Alaska News

A First-Timer鈥檚 Trip to the Kachemak Bay Shorebird Festival

Homer hosts a spectacular annual bird festival. Here's a recap of the presentations, workshops, and (in)famous bird-calling contest of the 32nd annual event.
Group of people birding by lake

Before we talk about birds鈥攁nd all the lectures, workshops, and opportunities to see them available at the 32nd annual Kachemak Bay Shorebird Festival鈥攍et鈥檚 talk about how beautiful a drive it is to Homer. Cruising down the Kenai Peninsula through rain, a little snow, and moose country, I actually gasped when I saw the view of Cook Inlet from Ninilchik, and again when I came into Homer proper and gazed upon Kachemak Bay for the first time.

My first night in Homer (every night, in fact) was spent at the 鈥攁 traditional bed and breakfast operated by Homerites Anna and Byron. There were teapots, books, and Fox Sparrows singing off the balcony (which also had panoramic views of Kachemak Bay and Grewingk Glacier from the aptly named Glacier View Suite).

Thursday was my first full day at the festival. I started strong, joining what was maybe my favorite talk of the entire event鈥擣oggy Origin: Rats in the Aleutian. Lauren Flynn, Wildlife Refuge Specialist with the , gave a fascinating overview of how several islands in Alaska鈥檚 Aleutian chain became rat-infested, which has greatly affected seabird populations ().

This was followed by a captivating presentation given by Schantz Scholar Adrianna Nelson on her work with birds in Maine and Birding Trivia! at Grace Ridge Brewing. In between, I also took a stroll down the Calvin and Coyle Trail to the Beluga Slough to first bust out of the binoculars. Myself and a small group of festival goers spotted Shovelers, Pintails, Wigeon, Sandhill Crane, Black-legged Kittiwakes, and Yellowlegs (though we couldn鈥檛 determine if they were Greater or Lesser).

Afterward, I tooled down the Homer Spit, again amazed at the views, while passing lines of people on the side of the road鈥攕copes and binoculars out鈥攚atching murmurations of shorebirds that swooped and dove over my vehicle as I headed down to dinner.

Friday morning, I watched Bald Eagles figure eight out the big window off the breakfast table while chatting with my bed-and-breakfast hosts. 

I then rushed to my first class鈥擠ocumenting Birds in the Digital Era鈥攚here we set out to photograph and record birds off the Beluga Slough. We saw and heard 19 species, including the American Crow. White-winged Crossbill, Long-billed Dowitchers, and Tree Swallows. Back inside, keynote speaker and Birding magazine editor Ted Floyd covered everything from image and audio editing to Merlin Bird ID and eBird (where he may have the longest-held contiguous bird-list-making streak on the platform). 

The day continued with Bird-friendly Buildings: What You Can Do, Be a Citizen Scientist and Explorer with eBird, Red-necked Phalaropes: Understanding a Unique Shorebird, and Gambell: Birding on the Western Edge. The talk and slideshow focused on Gambell, located on Saint Lawrence Island, was given by Jim Herbert. If there鈥檚 one takeaway from this talk, it鈥檚 that we at 探花精选 Alaska are very lucky to have Aaron Lang on our Board (Herbert referred to him as one of the world鈥檚 top birders).

Saturday was spent in the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge auditorium with Shorebird Identification, Tundra Nesting Birds of Arctic NWR, Birding the South Pacific from Australia to Chile, and The Power of Migration鈥攖he perfect talk to attend for World Migratory Bird Day. 

But I was still able to sneak away to bird on the Homer Spit and Louie鈥檚 Lagoon, where I set up the scope and watched a group of Dunlins, Semipalmated Plovers, and other shorebirds scutter. I also stopped by the Beluga Wetlands Overlook, where I saw and heard Northern Pintail, Mallard, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, and Green-winged Teal.

Now came the fun part.

The aforementioned Aaron Lang, Adrianna Nelson, and I got to judge the annual Bird Calling Contest at . There might have been up to 200 rowdy attendees behind us at the judges鈥 table. Still, our attention was solely focused on the 40-plus participants who gave us everything from a baby chicken to a Wilson's Snipe and more than a dozen Common Ravens. We had five winners. A Black-capped Chickadee duet won the youth category. A very Southern Peacock took home the 鈥渦nserious鈥 crown. And for the serious category, we had a tie鈥攁 Greater White-fronted Goose and a Pacific Golden Plover.

From here we zipped off to the Homer High School Auditorium for Ted Floyd鈥檚 keynote presentation鈥擝irding and Nature Study in the Digital Age. Amid the day-of bird imagery and stroll through Floyd鈥檚 memories of being a birder since childhood (with the 1984 journal entry to prove it), we were left with a beautiful thought: Birding can take you around the world. This was true for Floyd, who has been from pole to pole for birds, myself (birds have brought me all over Alaska), and I鈥檓 sure many others in the room.

I appropriately finished out my trip at the Birder鈥檚 Coffee gathering with my bed-and-breakfast hosts Anna and Byron. This would not have been as memorable a trip if it weren鈥檛 for their full breakfasts, never-ending supply of coffee and tea, long conversations about birds and books, and their incredibly beautiful 2.5-acre estate.

And if you鈥檇 like any food and drink recommendations in Homer, I鈥檇 suggest the Fresh Catch Cafe, Boatyard Cafe, La Baleine Caf茅, Two Sisters Bakery, River Cafe, Pho and Thai Restaurant (especially on a rainy/chilly day), and, of course, a couple rounds at the historic Salty Dawg Saloon.