The songs of spring birds

The birds are coming back. We see and hear new birds every day as those long-distance migrants return from their journey. How amazing it is that birds weighing no more than a 25-cent piece can find their way back from their wintering grounds in Central and South America. So accurate is their timing and navigation that they can return to the same acre to breed.Audubon Sharon has been helping monitor populations of migratory songbirds at bird banding stations throughout Litchfield and eastern Dutchess counties for almost 15 years. By recapturing birds that have been banded with a small leg band bearing a unique identification number, we can learn a lot about population trends and breeding site preferences. For example, at our station at Great Mountain Forest in Norfolk, we have recaptured the same Canada warblers (look them up, they are beautiful!) four years in a row in the exact same net. These are birds that migrate as far south as Central America and find their way back to the exact same spot to breed year after year.As the birds return, our forests once again ring with a symphony of bird song that gets louder each day as more musicians arrive. Many people don’t realize how important our forests are to a wide variety of spectacularly colorful songbirds, both as breeding areas and migratory stopover sites. Right in many of our backyards we are host to the black-masked common yellowthroat, the deep-blue indigo bunting and the brilliant scarlet tanager just to name a few. We provide the nurseries that perpetuate the species.As the symphony continues, there is nothing more satisfying than learning some of the players by sound. This can be done from the comfort of your back deck as you sip a cool drink. Start with the top five: American robin, Northern cardinal, black-capped chickadee, Eastern phoebe and song sparrow. Then gradually add a few more: Baltimore oriole, yellow warbler and so on. Before you know it, you will have command of the top 20 and you will be amazed at the satisfaction you will get.There are many resources available such as CDs, phone apps and websites. A good place to start is the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s All About Birds site. The more we all know about the natural world in our own backyards and neighborhoods, the more we will strive to protect it. Scott Heth is the director of Audubon Sharon and can be reached at sheth@audubon.org, (subject line: Nature Notes).

Latest News

Remembering George and Anne Phillips’ Edgewood restaurant in Amenia

The Edgewood Restaurant, a beloved Amenia roadside restaurant run by George and Anne Phillips, pictured during its peak years in the 1950s and ’60s.

Provided

With the recent death of George Phillips at 100, locals are remembering the Edgewood Restaurant, the Amenia supper club he and his wife, Anne Phillips, owned and operated together for more than two decades.

At the Edgewood, there were Delmonico steaks George carved in the basement, lobster tails from an infrared cooker, local trout from the stream outside the door, and a folded paper cup of butter, with heaping bowls of family-style potatoes and vegetables, plus a shot glass of crème de menthe to calm the stomach when the modest check arrived after dessert.

Keep ReadingShow less
Artist Alissa DeGregorio brings her work to Roxbury and New Milford

Alissa DeGregorio, a New Milford -based artist and designer, has pieces on display at Mine Hill Distillery.

Agnes Fohn
When I’m designing a book, I’m also the bridge between artist and author, the final step that pulls everything together.
— Alissa DeGregorio

A visit to Alissa DeGregorio Art, the website of the artist and designer, reveals the multiple talents she possesses.

Tabs for design, commissions, print club, and classes still reveal only part of her work.On the design page are examples of graphic and book design, including book covers illustrated by DeGregorio, along with samples of licensed products such as coloring pages and lunch boxes, and examples of prop design she has done for film.

Keep ReadingShow less

Agnes Martin at Dia:Beacon

Agnes Martin at Dia:Beacon

Minimalist works by Agnes Martin on display at Dia:Beacon.

D.H. Callahan

At Dia:Beacon, simplicity commands attention.

On Saturday, April 4, the venerated modern art museum — located at 3 Beekman St. in Beacon, NY — opened an exhibition of works by the middle- to late-20th-century minimalist artist Agnes Martin.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Falls Village exhibit honors life and work of Priscilla Belcher

Hunt Library in Falls Village will present a commemorative show of paintings and etchings by the late Priscilla Belcher of Falls Village.

Lydia Downs

Priscilla Belcher, a Canaan resident who was known for her community involvement and willingness to speak out, will be featured in a posthumous exhibition at the ArtWall at the Hunt Library from April 25 through May 15.

An opening reception will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on April 25. The show will commemorate her life and work and will include watercolors and etchings. Belcher died in November 2025 at the age of 95.

Keep ReadingShow less
Crescendo’s 'Stepping Into Song' blends Jewish, Argentine traditions

The sounds of Argentine tango and Jewish folk traditions will collide in a rare cross-cultural performance April 25 and 26, when Berkshire’s Crescendo presents the choral program “Stepping Into Song.”

Christine Gevert, Crescendo’s founding artistic director, described the concert as “a world-class, diverse cultural experience” pairing “A Jewish Cantata” with Martin Palmeri’s “Misa a Buenos Aires.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Salisbury Rotary brings Derby race-day flair to Noble Horizons for community fundraiser
Salisbury Rotary Club President Bill Pond and his wife, Beth, dressed for the occasion during last year’s Kentucky Derby Social.
Provided

SALISBURY — As millions tune in to the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs on May 2, a spirited local tradition unfolds in Salisbury, where the pageantry, fashion and excitement of race day are recreated — with a community purpose.

For the past six years in the Community Room at Noble Horizons, all eyes turn to the big screen as the crowd settles in, drinks in hand and anticipation building. Women in elaborate Derby hats — bursting with oversized silk flowers, feathers and playful cutouts — mingle with men dressed for the occasion in crisp jackets and bow ties, fedoras and the occasional red rose on a lapel.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.