Detailed Field Trip Descriptions
NOTE
Field trips will depart from several locations. Please read each of
the following field trip descriptions very carefully to determine from
where each of your field trips depart. Departure points are
Kern River Preserve
Headquarters in Weldon,
Lake Isabella Park-and-Ride,
Riverside Park in
Kernville, and the Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road. (CLICK ON THE LINKS FOR THE LOCATION
DESCRIPTION IN DEPTH AND A MAP)
BIRD BANDING
TRIP A: 7am-Noon (Saturday & Sunday only),
Bird Banding Demonstration at Kern River Preserve. Licensed bird
banders from Weldon’s Southern Sierra Research Station will conduct a morning bird banding session at the banding
station located along the Nature Trail east from
Kern River Preserve
Headquarters in Weldon. Learn how banding is used to
conserve birds, listen to the heartbeat of a bird, and otherwise observe
birds up close & personal. Visit anytime 7am-Noon. An extended stay is
recommended, especially late in the morning when bird activity may be
the slowest. FREE.
BIRDING
TRIP B: 4:45am-4pm/5pm, Butterbredt
Spring & East Kern Desert Oases.
“The early birder catches the worm.” Get off to an especially early
start to visit to the desert oasis of Butterbredt Spring, a National
Important Bird Area, found in the hills of the Western Mojave Desert
about one hour south of Audubon California’s Kern River Preserve.
Several noted birders consider Butterbredt Spring during spring
migration as one of their ten favorite birding locations in the United
States. If conditions are right, the birding at Butterbredt is
phenomenal, with 100s to 1000s of migrants passing through, with the
greatest concentration during the first hour of daylight starting about
6am … swifts, flycatchers, vireos, swallows, thrushes, wood warblers,
tanagers, grosbeaks, buntings, and orioles making up the majority. If
conditions are just so-so, species diversity, if not numbers, is still
likely to be high. In addition to migrants passing through, birders
visit Butterbredt to see nesting species such as Mountain Quail, Costa’s
Hummingbird, Ladder-backed Woodpecker, Rock Wren, California Thrasher,
Le Conte’s Thrasher, California Towhee, Black-throated Sparrow, and
Scott’s Oriole. After thorough birding of Butterbredt Spring, this trip
will continue to California City’s Central Park and Silver Saddle Resort
at Galileo Hill on the Mojave Desert floor. Central Park hosts migrants
and waterbirds. During the 2007 festival, Galileo Hill was one of the
highlight destinations with an estimated 1000-1500 migrant landbirds on
the lawns at Silver Saddle Resort. If time permits, a return to the Kern
River Valley via Ridgecrest’s Cerro Coso College and the City of
Ridgecrest’s Watchable Wildlife Area will be made. Leave at 4:45am via
carpool from the Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last
all day. FEE: $40.
TRIP C:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
4:45am-3pm/5pm, Butterbredt Spring & Piute Mountains. After
thorough birding of Butterbredt Spring (see TRIP B description), this
trip will explore the Piute Mountains region first reached just four
road miles to the west. Among the birding options will be grassland, oak
woodland, and chaparral habitats alongside Jawbone Canyon Road;
irrigated pasture, Joshua tree woodland, and ranch pond habitats
alongside Kelso Valley Road; and desert scrub, pinyon pine woodland,
Jeffrey pine woodland, and mountain meadow habitats alongside Piute
Mountain Road. The impressive mix of habitats in very close proximity to
each other during this trip may yield a very impressive species list.
Besides those mentioned for Butterbredt Spring (see TRIP B description),
among the species known to be in this area in early May are: Chukar,
California Quail, Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, Band-tailed Pigeon,
Greater Roadrunner, Say’s Phoebe, Loggerhead Shrike, Pinyon Jay, Horned
Lark, Violet-green Swallow, Oak Titmouse, Pygmy Nuthatch, Cactus Wren,
Western Bluebird, Black-throated Gray Warbler, Green-tailed Towhee,
Brewer’s Sparrow, Lark Sparrow, Sage Sparrow, “Thick-billed” Fox
Sparrow, Western Meadowlark, Cassin’s Finch, and Red Crossbill. Leave at
4:45am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring
food & drink to last all day. FEE: $40.
TRIP D:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11/30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Canebrake Ecological
Reserve. This 6900-acre California Department of Fish & Game
Ecological Reserve is part of the land protecting most of the cottonwood
and willow riparian forest found along the lower fourteen miles of the
South Fork Kern River. The Public Access Trail is wheelchair friendly
and winds for over a mile, one way, through Joshua tree woodland,
riparian forest, irrigated pasture, marsh & pond, grazing land, and
rocky hillsides. The scenery is stunning. Spring migration can be first
rate in terms of species diversity and numbers, especially in the
vicinity of the footbridge over Canebrake Creek. The footbridge area is
where Summer Tanager is most often found on the reserve. Tricolored
Blackbirds fly back and forth over the Public Access Trail from their
nesting colony, often foraging in pasture close at hand. An impressive
mix of birds found throughout the rest of the South Fork Valley is
present here as well … swallows, warblers, sparrows, grosbeaks, finches.
If there is time, stops will be made below the cliffs east of Cottage
Grove Cemetery Leave at 6am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178
in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last through lunch at Scodie Park in
Onyx. FEE: $30.
TRIP E:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-2pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Chimney Peak National
Backcountry Byway. The eleven miles of this road from Highway 178 to
Chimney Peak Campground goes through desert scrub & Joshua tree
woodland, a fairyland of rock formations, pinyon-juniper woodland,
Chimney Creek riparian woodland, and mountain meadows characteristic of
the Great Basin. Key target species include breeding Gray Flycatcher,
Plumbeous Vireo, Black-throated Gray Warbler, and Scott’s Oriole.
Additional local breeding season species which are possible include
Chukar, Mountain Quail, Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, Band-tailed
Pigeon, Greater Roadrunner, White-throated Swift, Calliope Hummingbird,
Ladder-backed, Nuttall’s, & White-headed Woodpecker, Mountain Chickadee,
Oak Titmouse, Cactus. Rock, and Canyon Wrens, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher,
Western Bluebird, Wrentit, California Thrasher, Western Tanager,
Green-tailed, Spotted, & California Towhees, Chipping, Brewer’s, Lark,
Black-throated, & Sage Sparrows, Black-headed Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting,
Cassin’s Finch, Red Crossbill, and Lawrence’s Goldfinch. Leave at 6am
via carpool from the Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring food & drink
to last through picnic lunch at Chimney Creek Campground. FEE: $30.
TRIP F:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Fay Ranch Road.
The birding along this four mile long road in the heart of the South
Fork Valley has produced remarkable birding during past Spring Nature
Festivals. Offered for the first time is a trip concentrating on birding
along Fay Ranch Road for a full morning. A highlight will be the
opportunity to access hundreds of acres of Kern River Preserve land that
is off-limits except for special events such as the Spring Nature
Festival. Cottonwood & willow riparian forest, desert scrub, freshwater
marsh, gray pine woodland, irrigated pasture, and live oak woodland
habitats are present. The South Fork Valley’s population of breeding
pairs of Vermilion Flycatcher is here. The mix of species is unique.
Lots of spring migrants may be present on any particular morning. Among
those species which have been encountered during prior Spring Nature
Festivals are: Wood Duck, Wild Turkey, White-tailed Kite Prairie Falcon,
Solitary Sandpiper, Wilson’s Snipe, Band-tailed Pigeon, Greater
Roadrunner, Vaux’s & White-throated Swifts, Acorn & Nuttall’s
Woodpeckers, eleven flycatcher species including Hammond’s, Dusky, Gray,
& Pacific-slope Flycatchers and Black & Say’s Phoebe, six swallow
species, Oak Titmouse, five wren species, Western Bluebird, Wrentit,
California Thrasher, Phainopepla, Summer Tanager, California Towhee,
Brewer’s, Lark, Black-throated, Sage, Savannah, & Grasshopper Sparrows,
Black-headed & Blue Grosbeaks, Lazuli Bunting, Red-winged & Tricolored
Blackbirds, Western Meadowlark, Bullock’s Oriole, and Lesser &
Lawrence’s Goldfinches. Start at 6am from
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in
Weldon. Bring food & drink to last until lunch. FEE: $30.
TRIP G:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
4:45am-3pm/5pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Galileo Hill-Silver
Saddle Resort. This resort in the Mojave Desert of eastern Kern
County is known throughout California as an excellent place to search
for migrant diversity and numbers during both spring and fall migration.
The overall list of birds for Galileo Hill stands at 324 species through
2007. As a likely result of the 2006/2007 drought year, 1000-1500
migrants were found at Silver Saddle Resort during the run of the 2007
Spring Nature Festival, most of those foraging on the ground in plain
sight – flycatchers, warblers, tanagers, grosbeaks, bunting, sparrows.
As much time will be taken as necessary to cover Galileo Hill. If time
permits, additional east Kern desert oases will be visited from among
California City’s Central Park, the campus of Cerro Coso College in
Ridgecrest, and the City of Ridgecrest’s Watchable Wildlife Park. Leave
at 4:45am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring
food & drink to last through lunch. FEE: $40.
TRIP H: 5:45am-4pm/6pm, Greenhorn
Mountains Transect. Visit prime birding spots from the west shore of
Isabella Reservoir to 6102' Greenhorn Summit. If there is time, a visit
to Cedar Creek Campground will be made. Leave from Riverside Park across
from Riverside One Stop (Shell gas station) in Kernville. The habitat
diversity is impressive: reservoir, oak woodland, chaparral, and mixed
conifer. Possible bird species present include: California & Mountain
Quail, Western & Clark’s Grebe, American White Pelican, Osprey, Northern
Goshawk, Golden Eagle, Band-tailed Pigeon, Black-chinned, Anna’s, &
Calliope Hummingbird, Red-breasted Sapsucker, Acorn, Nuttall’s,
White-headed, & Pileated Woodpeckers, Western Wood-Pewee, Dusky &
Ash-throated Flycatchers, Black Phoebe, Western Kingbird, Cassin’s &
Hutton’s Vireos, Steller’s & Western Scrub-Jay, Violet-green Swallow,
Mountain Chickadee, Oak Titmouse, Bushtit, Bewick’s & Winter Wrens,
Western Bluebird, Townsend’s Solitaire, Wrentit, California Thrasher,
Phainopepla, Orange-crowned, Nashville, Black-throated Gray, Hermit,
MacGillivray’s, and Wilson’s Warblers, Western Tanager, Green-tailed,
Spotted, and California Towhee, Rufous-crowned, Chipping, Lark, and
“Thick-billed” Fox Sparrow, Black-headed Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting,
Bullock’s Oriole, Purple Finch, Lesser Goldfinch, and Lawrence’s
Goldfinch. Meet at 5:45am at Riverside Park across from Riverside One
Stop (Shell gas station) in Kernville. Bring food & drink to last all
day. FEE: $40.
TRIP I:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Inyokern – Le
Conte’s Thrasher & Much More. This is THE trip to try for Verdin and
Le Conte's Thrasher. Explore a desert “oasis” on private property north
of Inyokern in the Mojave Desert. If there is time, short stops will be
made in the vicinity of Walker Pass and/or South Fork Valley. Among many
species which may be observed are: California Quail, Golden Eagle,
Prairie Falcon, Greater Roadrunner, White-throated Swift, Costa's
Hummingbird, Ladder-backed Woodpecker, Gray Flycatcher, Pinyon Jay,
Verdin, Le Conte's Thrasher, California Towhee, Brewer’s Sparrow,
Black-throated Sparrow, Hooded Oriole, Scott's Oriole, and Lesser
Goldfinch. During all days of the 2007 festival spring migrant birding
was excellent at the desert “oasis” with numerous flycatcher, warbler,
and sparrow species being seen at close distance. If there is time,
stops will be made at locations from among Walker Pass, Milepost 74, and
the cliffs east of Cottage Grove Cemetery. Leave at 6am via carpool from
the Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6
miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last through
picnic lunch at Scodie Park in Onyx. FEE: $30.
TRIP J:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Isabella Reservoir.
This trip will visit numerous locations around Isabella Reservoir. This
is the trip to try for American Dipper. Both landbirds and waterbirds
will be sought. Among species which might be encountered are four grebe
species (including Western & Clark’s), American White Pelican, Osprey,
Peregrine Falcon, Ring-billed, California, Herring, & Bonaparte’s Gull,
Caspian & Forster’s Tern, Greater Roadrunner, Acorn & Nuttall’s
Woodpecker, Black & Say’s Phoebe, Western Kingbird, Loggerhead Shrike,
Western Scrub-Jay, Horned Lark, six swallow species, Oak Titmouse, Rock,
Canyon, & Bewick’s Wren, American Dipper, California Towhee, Savannah
Sparrow, “Kern” Red-winged, Tricolored, Yellow-headed, & Brewer’s
Blackbird, Great-tailed Grackle, and Lesser Goldfinch. A Pacific Loon,
rare inland in California, was observed on Isabella Reservoir during the
2007 Nature Fest. Leave at 6am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178
in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last until lunch. FEE: $30.
TRIP K:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Kelso Creek
Sanctuary. The Kern River watershed’s desert oases often attract
migrants like magnets attract iron particles. This field trip will visit
several desert oases along Kelso Valley Road south seven to seventeen
miles from the Kern River Preserve. Oases include Audubon-California’s
156-acre Kelso Creek Sanctuary, Frog Springs, Sageland, and the USDI-Bureau
of Land Management’s riparian preserve below Rocky Point. Habitats along
the route include cottonwood & willow riparian, desert wash, Joshua tree
woodland, pasture & rangeland, rocky cliffs & hillsides, and wetlands.
Kelso Creek Sanctuary is the most reliable Kern River Valley location
for Brown-crested Flycatcher. On addition to numerous spring migrants
and Brown-crested Flycatcher, among other species which have been
encountered during past short, festival visits are: Chukar, Mountain
Quail, Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, Greater Roadrunner, Long-eared Owl,
Costa’s Hummingbird, Ladder-backed & Nuttall’s Woodpeckers, Ash-throated
Flycatcher, Pinyon Jay, Cactus, Rock, & Canyon Wrens, Le Conte’s
Thrasher (rare), Brewer’s, Lark, Black-throated, Sage, & Savannah
Sparrows, and Scott’s Oriole. Leave at 6am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last until lunch.
FEE: $30.
TRIP L:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Kern River Preserve
Headquarters. The early May dawn chorus of birds at KRP Headquarters
can be very impressive. At dawn, the hummingbird feeders start being
swarmed by Black-chinned and Anna’s Hummingbirds (and one or two
possible Costa’s, Calliope, and Rufous). The dawn chorus is made up
variously of vocalizing California Quail, Red-shouldered Hawk, Mourning
Dove, Nuttall’s, Downy, & Hairy Woodpeckers, Northern Flicker, Western
Wood-Pewee, Black Phoebe, Ash-throated Flycatcher, Western Kingbird,
Tree Swallow, Oak Titmouse, Bushtit, White-breasted Nuthatch, Western
Bluebird, American Robin, Yellow Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, Summer
Tanager, Lark & Song Sparrows, Bullock’s Oriole, House Finch, and Lesser
& Lawrence’s Goldfinch. Nesting season Yellow-breasted Chat, Blue
Grosbeak, and Lazuli Bunting may be seen along the trails radiating out
from Preserve Headquarters. Add in spring migrants passing through plus
a visit to the bird banding demonstration, and a memorable morning is
possible, even likely. Start at 6 am at
Kern River Preserve Headquarters in Weldon. Bring food & drink
to last until lunch. FEE: $30.
TRIP M: 5:45am-4pm/5pm, Kern River Valley
& Southern Sierra Nevada. This trip will spend the morning visiting
several birding areas in the South Fork Valley (Fay Ranch Road, Migrant
Corner, Kelso Valley Road, Kern River Preserve Headquarters, Scodie
Park, and South Fork Wildlife Area). A picnic lunch will be held at KRP
Headquarters or Scodie Park in Onyx. Depending on the remaining time,
the rest of this trip will be spent birding Isabella Reservoir, the
Piute Mountains, or Sierra Way above Kernville to the Giant Sequoia
National Monument. South Fork Valley possible bird species include: Wood
Duck, White-tailed Kite, Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, Wilson’s Snipe,
Vaux’s & White-throated Swift, Black-chinned & Anna’s Hummingbird,
Nuttall’s Woodpecker, fourteen flycatcher species (including
Olive-sided, 4-5 Empidonax, Vermilion, Ash-throated & Brown-crested
Flycatcher, Black & Say’s Phoebe), vireos, swallows, Oak Titmouse,
Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Swainson’s Thrush, eleven warbler species,
Western & Summer Tanager, three towhee species, fourteen small sparrow
species, Black-headed & Blue Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting, “Kern” Red-winged
& Tricolored Blackbird. Hooded & Bullock’s Oriole, Lesser & Lawrence’s
Goldfinch, and, perhaps lingering American Goldfinch from winter. Leave
at 5:45am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring
food & drink to last all day. FEE: $40.
TRIP N: 9am-11am (Saturday & Sunday only),
Kern River Preserve Bird Walk. A Kerncrest Audubon Society
volunteer will lead this walk through a portion of California’s largest
Fremont cottonwood and red willow riparian forest; a Globally Important
Bird Area. Kern River Preserve Headquarters is the best place to study
hummingbirds as they visit feeders in the yard. This trip will include a
visit to the bird banding station. Meet at the Festival Information
table at Kern River Preserve Headquarters in Weldon. Beginners welcome!
DONATION.
TRIP O:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
5:30am-4pm/5pm, (Thursday-Friday only), Little Lake & Owens Lake w. Mike Prather.
Little Lake: Mike has arranged for trip participants to experience early
morning, spring migration on a wildlife-rich private property alongside
U.S. Hwy. 395 at Little Lake at a “best time of year.” In addition to
residents and winter season lingerers, the desert, lake, marsh, and
riparian habitats found in very close proximity to each other on this
private wildlife preserve will likely yield an impressive diversity of
spring migrant bird species including from among waterbirds, swifts,
flycatchers, vireos, swallows, thrushes, warblers, sparrows, grosbeaks,
blackbirds, and orioles. If conditions are right, numbers of individual
migrants may be impressive as well. After thoroughly birding Little
Lake, this trip will continue north on U.S. Hwy. 395 to Owens Lake.
Owens Lake: Less than thirty minutes north from Little Lake and ninety
minutes from the Kern River Preserve is Owens Lake, at the base of the
14,000 feet tall High Sierra. Owens Lake is returning to wildlife.
Today, after being dried up when Los Angeles completed its 1913
aqueduct, the lake is once again an important stopover for thousands of
migrating shorebirds and waterfowl. An enormous dust control project
that is spreading shallow water has recreated many square miles of rich
habitat for migrating and resident birds. This trip will visit wetlands
around the shore of Audubon’s Owens Lake Important Bird Area and also
explore out onto the lakebed’s dust control project.
Owens Lake supports more nesting pairs of Snowy Plover than anywhere
else in California, c. 400 pairs! Among additional shorebird species
which may be present are Black-necked Stilt, American Avocet, Western
Sandpiper, Least Sandpiper, Long-billed Dowitcher, Dunlin, Wilson’s
Phalarope, and Red-necked Phalaropes; some of which may be present in
very impressive numbers in late April/early May. Many waterfowl species
are also possible along with hundreds, if not thousands, of California
Gulls. Perhaps White-faced Ibis and Peregrine Falcon will also be found.
Depending on remaining time, birding visits may be made to the Sage Flat
in the foothills to the southwest of Owens Lake and/or along Hwy. 178 on
the return to the Kern River Valley.
Much of the history and geology of the Owens Valley will be shared
during the day’s outing. Look forward to observing many birds and
experiencing the awesome vertical relief of the Eastern Sierra. All
participants will receive an Eastern Sierra Birding Trail map.
Leader: Lone Pine’s Mike Prather. A thirty-five year resident of Inyo
County, Mike has been actively studying and promoting wildlife at Owens
Lake since 1985 and has been active in a myriad of conservation causes
in the Eastern Sierra over the decades. He is a retired school teacher
and dedicated to life-long learning as well as contemplative recreation
and natural quiet.
Leave at 5:30am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring
food & drink to last all day. FEE: $40.
TRIP P:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), Migrant Corner
Trail & Prince’s Pond. This area of Audubon-California’s Kern River
Preserve is the place to witness spring migration in the Kern River
Valley. Species which dominate migration with their numbers are Western
Tanager and Black-headed Grosbeak, which can number in the high hundreds
counted in a single morning. The list of possible species to be seen is
long and includes from among Wood Duck, California Quail, Least Bittern,
Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, Virginia Rail, Sora, Solitary Sandpiper,
Wilson’s Snipe, Greater Roadrunner, Vaux’s & White-throated Swift,
Black-chinned & Anna’s Hummingbird, Nuttall’s Woodpecker, nine
flycatcher species, Cassin’s & Warbling Vireo, six swallow species, Oak
Titmouse, Bushtit, five wren species, Western Bluebird, Swainson’s &
Hermit Thrush, Phainopepla, ten warbler species, Summer & Western
Tanager, sixteen large (towhees) and small sparrow species, Black-headed
& Blue Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting, Red-winged & Tricolored Blackbird,
Great-tailed Grackle, Bullock’s Oriole, House Finch, and Lesser &
Lawrence’s Goldfinch. Leave at 6am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last until lunch. FEE: $30.
TRIP Q: 6am-4pm/5pm, Mojave Desert &
Great Basin. This is THE trip to try for Verdin and Le Conte's
Thrasher. Explore a desert “oasis” on private property north of Inyokern
in the Mojave Desert and Great Basin habitat along Chimney Peak National
Backcountry Byway and Kennedy Meadows Road. If there is time, short
stops will be made in the vicinity of Walker Pass and/or South Fork
Valley. Among many species which may be observed are: Chukar, California
Quail, Mountain Quail, Golden Eagle, Prairie Falcon, Greater Roadrunner,
White-throated Swift, Costa's Hummingbird, Calliope Hummingbird,
Ladder-backed Woodpecker, White-headed Woodpecker, Gray Flycatcher,
Plumbeous Vireo, Pinyon Jay, Oak Titmouse, Bushtit, Verdin, Cactus Wren,
Rock Wren, Canyon Wren, Wrentit, California Thrasher, LeConte's
Thrasher, Black-throated Gray Warbler, Green-tailed Towhee, California
Towhee, Brewer’s Sparrow, Black-throated Sparrow, Sage Sparrow, Lazuli
Bunting, Hooded Oriole, Scott's Oriole, Cassin’s Finch, and Lawrence's
Goldfinch. During all days of the 2007 festival, the first time this
field trip was offered, spring migrant birding was excellent at the
desert “oasis,” adding greatly to this trip. Leave at 6am via carpool
from the Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road,
1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon. Bring food & drink to last all
day. FEE: $40.
TRIP R1:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6pm-Conclusion (Saturday night only), All Night Owling on
Breckenridge Mountain. Try for Flammulated, Western Screech,
Northern Pygmy, Spotted, and Northern Saw-whet Owls. Look to hear or see
as many of the nesting owl species found in the Kern River watershed in
early May as time and energy permits. Unless the weather is disastrous
this trip gives a “best chance” of seeing and/or hearing many species.
Meet at the
Lake Isabella Park-and-Ride located just northwest of the
junction of CA State Hwy. 155 and CA State Hwy. 178 in Lake Isabella at
5:45pm. Return will be as late as Sunday morning. FEE: $60.
TRIP R2:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6pm-Conclusion (Friday and/or Saturday nights only), All Night Owling
in the Greenhorn Mountains. Try for Flammulated, Western Screech,
Northern Pygmy, Spotted, and Northern Saw-whet Owls. Look to hear or see
as many of the nesting owl species found in the Kern River watershed in
early May as time and energy permits. Unless the weather is disastrous
this trip gives a “best chance” of seeing and/or hearing many species.
Meet at Riverside Park across from Riverside One Stop (Shell gas
station), Kernville at 5:45pm. Return will be as late as Sunday morning.
FEE: $60.
TRIP S: 6pm-10pm/11pm (Friday and/or
Saturday nights only), High Country Owling. Look to hear or see
as many of the nesting owl species found in the Kern River watershed in
early May as time and energy permits. Unless the weather is disastrous
there is a good chance of seeing and/or hearing two or more species.
Meet at Riverside Park across from Riverside One Stop (Shell gas
station), Kernville at 5:45pm. FEE: $40.
TRIP T: 6pm-9:30pm/10pm (Friday night only),
Low Country Owling. Try for Barn, Western Screech, and Great
Horned Owls. Unless the weather is disastrous there is a very good
chance of seeing and hearing Great Horned Owl and Barn Owl on this trip.
Western Screech Owl is a good possibility for hearing. Long-eared Owl
will be a target species, although unlikely to be seen or heard. If a
Burrowing owl location has been pinned down, it will be visited.
Otherwise, enjoy evening birding before the owls come out. Meet at
Kern
River Preserve, Weldon at 5:45pm for orientation and carpooling. FEE:
$30.
TRIP U:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6:30am-4pm/5pm, San Joaquin Valley & Greenhorn Mountains
This trip will proceed down Hwy. 178 through the Lower Kern River Canyon
with stops to look for American Dipper and Rufous-crowned Sparrow. In
Bakersfield, stops will be made to search for Rose-ringed Parakeet in
Hart Park and Spotted Dove & Rose-ringed Parakeet in Beale Park. Then it
is on to the 11,000 acre Kern National Wildlife Refuge located northern
Kern County nineteen miles west of Delano. Ducks, grebe, Double-crested
Cormorant, herons, egrets, and up to 6,000 pairs of nesting White-faced
Ibis may be present Kern NWR. White-tailed Kite and Peregrine Falcon are
often seen in this area. The Kern NWR is the best area in Kern County
for marsh birds including American Bittern, Black-crowned Night-Heron,
Virginia Rail, Sora, and Common Moorhen. Up to six species of swallows
may be present. Marsh Wren, Common Yellowthroat, and Song Sparrow are
abundant species. Loggerhead Shrike may be common. Blackbirds
(Red-winged, Tricolored, Yellow-headed, and Brewer’s) may be present,
sometimes in the thousands. The strips of riparian habitat on the Kern
NWR may have a diversity of spring migrant flycatchers, vireos,
thrushes, wood-warblers, tanagers, and grosbeaks.
From the Kern National Wildlife Refuge, this trip will continue east on
Garces Highway and Hwy. 155 through agricultural areas in the southern
San Joaquin Valley, up into the foothills of the Greenhorn Mountains,
over 6102’ Greenhorn Summit to the Kern River Valley at Wofford Heights,
from where it is a ten minute drive to the Lake Isabella Park-and-Ride.
The west side foothills area offers a chance for Golden Eagle.
Pacific-slope Flycatcher, Hutton’s Vireo, Oak Titmouse, and Lawrence’s
Goldfinch may be found at Cedar Creek Campground. Bird species which may
be found in the area around Greenhorn Summit include Mountain Quail,
Northern Goshawk, Red-breasted Sapsucker, White-headed Woodpecker,
Pileated Woodpecker, Dusky Flycatcher, Cassin’s Vireo, Violet-green
Swallow, Mountain Chickadee, Townsend’s Solitaire, Nashville Warbler,
Hermit Warbler, MacGillivray’s Warbler, Western Tanager, Green-tailed
Towhee, and “Thick-billed” Fox Sparrow. Leave at 6:30am from the
Lake Isabella Park-and-Ride located just northwest of the junction of CA
State Hwy. 155 and CA State Hwy. 178 in Lake Isabella. Bring food &
drink to last all day.
NOTE: If hot coffee or a quick snack is desired to start the day, there
is a restaurant and a mini-mart located on opposite corners of the
nearby traffic light in Lake Isabella. Both businesses open at 6am. FEE:
$40.
TRIP V: 6:30am-3pm/5pm (Monday only), San
Joaquin Valley/Tulare Lake Basin via the Kern River Canyon. This
trip will proceed down Hwy. 178 through the Lower Kern River Canyon to
Hart Park and Beale Park in Bakersfield. Then it is on to the 11,000
acre Kern National Wildlife Refuge (See TRIP U description). From the
Kern NWR this trip will stop at Kings County wetland areas in the search
for late migrant shorebirds and waterbirds.
Leave at 6:30am from the
Lake Isabella Park-and-Ride located just
northwest of the junction of CA State Hwy. 155 and CA State Hwy. 178 in
Lake Isabella. Bring food & drink to last all day, or as long as you
plan to stay with the trip. This is an excellent trip for those of you
who want to “bird your way” out of the Kern River Valley after
NatureFest weekend.
NOTE: If hot coffee or a quick snack is desired to start the day, there
is a restaurant and a mini-mart located on opposite corners of the
nearby traffic light in Lake Isabella. Both businesses open at 6am. FEE:
$40.
TRIP W:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
6am-11:30am/1pm (Saturday and/or Sunday only), South Fork Wildlife
Area. The South Fork Wildlife Area (SFWA) is a 1200 acre unit of the
Sequoia National Forest bordering both sides of the South Fork Kern
River between the western boundary of the Kern River Preserve and the
eastern shore of Isabella Reservoir. Birds of grassland, open water,
riparian, and shoreline habitats will be sought. The SFWA is the best
place in the South Fork Wildlife Area to find Brown-crested Flycatcher.
Learn how to access this area and enjoy many of the bird species
present. Species which have been present, even common to abundant during
past festivals include Western Grebe, Clark’s Grebe, American White
Pelican, Osprey, Tree Swallow, Western Bluebird, Yellow Warbler, Common
Yellowthroat, Summer Tanager, Blue Grosbeak, Lazuli Bunting, Tricolored
Blackbird, and Lawrence’s Goldfinch, along with spring migrants. Leave
at 6 am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178 in Weldon.
Binoculars are helpful. Bring food & drink to last until lunch. FEE:
$30.
TRIP X:
NEW in 2008!!!!!
5:45am-3pm/6pm (Tuesday only), Target Species /
Target Trips Tuesday. Meet at Kern
River Preserve Headquarters in Weldon. Even after several days of
birding, some species and trip destinations will have been missed. After
a short group discussion, participants will be split into field trip
groups depending on which target species they wish to try to observe for
first time and/or for follow-up observations. Options for birding new
locations will be offered, too. Multiple leaders to realize trip route
flexibility. Bring food & drink to last all day. FEE: $40.
BUTTERFLIES
TRIP Y: 9am-3pm (Saturday and/or Sunday
only), An Introduction to Kern River Valley Spring Butterflies. The Kern
River Valley and Southern Sierra Nevada is such a great area for
butterflies that the North American Butterfly Association (NABA) will
hold their 8th Biennial National Meeting here June 26-29, 2008, the
first time this meeting has been held in California. Get a head start at
this year's Spring Nature Festival by joining butterfly experts Bill
Bouton and Fred Heath on visits to South Fork Valley and Erskine Creek
hotspots to look for some of the Kern River Valley's most beautiful and
rare butterflies. Butterfly species which have been known to fly in late
April include the Western Tiger Swallowtail, Western Pygmy-Blue (the
world's smallest butterfly), and California Sister (Erskine Creek). The
San Emigdio Blue and Alkali Skipper may be flying, butterflies which are
rare enough that people from around the world come to the Kern River
Valley to see them. Although this field trip is especially designed to
introduce participants to butterflies, anyone is welcome, from beginner
through expert. Leave at 9am via carpool from the
Audubon’s Sprague Ranch parking lot alongside Fay Ranch
Road, 1.6 miles north of Hwy. 178
in Weldon. Binoculars are helpful. Bring food & drink to last until 3pm.
FEE: $20.
GEOLOGY
TRIP Z: 8am-1:30pm (Saturday only), Southern
Sierra Geology. Geologist Joe Fontaine returns to conduct his immensely
popular geology field trip. This geological transect will interpret
millions of years of the Sierra Nevada. See metasedimentary rocks,
granite batholith, and limestone dikes along several stops along Sierra
Way from the Kern Canyon north of Kernville to the South Fork Valley
near Weldon. Joe will reveal the story told by the exposed soils and
rocks at each stop. Leave from
Riverside Park, across from Riverside One
Stop (Shell gas station) in Kernville. Bring food & drink to last until
1:30pm. Trip Limit. FEE: $30 (includes detailed booklet).
HABITAT RESTORATION
TRIP AA: 9am-11am (Saturday only), Kern
River Preserve Habitat Enhancements and Stewardship. Join Preserve
Manager Reed Tollefson on a walk around the restoration sites on the
Kern River Preserve. Learn about ongoing habitat improvements including
exotic plant removal that has contributed to greater numbers of nesting
species of birds. Meet at Kern River Preserve Headquarters in Weldon.
DONATION to the Kern River Preserve.
PHOTOGRAPHY
TRIP BB: 7am-10am+ (Saturday only). Basic
Bird Photography Workshop with Bob Steele. Learn how to set-up natural
habitat shots to photograph birds in a semi-controlled setting. Get tips
and techniques for using your camera more effectively. Minimum equipment
requirements: Digital or Film SLR camera, 300mm lens, teleconverter.
Meet at Kern River Preserve Headquarters in Weldon. See
Bob Steele's website. FEE: $30.
TRIP CC: 3pm-5pm+ (Saturday only), Advanced
Bird Photography Workshop with Bob Steele. Learn how to photograph birds
in flight. This workshop will take place along the shore of Isabella
reservoir. Gulls will be the target species. Minimum equipment
requirements: Digital or Film SLR camera, 300mm lens, teleconverters,
flash (not required, but suggested). Meet at
Kissack Cove in Mountain
Mesa just inside the westernmost entrance (where the speed limit
changes). See Bob Steele's website. FEE: $30.
NATURAL HISTORY
TRIP DD: 7 am - 5 pm.
(Monday only). Natural History of the Kern River Watershed with
Nature Ali. This trip covers the
whole enchilada of geology, botany, birding, other wildlife, Indigenous
cultures, and recent history of the Kern River Watershed. Bring water,
food, sunscreen, bug spray, hat, field guides, notebook, and dress in
layers anticipating any type of weather from hot to freezing. Meet at
6:50am at Kern River Preserve Headquarters for carpooling. FEE $40.
WILDFLOWERS and RARE PLANTS
TRIP EE: 8 am - 2 pm.
(Saturday only). Rare Plants of the Kern
River Watershed. The southern
Sierra Nevada is a floristic melting pot between the Central Valley and
the Mojave Desert and also between the High Sierra and the Southern
California Mountains. This confluence of diverse floras creates a high
density of rare endemic plants and many interesting plant communities.
Fletcher Linton, Sequoia National Forest
Botanist will lead a trip on a trip to rare plant
locations. Possible flowers in bloom include: Shirley Meadows Star
Tulip, Piute Mountain. Jewelflower, Kern Canyon Clarkia, Kern Canyon
Larkspur, Alkali Mariposa Lily, and Pygmy Poppy. There will be a
discussion of the ecology of the Piute Mtn Cypress while in Sequoia
National Forest's Piute Cypress botanical area. Meet at Riverside Park
across from Riverside One Stop (Shell gas station), Kernville. Carpool.
FEE: $20.
TRIP FF: 10 am - 2 pm.
(Sunday only). Wildflowers in Bloom Workshop. The Kern Valley is centered in the area
of highest plant diversity found in California. Join Fletcher Linton - Sequoia National Forest botanist
to learn about the ecology and names of wildflowers at some of the areas
best wildflower displays. Meet at Riverside Park
across from Riverside One Stop (Shell gas station), Kernville. Carpool.
FEE: $10.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Weather: Weather in the Kern Valley in late April is usually
spectacular (sunny, 65-80° F daytime highs), but it can be variable. On
mountain trips prepare for very cool to freezing weather. For your
comfort, we suggest bringing water, snacks, a hat, sunscreen, insect
repellent, jacket for cool weather, and sturdy shoes (waterproof boots
may be handy in riparian areas).
Fees/Registration: There is no general entrance fee to attend the
Kern River Valley Spring Nature Festival. All fee activities are limited
to twenty or less participants... usually ten to fifteen. All fees go to support the Festival and are not refundable.
Vendor fees are waved at Circle Park but are 10% of net or $100
whichever is lower for booths selling merchandise at the Kern River
Preserve.
Schedule of Events: Additional events may be added between now
and the Spring Nature Festival weekend.
Volunteer
NatureFest Steering Committee: Steve Kenton, Bill
& Birdie Foster, Reed Tollefson, Jeff King, Ron
Gillentine, Sandra Wieser, Bob
Barnes, Chuck Wild, Charlotte Goodson, Valerie Cassity, and Alison Sheehey
A big thank you to all of the 2008 Festival Sponsors:
Audubon-California (Kern River Preserve),
Bob Barnes & Associates,
Friends of the Kern River Preserve,
Kerncrest Audubon Society,
Kern River Valley Revitalization, Inc.,
Southern Sierra Research Center,
USDA- Forest Service – Sequoia National
Forest,
and Valley Wild
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