Annual Christmas bird count

Christmas comes a little late this year for the avid avian watcher. The annual Christmas Bird Count, sponsored by the San Juan Islands Chapter of the Audubon Society, is set to take flight Jan. 3. Grab your binoculars and get ready to tally.

by Emily Greenberg

Journal Reporter

Christmas comes a little late this year for the avid avian watcher. The annual Christmas Bird Count, sponsored by the San Juan Islands Chapter of the Audubon Society, is set to take flight Jan. 3. Grab your binoculars and get ready to tally.

“The thing that’s exciting here is we have fresh water birds, sea birds, land birds, raptors,” said Barbara Jensen, president of the local Audubon Society. “We’re looking for every single bird, and those that are hard to find.”

Keep an eye out this year for rarities in particular, like ospreys which won’t fly south unless there’s a freeze, golden eagles, winter duck species and the elusive red-breasted sap sucker.

The Audubon Society’s annual Christmas Bird Count (which started in 1900) runs Dec. 14 to Jan. 5, and delegates some of the counting responsibility to local chapters. The San Juans’ designated area is a circle 15 miles in diameter. The center is the University of Washington Labs in Friday Harbor, and its girth includes parts of San Juan, Orcas, Lopez and Shaw.

For the seasoned birder and for the novice, the bird count offers as little or as much involvement as one desires. Identify feathered-friends solo from your own bird feeder in the backyard or tag along with experienced birders to an assigned area. Wherever you choose to count make sure to contact Jensen at 378-3068 so she can set you up with paperwork and make sure there’s no double-dipping as far as areas to cover are concerned.

The San Juans’ Christmas Bird Count, which got its start in 1987, has shown variations in population during its 27-year history; some good, others not so good. The number of bluebirds and Anna’s hummingbirds are on the rise, while the population of seabirds and shorebirds have dropped over the years.