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2010 WOS Conference
Wenatchee - June 11-14
Photos from Conference

Jeffrey Cohen, Hugh Jennings, Tim Finn, Wilson Cady, Russ Koppendreyer, Mike Denny
Photo by MerryLynn Denny
Write-ups from Field Trip Leaders
Burch Mountain - Wilson Cady
I have to thank all of the people who participated at
this year's conference. Those who organized it did a splendid
job on everything and all of the people I had a chance to bird
or visit with were a joy.
Wenatchee has some splendid scenery, wildflowers and birding
opportunities.
As the Monday morning Burch Mountain field
trip gathered in the Red Lion parking lot, Russ Koppendrayer
stopped by and told us how he started to drive up Burch Mountain
on Sunday and turned around after the third bend in the road
where there was a taillight laying in the road. Despite my best
efforts to scare off the participants by describing how
rutted the road was when I scouted it on June 3rd and how I
thought that it had deteriorated since then with the recent
rains there were six people who were still willing to give it a
go. Even walking the group up the start of the road to show them
the ruts failed to deter this hearty bunch. So we headed up
hill, two small four-wheel drive pickups and a Subaru Outback.
This road has few rocks and looks like it could be very
treacherous when wet but dry it was as solid as concrete and
gives good traction. But in the first three miles there are ruts
in about five different sections of the road where you are
driving on ridges between gullies that are up to two feet deep.
The taillight near the bottom of the mountain was only the first
of the many car parts that are along the roadside.
We stopped several times to listen for birds in a
stiff cold wind and to let our heart rates drop while listening
for birds. Few species were detected until we reached the
shelter of the conifer forest at the end of the road where we
could not only hear and see birds we were in a lovely wildflower
area where Susan Ballinger identified the various species for
us. I was delighted to see the locally endemic white delphinium
blooming amid tall forget-me-nots. Wandering around the top of
the mountain produced a nice sampling of common species such as
Hermit Thrush, Rock Wren, and Townsend's Solitaire. We
had stunning views of the
Columbia River
and Wenatchee far below us and from Eagle Rock we enjoyed the
eastern view of the
Cascade Mountains.
While eating lunch two four-wheel drive vehicles
drove up to the end of the road, a large maintenance vehicle for
the State Patrol communications tower on the mountain top that
had slipped into the gullies on the road up and had
high-centered on one of the ridges and was unable to move until
winched off by the State Patrol Officer that had been dispatched
to rescue it. The drive down seemed much easier (perhaps that
was just relief at seeing the valley floor come closer) and we
once again looked and listened for our target species the
Black-throated Sparrow but finding only Vesper, Lark and
Brewer's Sparrows. We ended up with a list of 52 species which
has to be the shortest list of any conference field trips.
I want to thank all of the participants of this fun
trip, Kathy Andrich, Susan Ballinger, Lee Barnes, David and Jo
Nunallee, Guy McWethy, and Shep Thorp. Special kudos to Lee and
David for be willing to take their vehicles to the end of the
earth and back between breakfast and dinner.
Burch Mountain - It's not just birding, it's an
adventure.
Wilson Cady
Washougal, WA
Entiat River Valley, Lake Chelan, and Wenatchee Confluence - Tim
O'Brien
My tired self and I are back from an extended weekend
in Wenatchee for the 22nd Annual WOS Conference. I led 3 different
trips which included the Entiat River valley, Lake Chelan area,
and the Wenatchee Confluence / Horan Natural Area. A big thank
you to everyone involved in organizing the conference this year!
It was great! I personally would like to thank Dan Stephens
for all the pre-trip info on where to find the target birds and
Brad Waggoner for his team attitude on sharing birds found since
we led the same trips on different days. Here's a quick list of
highlights from the 3 days:
Best personal bird - Dusky Grouse
First heard then seen way up the
North Fork Mud
Creek Road on Saturday. The "booming" was low and not very loud
and thanks to the good eyes of one of the trip participants
(thanks Dave!) the grouse was found just off the road about
half-way up a small fir tree that was only about 50 feet away.
With scopes trained on the bird, each time it vocalized we
could see the air sac on the neck and it was very red. The
"booming" was very quiet compared to that of Sooty Grouse which
you can hear from a great distance.
Woodpeckers Galore! Both Saturday and Sunday turned up several woodpeckers
including fantastic views of White-headed, Lewis's, Red-naped
Sapsucker, Hairy, Northern Flicker, and one Pileated.
Mountain Bluebirds - two different spots both
in the higher elevations above Mud Creek. One nesting pair seen
on Friday when I was scouting.
Peregrine Falcons - Seen on the cliffs of the Columbia
River both Saturday and Sunday morning. On Sunday, we added a
second for the day on another cliff wall along Navaree Coulee
Road.
Black Swifts - two seen today over the Horan
Natural area (good spotting Jeff!) I kept it quiet, but they
were a life bird for me! I had studied them in the field guides
beforehand and was so glad to see them on the last day.
I could go on and on - 81 species on Saturday, 95 on
Sunday, and probably 40 this morning on a half day trip. Thanks
to all the participants and I hope to see everyone next year!
Tim O'Brien
Cheney, WA
Swakane Canyon - Matt Bartels
This Saturday & Sunday I led WOS conference trips to
Swakane
Canyon
--Overall, both trips were great fun, with piles of bright
birds. (Also nice to have sunny weather back in force.)
Swakane Canyon,
~ 5 miles north of Wenatchee on Alt-97, is a great eastern WA
canyon w/ a riparian corridor running along its length. The road
is bumpy, but between last weekend and this one, the road was
graded and now would be passable by most cars [maybe not a
Prius]. The loop route for our trip from the Red Lion at
Wenatchee up to the ridgeline at Swakane, and out via Nahahum
canyon to Cashmere and back to Wenatchee was less than 40 miles
in length -- great for making constant short stops to explore
and see what is around.
Lazuli Bunting, Yellow-breasted Chat, Bullocks Oriole,
Warbling Vireos & Cedar Waxwing
were present at almost every stop - at least audibly.
At the entrance to Swakane, we started each trip w/ Gray Catbird , Canyon & Rock Wren, Say's Phoebe and our
first looks at some of the above birds. White-throated Swifts
& Violet-green Swallows worked the cliff-top here ,
presumably nesting. On Sunday, Brad Waggoner, en route to a
different WOS trip, led us to a pair of Peregrine Falcons along the rocky cliffs just north of the Swakane entrance
[visible from the dam viewing pull-out ].
We heard and eventually saw a few Chukar from
the cliff walls ~ 4 miles up the road from the Swakane entrance.
Woodpeckers:
In addition to Northern Flickers, both days we were happy to
get looks at Lewis's Woodpeckers mid-way up Swakane. In
addition, we saw White-headed Woodpeckers both days --
Sunday we eventually located a nest hole that was being
regularly visited by a male & female WHWO, presumably actively
feeding young.
Warblers:
Besides constant Chats, we also saw & heard: Yellow
Warbler, Nashville Warbler
[pretty common],MacGillivray's Warbler, &
Yellow-rumped Warbler [Audubon's].
Flycatchers: Western Wood-Pewees were common throughout the day, and Eastern
& Western Kingbirds were present mostly at the low ends of
the canyon. We had Pacific-slope Flycatcher in the
riparian areas near the beaver ponds, and Willow Flycatchers at the 2nd & 3rd beaver ponds. Dusky Flycatcher mostly
up high along the brushy slopes, and Hammond's Flycatcher in the conifers at the crest. At one point Saturday, we were
happy to have back to back
Hammond's &
Dusky views & songs to be able to do some good comparisons.
At the upper ponds, on Saturday we had duellingSwainson's
Thrush&Veery [Sunday only the Veery cooperated].
Cassin's Finch, Pine Siskins, Evening Grosbeaks & a couple
Red Crossbills (Saturday only) joined American Goldfinch &
House Finch on the finch list. Calliope Hummingbirds were
pretty common, and we had a few Cassin's Vireo singing.
One Warbling Vireo nest w/ a singing WAVI on it was a fun
find both days.
Coming down NahahumCanyon, we had Western
Bluebirds at a nest box Saturday. Sunday, we missed the
bluebirds, but instead were rewarded w/ a soaring Northern
Goshawk [being harrassed by a Kestrel], a Turkey Vulture , and heard-only Wild Turkeys.
Thanks WOS for organizing the conference
Matt Bartels
Going Home West - Brian Bell
We wrapped up one of the best WOS conferences with the
Going Home West #1 trip (eventually over
Stevens Pass).
Monday started out cooler than previous days with some early
morning clouds. As we left Wenatchee we saw VIOLET-GREEN
SWALLOW, ROCK PIGEON, AMERICAN CROW, AMERICAN ROBIN, and HOUSE
SPARROW. As we drove west on US 2 toward Leavenworth we picked
up BARN SWALLOW and OSPREY. Our first stop was at the Cashmere
Sewage Ponds. Nice birdy spot with OSPREY on a nest, MALLARD,
WOOD DUCK, NORTHERN SHOVELER with young, CANADA GOOSE, KILLDEER,
SPOTTED SANDPIPER, AMERICAN COOT, and BARN, CLIFF, TREE,
VIOLET-GREEN, NORTHERN ROUGH-WINGED, and BANK SWALLOWs, and
RED-WINGED and BREWER'S BLACKIRDs. Across the road we saw
WESTERN KINGBIRD at the nest, BULLOCK'S ORIOLE, VAUX'S SWIFT,
EUROPEAN STARLING. On the way out we picked up EURASIAN
COLLARED-DOVE, MOURNING DOVE, GRAY CATBIRD, EASTERN KINGBIRD,
YELLOW WARBLER, SONG SPARROW, BLACK-HEADED GROSBEAK,
BROWN-HEADED COWBIRD and AMERICAN GOLDFINCH.
We made a quick restroom stop at the Safeway and heard
a singing WILSON'S WARBLER. Our next stop was the Leavenworth
Parks along the
Wenatchee
River
We had just walked into the park when we heard singing VEERY. A
short play on the I-Pod and the bird popped up. We also had
singing SWAINSON'S THRUSH and GRAY CATBIRD and WINTER WREN. A
WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH flew in, and we saw AMERICAN ROBIN, SONG
SPARROW, heard MACGILLIVRAY'S and NASHVILLE WARBLERs, and had
singing CASSIN'S and RED-EYED VIREOs (we saw the Red-eyed). A
RED-NAPEDSAPSUCKER flew in. In an offshoot of the river there
were MALLARDs, WOOD DUCKs, and some odd domestic ducks. A
PACIFIC-SLOPE FLYCATCHER was overhead.
We drove the East
Leavenworth Rd. and picked up WESTERN BLUEBIRD. We walked a loop
at the Fish Hatchery and added WESTERN KINGBIRD, LAZULI BUNTING,
YELLOW WARBLER, YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER, SONG SPARROW, CASSIN'S
FINCH, WARBLING VIREO, DOWNY WOODPECKER, WILLOW FLYCATCHER,
RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRD, CEDAR WAXWING, WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW, and
DARK-EYED JUNCO. An AMERICAN DIPPER was perched on the fence
under the bridge over the bypass canal. Overhead we had TURKEY
VULTURE (a group of at least 19), and RED-TAILED HAWK. We had a
very high accipiter that was a COOPER'S HAWK.
We made three stops along US 2 along the
Wenatchee
River, picking up more of the same species we had already seen.
In the interests of time we then headed for higher country. We
turned off on FR6700 (Smithbrook Rd.) heading for higher
elevations. We were stopped at about 1 mile in by snow that was
at least 1-2 feet deep over the road. We turned around and did
some birding on the way down. We saw VARIED THRUSH, AMERICAN
ROBIN, BLACK SWIFT, HAIRY WOODPECKER, OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER
sang up the hillside, CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEE, MOUNTAIN
CHICKADEE, STELLER'S JAY, GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET, HERMIT THRUSH.
Other birds we saw or heard included: COMMON
MERGANSER, CALIFORNIA QUAIL, PILEATED WOODPECKER, COMMON RAVEN,
BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE, WESTERN TANAGER, WESTERN WOOD-PEWEE
(seemingly everywhere - consistent with the weekend), PURPLE
FINCH, HOUSE FINCH, PINE SISKIN, EVENING GROSBEAK.
It was a good, leisurely trip home and we saw and
heard 84 species. We did have one miss - as we came out from
under the trees at the Fish Hatchery another couple asked if we
had seen the Golden Eagles over the ridge. Shoot, we just missed
them.
As others have said it was a great conference and too
many accolades can't be given to
DanStephens, Scott Downes and Cindy McCormick for the
preparations. Many thanks also to the folks who helped take care
of the registration table.
Brian H. Bell
Woodinville WA
Washington Ornithological Society.
12345 Lake City Way NE, #215. Seattle, WA 98125. Information@WOS.org
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