Westside Eagle-Observer

Audubon Society members make trip to Eagle Watch

- RANDY MOLL rmoll@nwadg.com

GENTRY — Eagle Watch Nature Area was a busy place Saturday morning with 50 or more members and guests from the Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society visiting and watching for bald eagles and other birds along the trail and lake and at the three observatio­n platforms along the quarter-mile walking trail.

Visitors brought cameras, spotting scopes and binoculars to scan the trees, skies and the shoreline for birds, and a variety of birds were on hand along SWEPCO Lake, with some bald eagles flying overhead. The birdwatche­rs seemed to especially enjoy the newest pavilion with See Audubon Page A3

a walkway and viewing platform out over the marshy section of the SWEPCO Lake inlet.

Other sightings included a great blue heron, song sparrows, a ring-billed gull, a single double-crested cormorant perched on a snag out in the lake, and last summer’s Baltimore oriole nest hanging from a leafless limb near the blind.

The Ozark witch hazel which was blooming along the trail again this year got everyone’s attention with its strong fragrance.

Following the visit to Eagle Watch, Audubon Society members also visited other parts of western Benton County to observe area birds. Sightings included numerous bald eagles, red-tailed hawks, turkey vultures, a flock of white-crowned sparrows and a Harris’ sparrow.

The field trip at Eagle Watch was led by Terry Stanfill, local wildlife photograph­er and caretaker of the Eagle Watch Nature Area which is owned by Southwest Electric Power Company in connection with its Flint Creek Power Plant. Joe Neal was the Audubon Society leader.

 ?? Westside Eagle Observer/RANDY MOLLA ?? A group of birders gather on the newest viewing pavilion at the Eagle Watch Nature Trail on Saturday. More than 50 bird watchers came out to Eagle Watch as a part of a Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society field trip on Saturday morning.
Westside Eagle Observer/RANDY MOLLA A group of birders gather on the newest viewing pavilion at the Eagle Watch Nature Trail on Saturday. More than 50 bird watchers came out to Eagle Watch as a part of a Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society field trip on Saturday morning.
 ?? Westside Eagle Observer/RANDY MOLL ?? Bob Caulk, of Fayettevil­le, watches for birds from a pavilion along the Eagle Watch Nature Trail on Saturday. Caulk was one of more than 50 bird watchers who came out to Eagle Watch as a part of a Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society field trip on Saturday morning.
Westside Eagle Observer/RANDY MOLL Bob Caulk, of Fayettevil­le, watches for birds from a pavilion along the Eagle Watch Nature Trail on Saturday. Caulk was one of more than 50 bird watchers who came out to Eagle Watch as a part of a Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society field trip on Saturday morning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States