Category Archives: Birdings

Notes from my bird sightings and seekings

A Reimagined Visitor Center at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology 6/21/24

Today I had the opportunity to visit the newly designed Visitor Center at the Lab of Ornithology, here in Ithaca, NY. During its closure over a year ago for renovation, I found myself really missing the Lab’s hallowed visitor space. As an avid birder, I’ve always found solace and comfort in this welcoming place. 

The Visitor Center is having a quiet reopening while the remaining details and functionalities are being completed.

As you enter, the first thing you notice is how clear, open and inviting the space feels. Several screens around the room welcome you and provide educational tidbits about different bird species from around the world. My friend Jody and I were welcomed by Dave at the welcome desk which is relocated straight ahead as you enter the building (a more logical place for a welcome desk!). 

The Lab’s biggest program, eBird has an impressive presence in the main hall with a several foot high, interactive super screen. When it is fully up and running, visitors will be able to change the view of the world to see where eBirders all over the planet are submitting checklists in real time. As well, you can record bird species seen at the Lab’s Sapsucker Woods.

There are several significant changes in the use of space that really add to the visitor experience. The small, dark theater off the main hall has been expanded and completely redesigned. Instead of a dark, cave-like space, it’s now brighter and much more welcoming with comfortable chairs. A schedule is posted with several short informative videos from the Conservation Media program, focusing on different species in their habitats. You can join in and skip-out whenever you want. 

The biggest change in the use of space is a complete reimagining of the Fuertes room off the main hall. This room was originally designed to closely mimic the same room in the original Lab building. It had beautiful wood detail and showcased a wide array of Louis Agassiz Fuertes paintings of birds. The room was beautiful but somewhat underused — more like a tiny museum/board room/coveted library. The Adelson Family Bird Discover Lab is now home to a plethora of interactive learning opportunities on everything bird. A glass wall now opens-up and welcomes visitors to come on in. Displays about avian eyesight, feathers, wings, bone structure, reproduction, sounds and other topics are visually and physically engaging to visitors of all ages.

Many of the beautiful Fuertes paintings have been relocated to the auditorium where they are now easier to view. The Bartels Science Illustration Program has used the rest of the room’s walls to showcase the work of other well-known and newer science illustrators. This large space’s audio/visual capacity has been updated with new technology and equipped with new, more comfortable chairs.

If you’re missing Maya Lin’s Sound Ring, it’s been relocated upstairs near the Adelson Library. The previously, somewhat hidden-away bioacoustics sound room is now folded into the Bird Discover Lab with a custom-built interface that will allow visitors to listen to hundreds of bird and other large and small critter sounds from toads to whales.

Part of what is exciting about the new Visitor Center is that the displays and videos are changeable and updateable so that subsequent visits can provide new opportunities for learning, interaction and fun. 

A few things remained unchanged such as The Wall of Silhouettes by James Prosek and Jane Kim’s Wall of Birds. It’s worth going to the second floor to enjoy the interactive station for the Wall of Birds which has an enormous amount of information about bird families both living and extinct. The Wild Birds Unlimited store is open again as well. This is my favorite place to shop for bird-friendly coffee, birdy gifts, binoculars, books and Lab of Ornithology logo items like t-shirts and bags. Lastly, the wall of windows looking out on Sapsucker Woods Pond remains a great place to view birds and other wildlife even when the weather is extreme.

As always, the Sapsucker Woods trails are open year-round from dawn to dusk. The Visitor Center is now open Tuesday through Sunday, 10am-4pm (closed on Mondays). The official reopening of the Visitor Center will occur on September 14 at the Lab’s annual Migration Celebration event – something you don’t want to miss!

Whether you’re just curious about birds or a long-time bird nerd, the Lab’s new Visitor Center experience promises to be engaging and fun. Hats off to Lisa Kopp, Visitor Experiences Manager and her team for their great work on reimagining the Visitor Center at the Lab – Arthur Allen would be pleased.

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The Lovely Laysan 2/10/15

The Laysan Albatross or Moli is truly an amazing bird. Well actually, I find all birds pretty cool, but the albatross I find particularly intriguing. Here at Ali’i Kai, I’m seeing these beautiful birds fly by every day as they fish on the water and catch the wind currents coming up the cliffs. They are basically built like sailplanes and spend most of their lives, for years at a time, 1,600 miles away on the open ocean in the North Pacific. The Princeville and Kilauea areas of Kauai are particularly blessed because the Laysan Albatross return each year to nest above the cliffs. This gives people like me the opportunity to see them up close as they sit on their eggs and tend to their chicks.

Photographing these birds in flight is not an easy task but I have managed to get a few good shots that thrilled me. At Kilauea Lighthouse/National Wildlife Refuge these birds as well as the Red-footed Booby and Great Frigatebird fly by quickly, riding the air currents rising from the ocean. My friend Jody who works at the Refuge showed me the best spot to stand to get a good shot at catching them as they soar by.

Laysan Albatross, Kilauea National Wildlife Refuge, Kauai

Laysan Albatross, Kilauea National Wildlife Refuge, Kauai

The Laysan’s body is 31-32” long and its wingspan is 78-80” – that’s over 6 ½ feet! Long, thin and pointed, their wings are built for seemingly effortless soaring over long distances. When you see them from a distance, what you notice is their large white body and dark wings. These birds feed primarily on cephalopods (mostly squid). On land, the albatross is pretty clumsy and walks with a humorous waddle – sort of like a toddler with a big diaper! Due to the their silly way on land, people used to call them “gooney birds.” Laysan Albatrosses vocalize with a collection of whinnies, wines and moans. They also snap their bills together a fair amount.

Our friend Jody knows a volunteer researcher, Cathy Granholm http://www.albatrossdiary.com who is protecting and recording the behaviors of the albatrosses while they nest and fledge in Princeville. Jody and two of her friends invited Bill and I to join Cathy on Friday as she made her rounds. This was a wonderful opportunity to see these birds up close including chicks that were just a day or two old. Believe it or not, these birds were nesting right in a residential area amidst people’s bushes and on their lawns.

Laysan Albatross, Princeville

Laysan Albatross, Princeville

The adults arrive in November to start courting and nesting. They lay just one egg, which becomes the center of their lives for 65 days of incubation until the chick hatches – then the real work starts. At first, one parent is always with the chick while the other is finding food. Eventually both parents leave the nest, sometimes for several weeks at a time, in order to find enough food for the growing chick. Cathy estimated that they may go as far as Alaska to get enough food. It takes about 160 days for the juveniles to fledge which happens in July or August. Once the juvenile fledges, it will be out at sea for three years before it returns to its colony. Albatrosses don’t start mating until they are about 7-8 years old. Most albatrosses live to be about 40-60 years old. The oldest living Laysan Albatross is 63 years old and her name is Wisdom.

Cathy has been documenting their activity for 10 years so we learned a lot about them as we walked around her neighborhood meeting these feathered visitors. It turns out there are a lot of misconceptions about these birds. Many of them mate for life but it turns out there is a lot more drama in the albatross world than most people realize. Courtship can be intense, and since there appear to be more females than males, this adds to the albatross soap opera in Princeville each year. Quarrels, divorces, and deaths are common occurrences as well as female-female nesting pairs. When two females get together, they usually each lay an egg and incubate one of them but since it’s rarely fertilized, it never hatches. Cathy told us about this with a bit of sadness in her voice. She knew most of the birds we encountered along the walk either by their names or their ankle tag numbers and had stories – some heartwarming and some sad – about these birds that return year after year.

Nesting Laysan Albatross, Princeville

Nesting Laysan Albatross, Princeville

The chicks are grey and fluffy and super cute, in an albatross kind of way! The ones we saw were cared for/doted on so lovingly by their parents – it was very sweet. Sometimes a father or mother will refuse to get up off the nest and give the other parent a chance to dote on the egg or chick. Cathy was careful not to upset the birds too much but needed to make note of each nester’s band number.

Laysan Albatross Day-old Chick

Laysan Albatross Day-old Chick

Laysan Albatross and Parent, Princeville

Laysan Albatross Chick and Parent, Princeville

During their nine-month process from courting to fledging, albatrosses kind of define this Princeville neighborhood. It was nice to see that Cathy’s neighbors were looking out for the birds and enjoying watching their progress. Sometimes people get to name birds that hatch in their yards.

On our walk, we got to see the cliff edge where the fledglings take off for their first flight. When we got home, I watched a video on Cathy’s site showing the numerous attempts that a particular juvenile “CJ” made before he took flight for the first time. It was very exciting. Since they are not able to get enough lift by running, like their parents do, the juveniles need a cliff edge where there is a breeze to provide the lift they need. Cathy told a story of one juvenile that didn’t quite get it right and ended up stranded in the ravine. She ended up climbing down a very steep edge in order to save the bird. It was so tired when she grabbed it that it didn’t resist her clutch at all. However, as soon as she got the bird to safety, it bit her. Oh well, all in a good day’s work protecting and saving wild and beautiful creatures!

Many thanks to Cathy for her important and valuable work and for editing this article for accuracy.

Chickens on the Beach

The Red Jungle Foul or Moa can be found all over the Island of Kauai. It was the first bird brought here by the ancient Polynesians that inhabited these islands long before Captain Cook stumbled upon them. Today, there are two species of chicken or jungle foul that are abundant on Kauai. The actual Red Jungle Foul is found in the upland forests and meadows and is often confused with its lowland cousin, the domestic chicken.

Female wild lowland chicken

Female wild lowland chicken

IMG_0249

Male lowland chicken

We’ve been watching and hearing the wild, domestic chicken today. Their colors are varied and quite beautiful, probably due to interbreeding with the Red Jungle Foul. The females are often brown and white and have such large, flat and horizontal tails that sometimes it’s difficult to determine which end of the bird you are looking at! Most of the males seem to have brown and black bodies with long black tail feathers that swish when they walk. One of the males we just saw had a big beautiful showy white tail and seemed to be pretty popular with the gals around him.

The strangest part of watching these birds is seeing them on the beach. In upstate New York, you often see chickens in people’s yards, pecking around for bugs. These birds are providing eggs for their owners or fattening up to become a meal. The owners keep them close to home by feeding them and providing a safe home at night. To see this same bird wild and on the beach is a real treat. These birds are acting as they have for presumably thousands of years, before they became domesticated. They have very few, if any predators here on Kauai and can live in peace.