UPDATE Oct 6: Grant Park Tennis Courts


Park at the tennis court lot near pond in Grant Park. The Milwaukee Marathon has a lot of roads closed tomorrow. It will take a little longer


Milwaukee parks that need birding this week

The county tracks every parkland and records to see if there are surveys recorded on eBird. Every year they identify priority parks by week. A park could be a priority because there are no surveys done in that week; or because there are surveys but they think there may be more species there than previously identified.

Milwaukee Parks that need birding this week
  • Alcott Park
  • Baran Park
  • Barnard Park
  • Chippewa Park
  • Doyne Park
  • Franklin Savanna- note this had tall grass, chest height. Entry may be difficult.
  • Honey Creek Parkway 2,3,4
  • Johnstone Park
  • Kern Park
  • Kohl Park east of 76th
  • Menomonee River Pkwy #2,3,7,8
  • Oak Creek Pkwy # 3,4,5
  • Pulaski (Cudahy)
  • Pulaski (Milwaukee)
  • Root River Parkway #8,10,13,15,16,18 (no trails for 13,15,16,18, you are bushwhacking)
  • Wisconsin Ave Park
  • Zablocki Park

Note- even if it’s already been birded this week, going another day (or a different time of day) helps. The parks department has a number of surveys it wants for each park, so birding more than once this week is very helpful!

Join one or more of the above bird clubs – Support local birding

Upcoming:

Have a birding event to share? Let me know, email us on the Contact Page
Walks listed are FREE unless noted. Please register if requested

The “Big Sit” at Forest Beach Migratory Preserve
4970 Country Club Rd, Port Washington
Oct 6 (Sunday) Starting at 6:30 a.m.

Park at point A and hike into point B
The Noel J. Cutright Bird Clubin cooperation with the Lake Michigan Bird Observatory and OWBC, will host its annual “Big Sit!” at Forest Beach Migratory Preserve, five miles north of Port Washington, on Sunday, Oct. 6. The count will begin at 6:30 a.m. on the Bill Cowart Memorial Hawk Watch Platform on the northeast corner of the preserve. The Sit’s 17-foot circle is on the perfectly-sized hawk watch platform at Forest Beach Migratory Preserve  (4970 Country Club Rd., Port Washington). Since 2007, birders have recorded a total of 266 species at Forest Beach. Drop in anytime and for as long as you want – Join us for a half-hour, or a half-day! And there will be donuts for the early birders. Questions: contact Carl Schwartz @ cschwartz3@wi.rr.co


“Facts, Fiction and Fun Stories about Owls” by Mary Holleback and Dan Wundrock

Oct. 9 (Wednesday), 7 p.m.
Hybrid live and Zoom program at Riveredge Nature Center; 
no registration required.
What’s a group of owls called?
 How far away can an owl see at night?
How do they find their prey?
Just how good is their hearing?
Learn some fun trivia about a variety of Wisconsin’s most secretive night time avian predators. You might even find out “who cooks for you”  or whoooooo’s the earliest nester in the state!
Mary is the naturalist and citizen science manager at Riveredge, serving as the onsite sturgeon project manager and director of the “Testing the Waters” high school water quality monitoring program. She holds a BA in conservation biology and an MS in curriculum and instruction from UW-Milwaukee.
Having done his undergrad and graduate work in biology, Dan spent the first 10 years of his career as a high school biology and special education teacher. He then spent the next 25+ years heading up science-based research and distribution companies. Dan brought his unique outdoor skills to Riveredge in 2012 as an environmental educator. He has spent numerous years researching and photographing birds in remote habitats of Lapland, Iceland, Newfoundland and Labrador and Alaska. Most recently he and three others traveled into a remote area of the Salonga National Park in Congo. While there they studied bonobos in an effort to ensure the survival of these endangered great apes as part of the Bonobo & Congo Biodiversity Initiative.
To join Zoom meeting: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81623192214?pwd=zOa73Mmft0cnIW0V9LYKIbp80EKJ4B.1
Meeting ID: 816 2319 2214
Passcode: 258434

WSO Un-Convention
Saturday, Oct 19 in Steven’s Point

A chance to learn and talk about birds and birding in Wisconsin. Presentations inlcude birding Portage County, All about Kestrels, Status of the Greater-Prairie Chicken, Kirtland’s Warblers and Red-shouldered Hawks and more. Registration and details here: https://wsobirds.org/about-wso/news/1951-wso-unconvention-and-other-upcoming-programs

November

Motus in Wisconsin: A Big Leap in Wildlife Tracking with Jacob Woulf, coordinator for Lake Michigan Bird Observatory MOTUS with Ozaukee-Washington Birding Coalition at Mequon Nature Preserve
Wednesday November 13 7:00-

The Motus Wildlife Tracking System uses small radio tags and receiving stations to detect animals (primarily birds) as they move across the landscape.  Hybrid live and Zoom program at Mequon Nature Preserve


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