Event Registration

Birmingham Audubon Fall Bird Count
09/29/2018 07:00 AM - 08:00 PM ET

Admission

  • Free
Event Registration is closed.

Since 1946, seasonal bird counts have been a central part of Birmingham Audubon’s work. This year, we’re continuing that tradition with four great counts, beginning with our fifty-eighth annual Fall Bird Count, scheduled for Saturday, September 29th.

Together, we’ll spend the day in small groups surveying bird populations at a wide variety of sites located in Jefferson, Shelby, and St. Clair counties. Fall migrants, resident hawks, large waders, even common birds like Northern mockingbirds and American robins, are all fair game—each sighting contributes to a half-century-long dataset with important information on shifting ranges, the effects of urbanization, and climate-related population changes.

As always with our counts, we’ll meet up at the end of the day for refreshments, good conversation, and the evening “compilation,” the sometimes raucous process by which the day’s final bird list is assembled. (This is also your best opportunity to brag about all those unusual sightings you managed to get—so long as you bring proof of the really rare ones!)

Note: Because this is a coordinated scientific survey, we require all participants to register at least a day or two before the count. Please let us know if you’re new to bird counts, as we’ll need to send further instructions on how to participate, what to expect, &c. (Don’t be intimidated, though! We strongly encourage participation by new and inexperienced birders—nothing quite builds expertise like a day-long count in the company of a seasoned birder.)

Compilation location: Elberta Reid will host the compilation at her home in Mountain Brook (2616 Mountain Brook Parkway). The compilation will begin at 7:00 p.m., with drinks and light snacks provided.

Count leaders: Greg Harber (cell: 205-807-8055; day of count only) will coordinate the count and compilation.

More information: To learn more about how bird counts work, and to read the history of the one that started it all, check out National Audubon’s “History of the Christmas Bird Count” page.