Take 5: Loony Tunes

Loons are famous for their beautifully haunting, eerie calls, which echo across the waters they call home. They have a variety of calls for different purposes—territorial, alarm sounds, mating, or to locate one another, to name a few.

Loons are water birds, venturing ashore only to mate and incubate eggs. They can dive almost noiselessly into the water to catch fish, and are agile underwater swimmers, propelling themselves with their feet. Their solid bones are perfectly designed to make them less buoyant and better at diving than most hollow-boned birds.

Have you heard any loons on your local lakes and ponds? Tell us below in the comments! And check out this beautiful Loon Flute from the Audubon Shop to make your own loon calls (just not during the summer because it can interfere with breeding).

Enjoy these five photos of loons in their striking black and white plumage, and submit your own wildlife photos to the 2016 Picture This: Your Great Outdoors Photo Contest, open now!

Common Loon and Chicks © Michael Phillips, 2014 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon and Chicks © Michael Phillips, 2014 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon © Mark Stone, 2015 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon © Mark Stone, 2015 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon and Chicks © Emily Eaton, 2014 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon and Chicks © Emily Eaton, 2014 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon © Ari Dinerman, 2013 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon © Ari Dinerman, 2013 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon © Linda MacMillan, 2015 Photo Contest Entry

Common Loon © Linda MacMillan, 2015 Photo Contest Entry

Help Trailside Museum Secure Funding

Help Mass Audubon’s Blue Hills Trailside Museum secure the state funding it needs for FY2017! Trailside is the interpretive center for the state-owned Blue Hills Reservation and features a natural history museum and outdoor exhibits of rescued wildlife.

TrailsideDiscoveryDayKentHarnois

Trailside Museum Sanctuary Director Norman Smith sharing his passion with adults and children. Photo © Kent Harnois

Mass Audubon operate the museum in partnership with the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, which means we receive a crucial component of Trailside’s funding through the state budget each fiscal year. Learn more about how the funding works.

Now that the House and Senate have both filed their FY2017 budgets, the two versions will be reconciled in conference committee. The Senate version of the budget allocated Trailside with $500,000, but the House version only budgeted $150,000.

We are asking for the conference committee budget to fund the full $500,000.

You can help!

Please call or email the conference committee members and urge them to include full funding for Trailside in their budget.

Senator Karen E. Spilka
617-722-1640
[email protected]

Senator Sal DiDomenico
617-722-1650
[email protected]

Senator Viriato DeMacedo
617-722-1330
[email protected]

Representative Brian Dempsey
617-722-2990
[email protected]

Stephen Kulik
617-722-2380
[email protected]

Representative Todd Smola
617-722-2100
[email protected]

Thank you for your advocacy!