Monday, May 30, 2011

Menunkatuck Joins in Fishing Line Recycling Program



Menunkatuck has installed these cool fishing line recycling bins at several locations within our chapter area. Please deposit all fishing line you use (or find) into these bins to protect birds and other wildlife from entanglement. The bins will be emptied and the fishing line collected to be recycled by the following volunteers and town/state staff.
  • Guilford Town Marina - maintained by marina staff
  • Lake Quonnipaug boat launch, Guilford - maintained by Lorrie Shaw and Cindi Kobak
  • Hammonasset Beach State Park, Madison (5 locations within the park) - maintained by park staff
  • Madison/Guilford boat launch off Neck Road – maintained by Bob Kuchta
We plan to install several more recycling bins in the future at fishing sites in Branford and West Haven. If you know of an appropriate site and would like to volunteer to maintain a bin, please contact Cindi Kobak at program@menunkatuck.org.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Menunkatuck Supports ‘Adopt a Book’ in Guilford

The Guilford Library recently put out the call seeking donations toward the purchase of new books for their children’s room. Menunkatuck Audubon answered that call to ‘Adopt a Book.’ Working with Suellen Heinrich at the library, we chose ten nature-related books to donate:


  • Backyard Birds – Peterson Field Guide
  • Birds of Prey – Peterson Field Guide
  • Bring On the Birds – Susan Stockdale
  • Can We Save the Tiger? – Martin Jenkins
  • Frog In a Bog – John Himmelman
  • Hatch – Roxie Munroe
  • Olivia’s Birds – Saving the Gulf – Olivia Bouler
  • Roscoe and the Pelican Rescue – Lynn Reed
  • Summer Birds: The Butterflies of Maria Merian – Margarita Engle
  • Thunder Birds – Nature’s Flying Predators – Jim Aronsky


Book plates will be placed in each of these books with the Menunkatuck Audubon Society named as donor. Share them with a favorite kid this summer when you visit the Guilford Library.


Thank you to our members, whose support made this donation possible.

Monday, May 23, 2011

New Birders’ Log Box at Hammonasset


Thanks to board member, John Picard, Menunkatuck has a beautiful new wooden box to store our Birders’ Log, newsletters, and our revised Birds of Hammonasset State Park Checklist. (Grateful thanks to Frank Gallo for working with us to revise the list, which now includes all 328 species of birds seen in the park.)

Publish Post

Please remember to record your bird sightings in the log after birding in the park. Birders can check the list to find what has been seen in the park recently, and to know where to look. The records are compiled at the end of the year and sent to Audubon CT and the CT Ornithological Association.

Happy birding.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Project Limulus Update: They're back!


A group of 12 Project Limulus volunteers met at Indian Cove on Sunday night,May 15th., at 9:40 and the crabs were finally there. We counted 6 during the actual survey but we were able to tag a total of 17. Sixteen crabs were tagged at the public beach and 1 was tagged at the private beach.

We are doing the survey by simple count now rather than dividing the beach into quadrats as we did during the last 2 years. We just walk through the water along the length of the beach, from the water's edge to 3 meters out, and tally single males, single females, pairs, and females with 2 or more males. After completing the survey we tag, tag, tag! Mark Beekey and Jennifer Mattei ( Sacred Heart profs in charge of the study ) decided to change the protocol for beaches measuring under 150 meters. It is much quicker and doesn't require as many people. It felt great to be out there again, getting up close and personal with the horseshoe crabs! We are hoping to count and tag many more crabs over the next few weeks now that their spawning season is under way.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Field Trip to Hammonasset


Nina Levenduski led a morning trip to Hammonasset Beach State Park this morning.

Sanderlings, ruddy turnstones, and dunlin were feeding along the beach below the east pavilion. Common and red-throated loons were numerous off-shore with a couple coming within 20 feet of the beach. Off the breakwater were four common goldeneye. Meigs Point gave good looks at a female common eider. Along the moraine trail more loons were sighted and two common mergansers were seen in Clinton Harbor. Four black-bellied plovers were on the rocks off the end of the moraine trail and a harbor seal was bobbing in the water. Back at the Nature Center parking lot was a flock of horned larks.


Bird list:
American Black Duck
Mallard
Common Eider
Common Goldeneye
Red-breasted Merganser
Red-throated Loon
Common Loon
Black-bellied Plover
Ruddy Turnstone
Sanderling
Purple Sandpiper
Dunlin
Ring-billed Gull
Herring Gull
American Crow
Horned Lark
Black-capped Chickadee
Carolina Wren
Northern Mockingbird
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Song Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Northern Cardinal

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Hammonasset Fall Planting

Twelve volunteers spent the morning of November 6 planting 210 native trees and shrubs at Hammonasset Beach State Park. An Audubon Collaborative Grant supplemented with money from the Friends of Hammonasset Unilever Grant were used to purchase the plants and the mulch that was put around the plants.



Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Project Limulus Update

Here is the final data for the 2010 horseshoe crab spawning season:

We surveyed 2 beaches in Indian Cove, Guilford, CT. We did the survey a total of 27 times during April, May, June, and July. We counted a total of 151 crabs.

Indian Cove Public Beach:
Single males- 4
Single females-1
Pairs- 30
Female with 2 males- 2
Female with 3 males- 0
Total crabs- 71

Indian Cove Private Beach:

Single males- 13
Single females- 4
Pairs- 19
Female with 2 males- 3
Female with 3 males- 4
Total crabs- 80
We counted the most crabs on the night of May 25th. during the full moon. The peak of the spawning season was May 25th. through May 29th.

Our volunteer group tagged a total of 370 crabs. 130 crabs were tagged in Indian Cove and the rest were tagged at Great Harbor, Jacobs Beach, Grass Island, Tuttles Point,Chaffinch Island, and Chittenden Park.

We reported 26 recaptures ( crabs which have been previously tagged ). One of the most interesting ones was found by Nina Ellison. It was a male which had been tagged in VA in 1999.

Thanks again to all of the Project Limulus volunteers. I will contact everyone in the spring. Now that we have such a dedicated and well-trained team, I'm looking forward to tagging even more crabs next year. I would like to try adding some extra sessions which would be just for tagging crabs at other Guilford beaches.