It’s that time of year again! The Brookline Bird Club will be leading daily birding trips through Mount Auburn Cemetery, an oasis for migrating birds, this spring from Wednesday April 17th through Sunday May 26th 2024.

All trips begin at the cemetery’s main entrance gate (580 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge). Please visit our trips calendar or blue book for timing and trip leaders, which vary by day. The cemetery is easily accessible by MBTA and you can visit the Mount Auburn website for more information.

Please be respectful of the cemetery and its visitors, as this is an active cemetery. We can’t wait to see what this spring migration brings.

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Upcoming Field Trips

  • Weston Station Pond Rookery

    Weston Conservation Land - Sears Land 27 Crescent St, Weston, MA, United States

    Discover a Weston hot-spot featuring a Great Blue Heron rookery accessible by public transportation. The walk offers excellent chances for spring migrants, raptors, nesting Eastern Bluebirds and various waterfowl. Beginners welcome. Leader will pre-walk the route to scout for arriving species each session.

  • Moose Hill Wildlife Sanctuary, Sharon

    Sharon - Moose Hill 293 Moose Hill Pkwy, Sharon, MA, United States

    We’ll be looking and listening for migrants along the Billings Loop. Let’s find what Glenn can hear! Cosponsored with the South Shore Bird Club.

  • Mount Auburn Cemetery

    Mount Auburn Cemetery 536 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge, MA, United States

  • Marblehead Neck Sanctuary

    Marblehead Neck MAS Sanctuary 98 Risley Road, Marblehead, MA, United States

    We will explore this small gem of a sanctuary for migrants and residents alike.

  • Webinar Open to All with Heather Packard, Mass Audubon – Rescue Wildlife from Rodenticides

    Please join the BBC on the evening of Tuesday, May 5 from 7PM to 8:30PM for a webinar with Heather Packard from the Massachusetts Audubon Society entitled Rescue Wildlife from Rodenticides. This webinar is open to all. Raptors, coyotes, and other predators balance Massachusetts’ ecosystems. But shocking numbers of these iconic creatures have been sickened

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