Tuesday, 28 November 2017

Saying goodbye to Sarah Bonnett "sarah dipity"

Sarah with our first ever indigo bunting banded at the marsh



Well anyone reading the blog will know how appreciative I am  of volunteers.  Well Sarah was not a volunteer, the marsh was able to pay her with the help of Colleges and Institute Canada  and a program they run called the clean tech internship program. We qualified to have a 6 month internship with the federal government and the marsh had to pay a big chunk and the feds paid the rest for a 6 month internship. The result was Sarah Bonnet.

     Sarah came to us from Trent University where she had volunteered banding sawwhet owls,she  also had banding experience at long point bird observatory. She was super keen and great with people which are clearly two wonderful skills to possess for working at the marsh. What I was not  quite prepared for was how amazing she was with data and how much she enjoyed checking to make sure our data was completely accurate. I was also not prepared for how much work beyond a normal working day she was  prepared to give which basically meant that when she was not banding she was doing data of some kind . Whether it was integrity checks or looking up something for the banding office, the result is that all of our data since 1996 has now been double checked  all of our data  is in a format where we can access it for ourselves and researchers . The best part of all this work is that she enjoyed doing it and I never really asked her it was an initiative she took on and wanted to be sure we were set.
     People may who know me know that one of my favourite words when it comes to banding is serendipity.  Well Sarah was the perfect case of that has we were so lucky to have someone with her strength to make sure our data has integrity moving forward. Her skill sets were such a mesh for the needs of our research.  You might call it "Sarah dipity"

only our 3rd ever belted king fisher 

    In addition to that  Sarah was excellent  teaching kids and adults alike and absolutely  thrived at the marsh.  Her knowledge of birds and banding have her on the cusp of getting her banding license  and I know she will move on to do great things.  If we had the chance to offer her a full time job we would without hesitation but alas the internship was for 6 months so we had to say goodbye.  We will have the chance to see her at the  Ontario bird banding meeting  at bird studies Canada  and I have a feeling we will be seeing her back at the marsh someday. After all where else in Ontario can you band 50 boreal in one season.  Hopefully one day someone will talk her into doing her masters and she will come back to the marsh to put motus transmitters on some owls for us one day. The future is very bright for Sarah, its definitely not a matter of chance!!! Good luck Sarah we already miss you
one of the many boreal Sarah banded 



Sarah with a Piliated

Sunday, 26 November 2017

moving day sadness...... looking for silver lining


C Can getting delivered  to house all of our donated  items  from the dorm  until we can find a new home for  them and those that will come to use them. Thanks to JPL storage for helping us out.
                                                                       

Yesterday ended a great run for the marsh and its volunteers. Yesterday we had to move our dorm from above the hilliardton community hall. The township had let us  use their upstairs for 2 years which is why we have been able to attract volunteers to the marsh in such great numbers and quality over the past two years. The ability to house volunteers and researchers at the marsh has translated into increased coverage at the nets. We have helped a great number of people interested in banding and extraction either gain their permit or get close to obtaining one. We have also been able to help a number of people go on to get jobs at other research centers and we have been able to attract some international volunteers to the marsh.
volunteers Louis Churman and Mike Werner  lending a hand 
      The biggest thing I am proud of though is that we really arrived as a banding family. Volunteers quickly discovered that coming to the marsh is not just a chance to see and band  so many amazingly beautiful boreal birds but that it is equally important to be immersed in a low key learning environment that stresses congeniality and fun along with doing research and greeting school groups and the public. It was an opportunity to see young people interact and be so thrilled and excited to see new species and to pass their enthusiasm and joy to our visitors. In essence having the ability to house volunteers allows us to be an efficient  bird observatory.... go figure!!!


     The bad news is that we are now in a "c can self storage unit"" all of the bunk beds,  couches,    chairs are now in limbo as are we  until we can forge ahead  with a new plan for housing volunteers.
      The new plan is being debated right now  but needless to say is going to involve a fund raising drive . The board of directors is meeting shortly to determine which one of our options we will pursue in order to deal with this issue. We always knew that the dorm above the community hall would some day come to an end  we were hoping to get one more banding season under our belt before we had to make the move.


    So stay tuned  for an announcement about our new plan and hopefully there are some generous people out there who would like to help us out by making a donation to the cause. Like so many bird observatories housing volunteers is often one of the biggest challenges but once we have this issue taken care of  the marsh will be able to settle into thinking more about research and delivering programs to school groups and the visiting public. The good news for folks in Canada is that the marsh is a registered charity so we can issue tax receipts if people would like to make a donation.  In early January we will be announcing the drive and how benefactors  will be recognized. Until then you can check out our website at www.thehilliardtonmarsh.com Its time to start thinking about banding redpolls and pine grosbeaks  which will hopefully be finding feeders at the marsh soon. Stay tuned for more exciting news at the Hilliardton marsh.

Volunteers of the year Ed and Ethan Quinton back to help move beds this past Wednesday to get ready for the bigger move  yesterday. We took a break from moving long enough to band 1 tree sparrow and retrap 12 chickadees and this 6 year old hairy woodpecker that Ethan is holding . Ethan proving if you keep your eyes closed it doe not hurt 

Monday, 20 November 2017

In denial owl nets come down

Definitely time to take down frozen nets  this frozen section of net  was held up to the sun for effect these pieces are dime size I do not want people thinking  we had an ice storm


The history of owl banding  at the marsh has been  full of surprises  and every year folks ask me for predictions  and I am always looking for any clue to divine what is going to happen in the upcoming season. I feel the pressure to predict most keenly from volunteer banders who are making travel decision based on when we can attempt to band owls  and when owls will be done . This year despite  when we have been able to band in years past it was apparent early that the season was coming to an end early. We kept looking at long term forecasts and the  opportunities for windows of good weather and friendly winds and moon phase always seemed to conspire against us. Yet the banders kept talking me into keeping the nets on poles  despite having lots of help to take them all down. This week all of the banders terms came to an end and yet the nets were still "up"  Up means they were still on poles and furled meaning that we cannot catch owls but we still had to go out and take them all down. Chased away by the storm that hit today (Saturday Nov 18th) Ethan Quinton and I headed out on the 17th under sunny skies at -8 Celsius to take down all of the nets. The ropes and knots were so frozen that some of them I had to gnaw at with my teeth to loosen up to untie. It seems every year I am taking these nets  down in terrible cold and  the only reason I can think of is denial. I am in denial every year that the owl banding season is actually over and I always try and convince myself that there will be a push of boreal owls . The very last owl we had in a net was on November 7th it was  a boreal owl we had banded on October 20th so we knew it was time to quit.

Ethan Quinton  never shy of the camera or helping out 

     Many banders have two banding season within a season. The normal protocol banding season then something referred to as non standard banding because it is outside of the protocol. The protocol is an attempt to band on the same  day with the same calls  for the same period of time every year so we can compare year to year.  One year we were able to attempt (non standard) to band owls right into December  and in fact banded 2 long eared owls in early December  so if conditions warrant we can push the season.  Owl banding almost defies a protocol because every year is very unique and the biggest factor really comes down to weather  This year however at this time ,the weather has told us no!


    In my defense I used to have a quote above my desk at university written in capital letter "Those who do not learn from history are condemned to relive it". It is hard when you have keen people who are there to hopefully band owls  to tell them that the season is over  and it is time to take  down  the nets. Clearly they were the ones  denial!  At least that is what I told myself as Ethan and I  dealt with snow depth and cold temperatures as we packed the nets into the back of his truck.
Sadly the weather said no to trying for more owls  Ethan rests before we take a long walk back to the truck.

     The final word on the season is that we banded 275 northern sawwhets  50 boreal owls and 31 long eared owls . Thanks to all who helped  wish you could have been here to help Ethan and I today. I will be sure to get the nets down earlier next year.......yah right!!!



One of the saddest sights for me is a net lane without a net!!!


Wednesday, 15 November 2017

I migrated to meet banders in New Jersey from around the world!!!





It was with great excitement and anticipation that I packed my bags, put my posters for my presentation in the car and pointed the bow south to attend the 2nd international bird observatory conference in Cape May New Jersey. It was going to be a chance to mingle with birders from across the globe and to learn more about what is happening around the world and to connect with and learn from banders.   I had lot of time to anticipate what was about to happen as I was travelling 18 hours in a rental not wanting to trust my ageing corolla to the gathering of banders.  Despite all of my musings about how great the conference was going to be nothing prepared for how wonderful the conference was and how much I was going to learn in the upcoming week.

banders touring the sea watch station

    It turns out there were 98 banders from as far away as South Korea and Israel quite a gathering from Europe and Scandinavia and Iceland, Mexico and Costa Rica and a great collection  of banders from the U.S. and Canada. It was a great opportunity to put faces to names that I had frequently exchanged information about sawwhet owls. It was wonderful to connect with Canadian banders as well and I met banders from Tadoussac Quebec where we have long been inspired by their boreal owl banding and we even re trapped a siskin banded there. On the West coast I met Anne Nightingale who is the inspiration for the Rocky point bird observatory where they banded 1400 sawwhets this past season. Also in attendance was Stephan Menu from Bruce Peninsula Bird Observatory , Stu Mackenzie from Long Point Bird Observatory and Patricia Campsall from  Lesser Slave lake bird Observatory and Ricky Dunn who has been a great inspiration in the Canadian Migration Monitoring network.


     One of the things I was not prepared for was the absolute parade of jaw dropping inspirational work that banders are doing around the world and the emphasis so may have on providing quality educational opportunities to get the public interested in birds. Another takeaway from the conference was the need to publish as much information as we can to convey information to other researchers and the public to  understand more about what is happening to birds worldwide and at a local level.  I had always thought we would be waiting for graduate students to do the writing from our data but we have been urged as banders to get the word out so more people have a sense of what we are seeing with the hope of informing conservation decisions. The adage of Partners in Flight “to keep common birds common” may well depend on bird observatories doing a better job getting their information out to scientists and the public.

Needless to say I am making plans to attend the 3rd  international bird observatory conference  I cannot say enough about it and as always it was hard to say goodbye to new friends but I was keen to return home with so many new ideas.
  
tree swallows in flight
     In addition to all of the talks on a mosaic of different topics we had the chance to do some fun bird watching at Cape May which is a migratory hotspot and a place I have always wanted to visit and the cape did not disappoint. While touring one of the hawk watch stations I had the chance  with others to take in a movement of over 10,000 tree swallows flying overhead at one time an experience that I tried to video but feel I really captured  deep . It is something I had never experienced before and really drove home the point especially as we know how much trouble they are in the North. Keeping common birds common!!!  Sometimes dragging myself out of bed into the cold of 4 am to get to net lanes in time I periodically question why do we band birds?  People ask me this very question all of the time.  After seeing that swarm of tree swallows and thinking of what the future holds and the role bird observatories have around the world. I will never have trouble answering that question ever again. 

     

black backed gull soaring over Atlantic common on the beach rare in the north !!

Wednesday, 8 November 2017

Reflection by Joanne Hamilton
Joanne Hamilton bander and author 


The weather has turned for the worse and it’s looking like it won’t let up for the next week or so. The skies are a bitter, angry, grey, with winds and rain carving up the landscape. Slick mud and cold-water wash over the paths as the scattered leave litter the ground. The birds are trickling through, but many of the flocks have moved southwards to better weather. I miss seeing the huge warbler flocks of late summer, and the cheerful sparrows of early fall. Crows and Ravens struggle against the coursing winds, fine drizzle misting over us. Hopefully Redpolls will arrive soon, tiny splashes of colour against the monumental greys of late October.
I’ve decide to leave a few days early to avoid the possibility of snow and ice. I finish closing the lab for the day and think fondly of my time spent here at the Hilliardton Marsh. I’ve met many kind and thoughtful people, and had the chance to band hundreds of different birds. I learned so much about birds while here, and I learned so much about myself. But none of this would have been possible without the people at the Marsh, I am incredibly grateful to them who made this experience as memorable as it was.

I would like to say thank you to Bruce Murphy who taught me so much about birds, banding, public outreach, education, and made a valiant attempt to teach me how to golf. 
A thank you to Joanne Goddard who showed me hummingbird banding, and whose hospitality and kindness made the Marsh a home away from home.
Thank you to Sarah Bonnett, you always brought energy and positivity to everything you did, and helped me immensely with learning how to use eBird and Bandit.

chris sukha

Thank you to Nicole Blackburn, who brought new perspectives on Canadian culture, forced me to learn a new type of cooking, and who’s kindness made even the most difficult days positive.
Thank you to Chris Sukha, a very patient and dedicated teacher who taught me so much about birds and banding.
Sarah Bonnett

Thank you to Michelle McKay, who helped me immensely in understanding how the ‘real world’ works in terms of job hunting, master programs, and writing.

Michelle McKay

Special mention to Greg Rand for his knowledge of birding, despite him getting the Mario theme song stuck in my head for weeks.
Nicole Blackburn
A special thank you to all the visitors at the Marsh and the dorm who brought new ideas, perspectives, and taught me so much about teaching others about birds and banding.