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Berlin, Ocean Pines News Worcester County Bayside Gazette Logo Berlin, Ocean Pines News Worcester County Bayside Gazette

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Annual Birding Weekend flies in, April 21-24

(April 21, 2016) The 2016 Delmarva Birding Weekend is set to bring hundreds of nature enthusiasts to the shore, April 21-24, to enjoy the full complement of Mid-Atlantic birds, as the region welcomes warblers, tanagers, and other spring migrants – and prepares to bid adieu to its loons, falcons and waterfowl as they head northward.
Registration for the event is open at www.delmarvabirding.com.
Outdoor lovers can register for just one field trip, or multiple field trips each day of the four-day event. On Thursday, you can get an early start to the weekend, with shorebirds along the Delaware Bayshore at Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge and the Mispillion Harbor. On Friday, you can start your morning searching for rails by kayak on Delaware’s inland bays, and enjoy a songbird and shorebird spectacle at Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge in the afternoon.
Exploring the bald cypress swamps by kayak around Snow Hill, on Saturday morning, will add several warbler species to your list, and a boat trip behind Assateague and Ocean City in the afternoon can increase your tally for the weekend to more than 100 species. You might choose to take an all-day boat trip to Smith Island on Saturday to welcome back breeding pelicans and herons, and enjoy a slice of Smith Island cake with lunch.
Several field trips have sold out, so interested birders are encouraged to register soon.
Guided by local birders with decades-long experience on the peninsula, the walking tours, boat trips, and canoe and kayak paddles will accommodate visitors from the curious nature lover to fowl fanatics. Every year, birdwatchers from surrounding states flock to the event.
“This is one of our biggest nature-oriented weekends,” Lisa Challenger, tourism director for Worcester County, said. “People go crazy over the number of eagles and herons, but they will see a lot more than that birding with our guides around Assateague Island and our cypress swamps near Snow Hill.”
Boasting patient and fun loving guides, new trips will feature jaunts around Laurel, Delaware – and Maryland’s Chincoteague Bay – through some of the most pristine habitats on the East Coast.
For the first time, the Delmarva Birding Weekend is co-hosting a showing of the bird documentary “The Messenger,” with the Rehoboth Beach Film Society. The film will be shown on Friday, April 22, at the Cinema Art Theater in Lewes, Delaware.
“The April weekend is spectacular,” Southern Delaware Tourism Director Scott Thomas said. “Picture slinking around a bend in your canoe on Trussum Pond to be met with one of the most beautiful yellows you’ve ever seen … in the form of a prothonotary warbler. Or, spend a Friday afternoon at Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge, or boating around Lewes and the Delaware Bay, followed by craft beer and a movie. That’s what the weekend is all about.”
Social events for new and experienced birders are scheduled throughout the weekend. These “Tally Rallies” are held at local breweries, bars, and restaurants, and provide participants to add to the species checklist and swap birding stories with new friends.
Indeed, participants recount the event in terms of experiences, rather than simply observing birds – a majestic Bald Eagle soaring over the marsh, a loon in breeding plumage catching fish, or the eerie hoot and shadow of a barred owl at dusk. An outdoor experience is the true draw.
The Delmarva Peninsula is one of the country’s premier birding areas, thanks to an extensive variety of habitat protected by our coastal parks, refuges and wildlife management areas. More than 400 bird species have been recorded in the region, and previous weekend tallies have topped 200 species.
If boasting that many species isn’t enough, participants should feel even better knowing that they’ve helped Delmarva’s birds by promoting birding and habitat conservation. Birders, both novice and experienced, make an important statement about the economic value of birds and their habitats through the money they spend in local hotels, restaurants, and shops. Participants are encouraged to remind local businesses that they are here to enjoy Delmarva’s natural areas and the birds that inhabit them.
“It’s our vast shallow bays and large tracts of protected marshes and bald cypress forests that make the Delmarva Peninsula one of the finest birding regions in the nation,” guide and organizer Jim Rapp said. “During the Weekend, our guests will hike on private farmland and woodland that are normally off-limits to birders, and our waterborne trips go where the birds are.”
Co-organizer Dave Wilson added that none of our trips were physically taxing, and that the event provides a rare opportunity to tally 100 species in a day in places that are normally inaccessible to the public.
Sponsors for the events include Worcester County Tourism, Southern Delaware Tourism, the Boardwalk Hotel Group, the Delmarva Almanac, Hodges Taylor Art Consultancy, the Town of Snow Hill, MD, the Delaware Center for the Inland Bays, Somerset County (MD) Tourism, the Howard Johnson’s Oceanfront Plaza Hotel, Days Inn Ocean City, the Atlantic Sands Hotel and Conference Center, Fager’s Lighthouse, the Breakers Hotel and Suites, the Atlantic Hotel in Berlin, and The Avenue Inn.
Additional sponsor and registration information, field trip descriptions and other resources for Delmarva Birding are available at www.delmarvabirding.com.
To become a sponsor or for additional information, contact Jim Rapp (443-614-0261) or Dave Wilson (443-523-2201) at Conservation Community Consulting at conservationcc@gmail.com.