13 Birding - Gloucester HarborWalk
2039
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13 Important Bird Area
13 Birding

© John Van de Graaff

Gloucester boasts an international reputation as an Important Bird Area (IBA). Its coastal thickets attract a great variety of songbirds during the peaks of their migration in May and September. The area has a special attraction for birdwatchers in winter, when many species travel here from as far away as the High Arctic. The striking drake Common Eider is easy to spot from almost anywhere along the harbor’s shoreline. It nests here on offshore islands, but its numbers swell in winter with the arrival of birds from farther north.

Mass Audubon’s Eastern Point Wildlife Sanctuary, the Dog Bar Breakwater, Niles Beach, the Jodrey Fish Pier, and any of the harbor’s numerous coves and vantage points are ideal places to see winter birds of many species such as loons, rebes, sea ducks, gannets, auks, and gulls. Rarities are recorded on an almost annual basis and arrive from as far away as Japan.

Calls, Whistles & Whoops

Calls, Whistles & Whoops

 courtesy of Macaulay Library © Cornell Lab of Ornithology

MA Audubon Poster

Massachusetts Audubon Bird Poster

‘State of the Birds’ Documenting Changes in Massachusetts’ Bird life

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Eider Duck Family

Eider Duck Family

Common Eider family, Gloucester Harbor

Photo by Kim Smith

Spring Walk BINGO MA Audubon

Spring Walk BINGO MA Audubon

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