pine, cedar and oak. Now, Bailey is waiting for more birds to call it home.
It's that kind of dirty-hands conservation work that not only helps birds but helps the local community, Bailey noted, and can unite people in conservation.
Second, Bailey wants Audubon to have a higher profile in Duluth.
"Many people know that Audubon means birds. But they probably don't know what we do for birds," he said, noting the group is trying to expand its warbler walks into Superior but has been unable to find Superior birder who is able and willing to lead them.
Lastly, Duluth Audubon is looking for a new, younger flight of members, even if they get involved only for a specific project or single issue. Bring your issue with you and join in, Bailey said.
"We know there are people in this area who are interested in issues and ideas that relate to habitat and birds and conservation. We just need to wrangle them in," he said. "If you have an idea, and if it matches our mission, let's put Audubon's name on it and get it done."