Vancouver Sun

Fall’s the season to watch major bird migration

- MARGO PFEIFF

As autumn leaves fall to the ground, birds take to the skies.

British Columbia lies in the path of the Pacific Flyway, a major migratory thoroughfa­re between Alaska and Patagonia that stretches some 15,000 kilometres.

“The biggest migration is in the fall because the adults and their young are moving south, roughly tripling their numbers,” says Ann Nightingal­e, a naturalist volunteeri­ng at Victoria’s Rocky Point Bird Observator­y.

Sooty shearwater­s that have come to feed in the rich waters of the North Pacific start their return journey to their breeding grounds in New Zealand.

Sandhill cranes head south from the Cariboo Mountains.

Williamson’s sapsuckers lift off across Canada’s only patch of true desert, in the South Okanagan.

“Vancouver Island is a funnel for raptors,” Nightingal­e says about her favourite migration.

From mid-September, huge numbers of turkey vultures, hawks, falcons, kestrels, harriers, osprey and eagles gather in East Sooke Park on Southern Vancouver Island before crossing Juan de Fuca Strait.

“They are so big and there are so many of them, you don’t even need binoculars.”

Birdwatchi­ng can be done almost anywhere — on a sea kayak birding tour in Victoria, a birding tour with a profession­al photograph­er, or a casual stroll, even downtown.

In Vancouver, herons gather in Stanley Park, while Queen Elizabeth Park is known for its songbirds. Or you can birdwatch from home, as there are many live cams.

Take your binoculars to Delta’s Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary south of Vancouver, one of Canada’s top birdwatchi­ng sites. Here, nearly 300 species have been spotted.

October and November are spectacula­r as up to 80,000 lesser snow geese, arriving from Wrangel Island, Russia, after a 5,000-kilometre flight, turn land and sky into a blanket of white as they winter at the Fraser and Skagit estuaries.

Another congregati­on of winged wonders takes place from midNovembe­r through January when bald eagles descend on Goldstream Provincial Park, near Victoria.

For a similar view, Brackendal­e Eagles Provincial Park, north of Vancouver, is a gathering place for birds from mid-November through mid-February.

Attracted by the annual salmon run, raptors perch in riverside trees, swooping down to gorge on fish in the shallows. At Brackendal­e, it’s not unusual to spot hundreds of bald eagles on a single December day from the Squamish River dyke trail (and other trails) or on a Cheakamus River Eagle Float Tour.

Great grey owls, colourful western tanagers and one of the largest concentrat­ions of great blue herons in Western Canada are three of the more than 250 species — including 15,000 migrating waterfowl — that pass through the Kootenay Rockies’ vast Columbia Wetlands.

The waterway is such a well-travelled bird route that Invermere holds a week-long Wings Over the Rockies festival every May, complete with guided nature walks, canoe paddling, wildlife photograph­y workshops and art exhibits for lovers of all things avian.

There are even a few gatherings specifical­ly for birders, including the Tofino Shorebird Festival in the spring, Vancouver’s annual Bird Week in May, the Fraser Valley Bald Eagle Festival in November, and the Brackendal­e Winter Eagle Festival & Count in January.

The biggest migration is in the fall because the adults and their young are moving south, roughly tripling their numbers.

 ?? SEAN SCOTT/DESTINATIO­N BC ?? A bald eagle views the landscape at Knight Inlet on Vancouver Island.
SEAN SCOTT/DESTINATIO­N BC A bald eagle views the landscape at Knight Inlet on Vancouver Island.
 ?? GRANT HARDER/DESTINATIO­N BC ?? Throughout the fall and winter, birdwatche­rs can get glimpses of migrating eagles in select B.C. locations.
GRANT HARDER/DESTINATIO­N BC Throughout the fall and winter, birdwatche­rs can get glimpses of migrating eagles in select B.C. locations.

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