Westside Eagle-Observer

Out and about bird-watching

Birds, nature abound on 1-mile loop

- FLIP PUTTHOFF NWA Democrat-Gazette

The Beaver Lake nursery pond gives the lake’s fish population a boost. It’s also a fine destinatio­n for bird-watching, hiking or taking shelter from a wicked thundersto­rm.

The 30-acre pond was built beside the lake in 1987 on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers land by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. Fish are raised each year at the pond and released into the lake through a large-diameter pipe.

Game fish such as smallmouth bass, largemouth bass, walleye, crappie and bluegill have been raised at the pond. The nursery pond was instrument­al in getting a healthy population of native smallmouth bass and walleye establishe­d at Beaver. To start production, Game and Fish stocks the pond with adult fish during spring. Those fish spawn and produce hundreds of thousands of tiny fry that grow through the summer.

Those fry reach fingerling size of 3 to 4 inches by late August. That’s when Game and Fish staff opens the pipe to drain the pond and release all those fingerling­s into the lake. Bluegill and redear sunfish were raised in the pond this summer. The pond was drained in mid-August, releasing those fish into the reservoir.

Jon Stein, district fisheries supervisor with Game and Fish, said the release boosts the number of bluegill and redear for anglers, but their small size makes them ideal forage for larger fish.

The pond is about one-half mile north of Horseshoe Bend Park on the east side of the lake. It’s open to the public for all sorts of nature-related activities. Fishing in the pond isn’t allowed.

There’s an oval-shaped two-track gravel road around the pond, which makes for level walking. One lap around the pond is a mile. There are a rest bench and a small shelter along the route with a wildlife viewing blind.

Birds galore flock to the pond all seasons of the year. So do bird watchers like Joe Neal of Fayettevil­le and Joan Reynolds of Rogers, both active in the Northwest Arkansas Audubon Society. Visitors to the pond on a stormy Thursday morning Aug. 6 included Neal, Reynolds and her daughter, Samantha Heller, and photograph­er

Terry Stanfill of the Decatur area.

Stanfill is never without his trusty monopod-mounted camera, always at the ready to capture pictures of birds, insects and the Ozarks landscape.

Neal visits the pond regularly. He’s documented some 160 bird species at the pond. His pen hit his field notebook on this trip as soon as he shut his car door.

“There’s a pine warbler right there,” Neal said, glancing into the forest on the nursery pond property. “Oh look, there are some goldfinche­s flying right over us. And there’s a bluebird.”

Canada geese and herons were on a grassy bank beside the water. A dazzling array of habitat at the pond brings in all kinds of birds.

“This is a good place to come for people who don’t have a boat but want to see the lake,” Neal added. Miles of Beaver Lake can be seen from the nursery pond property. “They can see the lake and the surroundin­g hillsides,” he said.

The western sky turned a scary shade of purple as the birders strolled around the oval. Then thunder rumbled.

“You’ve got two water habitats here,” Neal said, with one eye on the blackening sky. “There’s the pond itself and Beaver Lake. You’ve got mature forest, shrubs and grassy areas.”

Small raindrops turned into heavy dollops. The birders made a quick dash to a small shelter at a wildlife viewing blind. The heavens opened their flood gates to let loose a major downpour. Neal finished his field notes, staying dry under the metal roof.

The deluge eased some, but the outlook appeared wet for the rest of the morning.

“Looks like a rain-out,” Neal announced, but not before a pileated woodpecker flew by. The big bird was another species for Neal’s trip tally.

Rain, rain, it’s here to stay. The birds will fly another day.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff ?? Joan Reynolds looks for birds Aug. 6 during a steady rain.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff Joan Reynolds looks for birds Aug. 6 during a steady rain.
 ??  ?? Joe Neal (left) and Terry Stanfill stop during a walk around the pond to view a variety of birds.
Joe Neal (left) and Terry Stanfill stop during a walk around the pond to view a variety of birds.
 ??  ?? Reynolds scans the pond for waterfowl.
Reynolds scans the pond for waterfowl.
 ??  ?? The main purpose of the Beaver Lake fish nursery pond is to raise fish that are stocked into Beaver Lake. Public land around the pond is a fine destinatio­n for bird watching, hiking and nature study.
The main purpose of the Beaver Lake fish nursery pond is to raise fish that are stocked into Beaver Lake. Public land around the pond is a fine destinatio­n for bird watching, hiking and nature study.
 ??  ?? Nesting boxes around the 30-acre pond attract bluebirds, warblers and wrens.
Nesting boxes around the 30-acre pond attract bluebirds, warblers and wrens.

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