On February 9, 2022, our Members Virtual Winter Meeting will present Puffin Researcher and Ornithologist Steve Kress and Journalist-Photographer Derrick Z. Jackson.
NOTE: This event requires all participants to register, and attendance is limited.
Please check out Derrick Jackson’s stunning images, all for sale. All proceeds from his bird photography goes toward scholarships he has established for Black, Latinx and Indigenous research assistants in National Audubon’s Project Puffin, and for Black, Latinx and Indigenous educators to attend Audubon’s Hog Island Camp in Maine. For purchasing information and orders, please contact Mr. Jackson at dzjphoto@gmail.com.
The prices for images are:
11 x 14 in 16 x 20 mat or frame: $200
8 x 10 in 11 x14 mat or frame: $150
5 x 7 in 8 x 10 mat or frame: $100
Custom Wide Images prices are $15-$25 more.
If mailing is involved, shipping would be extra between $10 and $25, depending on weight and size, and which state the image is being shipped to. Matted images can be shipped; framed images with glass cannot be shipped. Framed images using acrylic instead of glass are a possibility.
Derrick Z. Jackson is a three-time finalist in BirdWatching Magazine’s photography contests, including a third-place finish in 2020. He has also been a finalist or semifinalist in Nature’s Best Photography Awards and Outdoor Photographer Magazine’s The American Landscape Contest. His photography has been published in the Boston Globe, DownEast Magazine, Grist.org, the Union of Concerned Scientists, the American Prospect Magazine, A.T. Journeys Magazine, the Journal of Wildlife Management and used by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
Derrick’s puffin images are featured in Project Puffin: The Improbable Quest to Bring a Beloved Seabird Back to Egg Rock, published in 2015 by Yale University Press, and The Puffin Plan, published in 2020 by Tumblehome Books. The Puffin Plan won the 2021 Gold Award in Teen Nonfiction from the Independent Book Publishers Association. Jackson co-authored both books with Stephen Kress, the former director of National Audubon’s Seabird Restoration Program, who brought puffins back to islands of Maine where they had been absent for nearly a century.
News Categories
Upcoming Field Trips
Field Trips / Events
-
-
Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, Concord
Concord - Great Meadows Concord Unit, Entrance Rd, Concord, MA, United StatesWe will look for early migrants, waterfowl, and waders. Conditions may be wet; boots advised. Note that an entrance fee or pass is required.
-
Fruitlands Museum, Harvard
Harvard - Fruitlands Museum 102 Prospect Hill Rd., Harvard, MA, United StatesCosponsored with Boxborough Birders. We will look for local avian non-migratory species and early migrant arrivals. Expect to walk about two miles on trails through meadows and woods, with some steep sections. Prepare for ticks. We will bird at the meeting location for about 30 minutes so any latecomers can catch up.
-
Westborough WMA in Two Parts
Northborough - Watson Park, Bartlett Pond 35A Lyman St, Northborough, MA, United StatesPart 1: 7 AM -10 AM / Part 2: 10:30 AM -1:00 PM. We will hike at a slow pace through mild moderate trails in search of sparrows and other migrants. For the first part we will hike the Eastern trails between Lake Chauncy and Little Chauncy(about 3 miles). Then we will again meet at
-
Belle Isle Marsh and Vicinity
East Boston - Belle Isle Parking Lot 1399 Bennington Street, Boston, MA, United StatesLed by DCR staff. We will search on foot up to one mile on flat, easy terrain, for migrating or resident songbirds, raptors, shorebirds, and marsh birds at this birding hotspot and state park. This is a traveling program by car or bike. Prepare for ticks and mosquitoes. Ages: Adults and kids 8 years+ with
-
Millennium Park
Boston - Millennium Park Canoe Launch 300 Gardner Street, Boston, MA, United StatesJoin us to observe resident birds and spring migrants in a unique urban habitat that is a favorite for many bird species, including uncommon and rare flycatchers, swallows & warblers. Birders of all levels welcome. The trails are generally flat and easy to walk, with some rough patches. A water bottle, sunblock, insect repellent, waterproof






















