Happy New Year MassBirders!

Mark Burns and I led our 28th Annual New Year’s Day Birding Trip for the Brookline Bird Club (BBC)! At 9:00AM, 18BBCers met at Cashman Park in Newburyport where we toasted in the New Year with sparkling apple cider, introduced ourselves, and reported on where we traveled from and what our first bird of the New Year was.  We had rain and drizzle for most of the day, temps that hovered around 44df, and little to no wind. We birded the Merrimack River, Parker River National Wildlife Refuge, and Salisbury Beach State Reservation and called it a day at 4:15PM.  We tallied 64 species for the Club list. Following is a complete list of the birds we saw:

Red-throated Loon –  3 

Common Loon –  1 

Horned Grebe –  7 

Red-necked Grebe –  1 

Great Cormorant – 1 

Great Blue Heron –  1 

Canada Goose –  64 

Mute Swan –  5 

Gadwall –  9 

American Black Duck –  125 

Mallard –  89 

Northern Pintail – 40 

Green-winged Teal –  2 

Ring-necked Duck – 10 

Greater Scaup – 2 

Lesser Scaup – 2 

Northern Gannet – 4 

Common Eider –  313 

Surf Scoter – 252 

White-winged Scoter –  313 

Black Scoter –  401 

Long-tailed Duck –  13 

Bufflehead –  5 

Common Goldeneye –  87 

Hooded Merganser – 11 

Common Merganser –  15 

Red-breasted Merganser –  82 

Northern Harrier –  7 

Red-tailed Hawk –  1 

Merlin –  2 

Killdeer – 1 

Sanderling –  2 

Purple Sandpiper – 3 

Dunlin – 25 

Herring Gull –  108 

Ring-billed Gull – 86   

Great Black-backed Gull –  5 

Black-legged Kittiwake –  1 

Rock Pigeon –  3 

Mourning Dove –  3 

Barred Owl – 1 

Short-eared Owl – 1 

Red-bellied Woodpecker –  1 

Downy Woodpecker –  1 

Blue Jay – 2 

American Crow – 8 

Comon Raven –  1 

Black-capped Chickadee –  4 

Tufted Titmouse – 1 

White-breasted Nuthatch –  1 

Horned Lark – 12 

Carolina Wren – 2 

American Robin –  3 

Northern Mockingbird – 2 

Hermit Thrush – 1 

European Starling –  3 

American Tree Sparrow – 2 

Song Sparrow – 4 

White-throated Sparrow –  2 

Dark-eyed Junco – 5 

Northern Cardinal – 2 

House Finch – 2 

American Goldfinch – 3 

House Sparrow –  20 

Wishing you all a very Happy, Healthy, and Birdy 2025!

Laura H. de la Flor

Black Birders’ Week 2021

May 30-June 5 Organized by The BlackAFInSTEM Collective – a collective that “seeks to support, uplift, and amplify Black Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics professionals in natural resources and the environment through professional development, career

Everybody Loves Owls

With reports of too close encounters with owls, it's time to check in and think about birding ethics. It is NEVER okay to approach roosting owls closely. The Brookline Bird Club’s code of Ethics

Black Birders’ Week 2021

May 30-June 5 Organized by The BlackAFInSTEM Collective – a collective that “seeks to support, uplift, and amplify Black Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics professionals in natural resources and the environment through professional development, career

Everybody Loves Owls

With reports of too close encounters with owls, it's time to check in and think about birding ethics. It is NEVER okay to approach roosting owls closely. The Brookline Bird Club’s code of Ethics

Black Birders’ Week 2021

May 30-June 5 Organized by The BlackAFInSTEM Collective – a collective that “seeks to support, uplift, and amplify Black Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics professionals in natural resources and the environment through professional development, career

Everybody Loves Owls

With reports of too close encounters with owls, it's time to check in and think about birding ethics. It is NEVER okay to approach roosting owls closely. The Brookline Bird Club’s code of Ethics

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Upcoming Field Trips

  • Quabbin Reservoir

    Join Glenn on a 5-to-6-mile walk through a very birdy area with species ranging from Broad-winged Hawk to Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Blue-headed Vireo, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Scarlet Tanager, Baltimore Oriole, and lots of stuff in between. (Maybe a moose or a bobcat!) Co-sponsored with the South Shore Bird Club.

  • Bring Back Boblinks: Bobolinks at Heard Farm, Wayland (New!)

    New addition to our Bring Back Bobolinks conservation series. This gem works its way into the rotations of many birders once discovered. It is managed for dog walking (no dogs on this walk please) and bobolinks, which in a good year can number 100 or more. We will be using dirt trails and boardwalks. Trails

  • Bring Back Bobolinks: Codman Estate Farm (Was Drumlin Farm) (New!)

    This walk was planned for Drumlin Farm but more Bobolinks can be seen at this nearby location so we've moved the walk to Codman Farms. Adding to our Bobolink conservation series. Join Ilija to observe and appreciate Bobolinks in breeding habitat! Bobolinks are migratory grassland birds found across Massachusetts. The Bobolink is listed as a

  • Fruitlands Museum, Harvard

    Cosponsored with Boxborough Birders. All the nesting birds will still be around, with good views of young out of the nest being fed by parents: Veery, Indigo Bunting, Catbird, Red-winged Blackbird, Tree Swallow, Bobolink, Wood Thrush, Baltimore Oriole, and Warblers. Expect to walk about 2 miles on trails through meadow and woods with some steep

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