Calendar

Feb
11
Sat
Daytona Beach Shores Gulls and Terns
Feb 11 @ 12:30 pm

Join trip leader Dotty Robbins in the Target parking lot on Archer Rd. at 12:30 p.m. and then drive to Frank Rendon Park in Daytona Beach Shores. We’ll meet Michael Brothers of the Marine Science Center at 3:30 to stroll the beach and enjoy the spectacle of the many thousands of gulls that amass there. Michael will share his gull expertise at our program on February 7th, and this will be an opportunity to practice those identification tips.

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain one to two miles)

Feb
18
Sat
Let’s Look for Birds at Depot Park
Feb 18 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am
Let's Look for Birds at Depot Park @ Gainesville | Florida | United States

This activity at the new and beautiful Depot Park in downtown Gainesville is for young people 6 to 18 who are accompanied by a parent or guardian. We will walk the park looking for birds using binoculars. You must be registered to attend. Register at audubonyouthbirding@gmail.com.  There is no fee but there is a limit of 20 youth. No pets please. Sponsored by Alachua Audubon and Depot Park.

Saturday, February 18, 2017 from 9 to 11 a.m.

Apr
8
Sat
Let’s Go Downtown
Apr 8 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am
Let’s Go Downtown @ Gainesville | Florida | United States

Family Birding opportunity! Meet guide Adam Kent at the Thomas Center in downtown Gainesville (302 NE 6 th Avenue) on Saturday, April 8 at 9:00 a.m. We will walk the Thomas Center grounds, city streets, and the Duckpond area looking for city birds and animals. Binoculars will be available for use. Please register for this event at audubonyouthbirding@gmail.com . Be sure to bring water and a hat.

Apr
23
Sun
Kanapaha Botanical Gardens
Apr 23 @ 8:00 am

Meet trip leader Mike Manetz in the parking lot at Kanapaha Botanical Gardens for a stroll through a beautiful 62-acre park marked by gorgeous gardens (including butterfly and hummingbird gardens), sinkholes, a man-made watercourse, and hardwood hammocks that host a wide variety of bird life. What can be more beautiful than springtime in the Gardens? Participants will be admitted to the park for half price ($4), but MUST be on time to get the group rate.

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain one to two miles).

May
21
Sun
Woodpecker Walk for Kids @ Northeast Park
May 21 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am
Woodpecker Walk for Kids @ Northeast Park | Gainesville | Florida | United States

This field trip is geared for kids from 6 to 18. Northeast Park is a small, urban park in the heart of Gainesville that is home to a variety of songbirds, including at least 4 species of woodpeckers. The park provides the perfect setting to get acquainted with these colorful, animated birds.

Ted Goodman will be your guide for this trip. We’ll meet at the parking lot by the tennis courts at 9:00 a.m. for a brief introduction, followed by birding in the park. Loaner binoculars will be available on a first-come-first served basis. Drinks and snacks will be provided. For insurance reasons, all children must be accompanied by an adult. It is not necessary to preregister.

 

 

Oct
7
Sat
Guana-Tolomato-Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve
Oct 7 @ 6:30 am – 12:30 pm

Peregrine Falcons migrate down the Atlantic Coast in fall, usually peaking in early October.

 

Meet trip leader John Hintermister at the Tag Agency and carpool to the hawk-watching platform at the north end of the park in hopes of seeing Peregrines. During the second half of the morning we’ll walk a woodland trail in search of fall warblers, tanagers, grosbeaks, and thrushes. Entry fee $3 per vehicle. Bring water and bug repellent. Lunch is at Cap’s on the Inland Waterway.

 

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain one to two miles).

 

Web sites for GTM NERR: http://www.gtmnerr.org and http://www.dep.state.fl.us/coastal/sites/gtm/

Oct
14
Sat
Kanapaha Botanical Gardens
Oct 14 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am

Meet trip leader Trina Anderson in the parking lot at Kanapaha Botanical Gardens for a stroll through a beautiful 62-acre park marked by gorgeous gardens (including butterfly and hummingbird gardens), sinkholes, a man-made watercourse, and hardwood hammocks that host a wide variety of bird life. Participants will be admitted to the park for half price ($4), but MUST be on time to get the group rate.

 

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain one to two miles).

Oct
28
Sat
Cedar Key
Oct 28 @ 6:00 am – 12:00 pm

Meet Rex Rowan in the Target parking lot and carpool to Cedar Key, a quintessential Florida birding destination where birders can often view shorebirds over one shoulder and songbirds over the other. Participants may want to stay in Cedar Key for lunch.

Difficulty: 1 (trip within easy access to vehicle and/or level terrain one mile or less).

Nov
11
Sat
La Chua Trail
Nov 11 @ 8:00 am – 12:00 pm

Meet trip leader Howard Adams at the trailhead of La Chua Trail on Camp Ranch Rd. La Chua is one of the area’s best birding hotspots and it supports a tremendous bird population including wading birds, waterfowl, raptors, warblers, and others. Resident species should be in the midst of nesting activities, and we may see a few migrants passing through. Entry fee for the State Park is $4 per vehicle.

Difficulty: 3 (may involve elevation change, uneven terrain, and/or walking distances greater than two miles).

Dec
9
Sat
Sparrows at Newnans Lake State Forest
Dec 9 @ 8:00 am – 12:00 pm

Instead of the Lake Apopka Wildlife Drive (still closed due to continued flooding from Hurricane Irma), we’ll be birding the West Trail of the Newnans Lake State Forest, specifically the weedy sparrow field at the north end of the property. Recent trips have discovered remarkably large numbers of sparrows, up to nine species so far: Chipping, Field, Vesper, Savannah, Grasshopper, Song, Swamp, White-throated, and White-crowned. You can be sure that there are more to be found. If you want some practice with sparrows, this is the trip for you.

 

Directions: Drive east on University Avenue past Morningside Nature Center. About a mile past Morningside, State Road 26 curves left (while University continues straight to the shore of Newnans Lake). Stay on 26 for another mile and you’ll see the Newnans Lake State Forest sign on your LEFT. Make a left turn into the driveway and follow it to the parking corral. (There’s also a sign and a parking corral for the Pithlachocco Trailhead on the RIGHT side of the road. Don’t go there.) The official address is 1404 NE 55th Blvd, Gainesville, FL 32641, but check the map for the accurate location.

 

Trip Difficulty: 2 (We’ll walk a forest trail and grassy service road about a third of a mile to the field, then just amble around in the weeds looking for birds. Total walking distance for the day will probably be around a mile and a half or two miles).

Jan
27
Sat
La Chua Trail
Jan 27 @ 8:00 am

Meet trip leader Felicia Lee at the trailhead of La Chua Trail on Camp Ranch Rd. La Chua is one of the area’s best birding hotspots and it supports a tremendous bird population including wading birds, waterfowl, raptors, warblers, and others.

 

Entry fee for the State Park is $4 per vehicle.

 

Difficulty: 3 (may involve elevation change, uneven terrain, and/or walking distances greater than two miles).

Feb
3
Sat
Northeast Florida coast
Feb 3 @ 6:30 am

Meet trip leader John Hintermister at the Tag Agency on NW 34th St. just south of US-441 to carpool to the east coast. We’ll start at Fernandina Beach and work our way south. Possible Purple Sandpipers and scoters at Ft. Clinch State Park (entry fee $6 per vehicle). Then to Amelia Island for Red-throated Loon, scoters, Horned Grebes, and gulls. We’ll finish at Jacksonville’s Huguenot Park ($5 per vehicle) for shorebirds and other winter birds. Expect a full day of birding and some walking at various coastal sites.

 

Bring a lunch and warm clothes.

 

Difficulty: 3 (may involve elevation change, uneven terrain, and/or walking distances greater than two miles).

Mar
17
Sat
La Chua Trail
Mar 17 @ 8:00 am

Meet trip leader Howard Adams at the trailhead of La Chua Trail on Camp Ranch Rd. La Chua is one of the area’s best birding hotspots and it supports a tremendous bird population including wading birds, waterfowl, raptors, warblers, and others. Resident species should be in the midst of nesting activities, and we may see a few migrants passing through.

 

Entry fee for the State Park is $4 per vehicle.

 

Difficulty: 3 (may involve elevation change, uneven terrain, and/or walking distances greater than two miles).

Apr
29
Sun
Huguenot Park and Ft. George Island
Apr 29 @ 6:00 am

Meet trip leader Rex Rowan at the Tag Agency on NW 34th St. just south of US-441 to carpool to Jacksonville’s Huguenot Park, where we’ll look for shorebirds, gulls, and terns, all in their breeding plumage, and migrant songbirds, including Painted Buntings, at Ft. George Island. Admission to Huguenot is $5 per vehicle, $3 (exact change only) if we get there before 8 a.m.

Difficulty: 3 (may involve elevation change, uneven terrain, and/or walking distances greater than two miles).

Oct
21
Sun
Watermelon Pond Wildlife and Environmental Area
Oct 21 @ 8:00 am – 12:00 pm

Location map

 

Meet trip leader Rex Rowan at the parking lot of the Watermelon Pond WEA on SW 250th Street 2.0 miles south of SW 46th Avenue. We’ll be looking for open-country migrants like Western Kingbirds as well as winter arrivals like Savannah and Vesper Sparrows (and the season’s first Yellow-rumped Warblers!). Fall wildflowers ought to be blooming, and hopefully we’ll encounter a Fox Squirrel or two.

 

Difficulty: 3 (may involve elevation change, uneven terrain, and/or walking distances greater than two miles).

Nov
10
Sat
Newnans Lake State Forest – West Trail
Nov 10 @ 8:00 am – 12:00 pm

Location map

 

Meet trip leader Rex Rowan in the parking corral for the West Trail, on State Road 26 one mile north of the junction with County Road 329B. The 182-acre field on this property produced 13 species of sparrows last winter, including Henslow’s, Lincoln’s, and Clay-colored, and we’ll see how many of them we can find. Interesting western strays are also possible at this time of year.

 

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain and/or walking distances one to two miles).

 

Nov
17
Sat
Sweetwater Wetlands Park
Nov 17 @ 8:00 am – 11:00 am

Location map

 

Meet field trip leader Barbara Shea in the SWP parking lot on Williston Road about ¾ of a mile east of US-441. This city park was created to improve water quality in Paynes Prairie and the Floridan Aquifer. It’s now a draw to a large variety of birds, with 237 species reported to eBird so far. We’ll look for ducks, American Bitterns, and other wetland birds.

 

Entry fee $5 per vehicle.

 

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain and/or walking distances one to two miles).

 

Dec
9
Sun
Lake Apopka Wildlife Drive
Dec 9 @ 6:30 am – 1:00 pm

Location map

 

For decades the fields north of Lake Apopka were cultivated for vegetables by the Duda family. About 20 years ago the St. Johns Water Management District bought those fields, and now they grow birds and other wildlife.

 

Join trip leader Howard Adams for a driving tour through the brushy wetlands of the Lake Apopka Restoration Area, one of the best birding areas in the state. Fulvous Whistling-Ducks are regular there, and rarities often show up; in 2017 a Fork-tailed Flycatcher was present for several months.

 

Meet in the Target parking lot on Archer Road just east of I-75. 

 

Difficulty: 1 (trip within easy access of vehicle and/or level terrain one mile or less).

Jan
12
Sat
Prairie Creek Lodge
Jan 12 @ 8:00 am – 12:00 pm

Location map

 

Meet trip leader Chris Burney at Powers Park on Hawthorne Rd. to carpool to the Alachua Conservation Trust’s 500-acre Prairie Creek Preserve. The Preserve encompasses a variety of uplands and lowlands, and we’ll sample several of them in search of sparrows and winter feeding flocks. Wear rubber boots or old shoes you don’t mind getting wet, as the trail can be soggy or even flooded. 

 

Difficulty: 2 (may involve uneven terrain and/or walking distances one to two miles).

Jan
26
Sat
Newnans Lake State Forest – West Trail
Jan 26 @ 8:00 am – 12:00 pm

Location map

 

Meet trip leader Rex Rowan in the parking corral for the West Trail on State Road 26 one mile north of the junction with County Road 329B. The 182-acre field on this property produced 13 species of sparrows last winter, including Henslow’s, Lincoln’s, and Clay-colored, and we’ll see how many of them we can find. 

 

Difficulty: 2 (Walking over uneven ground or distances of 1-2 miles.)