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See spring migrants at birding hot spots

By Charles Seabrook
March 22, 2011

We’re heading into prime bird-watching time in Georgia. Over the next several weeks, untold numbers of Neotropical migrants -- warblers, thrushes, orioles, vireos, buntings, grosbeaks, hummingbirds, tanagers, swallows, flycatchers -- will be returning from winter grounds in Latin America and the Caribbean to commence nesting and raise babies.

The spring migrants will be decked out in their bright, spiffy breeding plumage; some, such as the beautiful rose-breasted grosbeak and indigo bunting, may stop at our feeders to refresh and refuel. But to see an array of these colorful creatures, you'll have to go to where they are -- woodlands, wetlands, fields, parks, stream banks.

With trees and shrubs bare of leaves, spotting spring migrants will be much easier over the next several weeks than later in spring, when dense foliage will hide many of the sprightly creatures.

You don’t have to drive far in metro Atlanta to visit some top spring birding spots. Here's a sampling from the Atlanta Audubon Society of some of the metro area’s best places, free and open to the public, to see a variety of birds:

For information on guided walks and driving directions to these places and other local birding hot spots, visit the Atlanta Audubon Society at www.atlantaaudubon.org.

IN THE SKY: The moon will be first quarter Saturday night and will grow into a full moon by March 19, said David Dundee, astronomer with Tellus Science Museum. This month’s full moon is known as “the windy moon” by the Cherokee peoples. Venus rises out of the east about two hours before sunrise. Jupiter is very low in the west just after dark. Saturn rises out of the east about 8 p.m.

About the Author

Charles Seabrook

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