Evergreen Audubon’s Annual January Banquet (exact date to be determined) is a time to celebrate and acknowledge all the ways in which the members of our community contribute to manifesting our mission of wildlife and habitat conservation and natural history education. Each year as part of our celebratory mood we announce the Bear Creek Watershed Bird-of-the-Year and honor those folks who have successfully completed our annual Birding Challenge with Bird Challenge hats, well-deserved accolades, and much cheering!
First, with regard to the Bird-of-the-Year, if you think you have seen the coolest bird in the Bear Creek Watershed in 2024 send Chuck an email – chuck.aid@evergreenaudubon.org, and provide a few details.
Then, with regard to our Birding Challenge….. In 1918 the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) was passed, solidifying the United States’ commitment to four bilateral treaties for the protection of our shared migratory birds. This came on the heels of an earlier 1916 treaty with Canada for the protection “of the many species of birds that traverse certain parts of the United States and Canada in their annual migration.” The primary goal of these two treaties was to stop the “indiscriminate slaughter” of migratory birds, essentially stating that it is unlawful to pursue, hunt, take, capture, kill, possess, sell, purchase, barter, import, export, or transport any migratory bird, or any part, nest, or egg or any such bird, unless authorized under a permit issued by the Secretary of the Interior. The MBTA was subsequently amended to protect over 800 species as treaties were signed with Mexico (1936), Japan (1972), and Russia (1976). The Canadian treaty was amended in December 1995 to allow traditional subsistence hunting of migratory birds.
In 2016, to commemorate 100 years of the MBTA, Evergreen Audubon initiated its Annual Birding Challenge, hoping that through goal setting and competition more folks would be inclined to work on their bird identification skills and come to know our birds more intimately. Successful completion of the Challenge makes you a Challenge Club member and earns you an exclusive Challenge Club cap. The goal of the Challenge is to identify by sight or sound the following number of species in just one of six possible geographic regions:
- Jefferson County: 131 species
- Clear Creek County: 76 species
- Gilpin County: 68 species
- Park County: 101 species
- The State of Colorado: 173 species
- Bear Creek Watershed (Bear Creek and its tributaries from Mount Evans to the South Platte): 112 species
These lists are not mutually exclusive; if you see a Dipper in downtown Evergreen, you can count it for the Bear Creek Watershed, Jefferson County, and the State of Colorado.
There’s still time this year to add more migrant and winter birds to your count! If you are fortunate enough to achieve the specified number of birds for one of the six areas, please send your list by Jan 6 to Chuck Aid at – chuck.aid@evergreenaudubon.org.