Category Archives: Get Outdoors

Rose-breasted Grosbeak

Spring Migration is Finally Here

On the evening of Tuesday, May 1, a wave of migratory birds arrived in Massachusetts. While some early-migrating species have been trickling in since April, Wednesday, May 2, marks the beginning of the season for our most colorful migrants. Scarlet Tanagers, Yellow Warblers, melodious Wood Thrushes, and a host of other species have finally arrived after waiting out winter in the tropics. 

Rose-breasted Grosbeaks are one of dozens of showy migratory species. Photo © Will Freedberg

Understanding Migration

Most migratory songbirds fly north under the cover of darkness, out of sight of daytime predators like falcons and hawks. Sometimes, it’s possible to hear them in quiet, open spaces: a faint “chip” noise is the telltale sign of a warbler flying overhead. Most nights, you might just hear one ever few minutes, but on nights with heavy migration, it’s possible to hear a flight call every second.

These birds prefer to migrate on nights with southwest winds, which speed them on their journey north. In fact, Tuesday’s southwest winds combined with recent bird reports from New York were the key tip-offs that migrants would arrive today.

These birds journey north over several nights, with most stopping to feed along the way and flying with a southwest wind at their backs. In fact, after staying put during last week’s steady northerly winds, this first push of birds flew into Massachusetts as soon as the winds shifted southwest.

Read the Radar

The scale of bird migration is astounding. So huge, in fact, that you can watch it unfold across entire regions on radar. Doppler radar, normally used to detect weather patterns like thunderstorms, regularly picks up “clouds” of migrating birds, allowing scientists to study migration patterns on a continental scale. To learn how to predict bird migration with radar, check out our introduction to the topic and specific instructions on how to read radar signals.

Canada Warbler. Photo © Will Freedberg

Tips For Watching Warblers

One of the joys of spring migration is that surprising birds can show up just about anywhere. While migratory species rely on undisturbed forests and shrublands to breed, many also pass through urban and suburban parks on their way north. Any grove of trees, whether in the Boston Public Garden or a suburban backyard, is a great place to check for warblers, orioles, grosbeaks, and other goodies.

Look for these colorful visitors in the highest parts of trees, but also around dense cover like thickets. But the real key is waking up early. Most migrants are active just after dawn, and turn quiet by mid-morning.

Good luck! If you see anything good out there, let us know on our Facebook page.

Maple Madness 2018

Maple sugaring is about to kick in to high gear and several of our wildlife sanctuaries are ready to celebrate the sweet season. Find out how you can take part—and be sure to register early to guarantee a spot!

Boston Nature Center, Mattapan

During Maple Sugaring on February 24, tap, collect, and boil down sap from the maple trees found. Find out about the different techniques and equipment used across New England and why sugar maples are so unique.

Drumlin Farm, Lincoln

During Maple Magic on March 2, visit the maple grove to check the taps and taste some sap. Learn how maple syrup is made from past to present and delight your taste buds with a sweet maple treat.

Listen to a story of maple sugaring and take a walk out to our sugar bush as part of Sip Some Sap on March 8. We’ll check out our evaporator to see how sap is turned into syrup, and enjoy a tasty maple treat.

Sign up for a seating at Sap-to-Syrup Breakfast on March 10 or 11 to enjoy homemade pancakes, roasted potatoes, and sausage! After, see how sap is collected from our majestic maple trees.

Habitat Education Center, Belmont

At the annual Sugaring Celebration on March 3, everyone can learn how maple syrup is made from sugar maple trees. Try few sugaring activities, hear stories, and visit a few places on the property including our tapped sugar trees.

During From Sap to Syrup on March 4, adults can learn how to identify the various maple species and taste sap right from the bucket!

Kids 5 and under can Go to the Maple Tree with their parents on March 6 or March 8. Taste the sap, make maple leaf rubbings, and hear a sugaring story!

Blue  Hills Trailside Museum, Milton

Maple Sugar Days at Brookwood Farm in the Blue Hills Reservation on March is scheduled for March 24-25. Walk down “Maple Lane,” meeting people who share the maple story and who will help you handle and use sugar making tools. Activities include games for children, a warming bonfire, and horse-drawn wagon rides.

Moose HIll, Sharon

Experience the sugaring process from tree to table and learn how sugaring has evolved from Native American to colonial to our own current procedures during Maple Sugaring Weekend 90-minute guide tours. Sign up for time slot on March 17, 18, or 25. End with a sweet snack!

Ipswich River, Topsfield

We do all the work and you get the reward when you Rent a Bucket. In addition to taking home an 8-ounce bottle of syrup at season’s end, you will have a hands-on opportunity to tap your tree at a special sugaring tour on Saturday, February 24.

Sugaring Off Tours take place weekends in March. Learn how to identify a sugar maple, observe tapping and sap collection methods, watch the sap being boiled down in the sugarhouse, and get a sweet taste of the final product.

On March 24, enjoy a Spring Flapjack Fling & Sugaring Off Tour. Flapjacks with our own maple syrup, along with fruit, orange juice, coffee, tea, and milk are on the menu.