Tagged: Columbia County
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
The downloadable version of the Site Guide has been updated a bit. It can be found here.
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the eighteenth installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers a site that is found in the Coast Range of Columbia County a transect road: Pittsburg Rd.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
Rainier Waterfront, Dibblee Point, Rainier Dike Rd (6/24/14 post)
Erickson Dike Rd, John’s Slough (6/25/14 post)
Marshland Drainage District (6/27/14 post)
Coast Range Birding Sites
Pisgah Home Rd, Crown Zellerbach Trail (West), Bonnie Falls (7/1/14 post)
Gunners Lakes (7/3/14 post)
Pittsburg Road (7/23/14 post)
Here is a map of all the locations mentioned in this guide.
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Pittsburg Rd:
Location/Directions: (45.9009, -123.1408) 15.8 miles from Scappoose, and 0.1 mile from Hwy 47 on the Scappoose – Vernonia Hwy. From this point to Canaan Rd is 13.2 miles, all on gravel roads that vary in condition depending on logging activity.
Habitat and Birds: All but the last mile or so of the road is heavily managed Coast Range Douglas Fir forest in varying stages of harvest. The best strategy is to just get out at promising looking areas. Any place is subject to radical change from year to year. Sooty and Ruffed Grouse, Mountain Quail (rare), Gray Jays, Hermit Warblers, Hutton’s Vireos, Band-tailed Pigeons and Western Bluebirds are the highlights. Possibilities include Northern Goshawk, and Saw-whet, and Northern Pygmy Owls. From the junction with Canaan Rd it is 10.7 miles along Pittsburg Rd into St. Helens and 9.6 miles into Deer Island along Canaan Rd.
Pittsburg Rd (PL) – 70 species, 10 (5/12/14)
Cackling Goose | Canada Goose | Mallard |
Mountain Quail | Ruffed Grouse | Sooty Grouse |
Turkey Vulture | Sharp-shinned Hawk | Northern Goshawk |
Red-tailed Hawk | Sandhill Crane | Band-tailed Pigeon |
Eurasian Collared-Dove | Mourning Dove | Anna’s Hummingbird |
Rufous Hummingbird | Red-breasted Sapsucker | Hairy Woodpecker |
Northern Flicker | American Kestrel | Olive-sided Flycatcher |
Western Wood-Pewee | Willow Flycatcher | Hammond’s Flycatcher |
Pacific-slope Flycatcher | Hutton’s Vireo | Warbling Vireo |
Gray Jay | Steller’s Jay | Western Scrub-Jay |
American Crow | Common Raven | Tree Swallow |
Violet-green Swallow | Black-capped Chickadee | Chestnut-backed Chickadee |
Red-breasted Nuthatch | Brown Creeper | House Wren |
Pacific Wren | Bewick’s Wren | Golden-crowned Kinglet |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Western Bluebird | Swainson’s Thrush |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | European Starling |
Cedar Waxwing | Orange-crowned Warbler | MacGillivray’s Warbler |
Common Yellowthroat | Yellow-rumped Warbler | Black-throated Gray |
Townsend’s Warbler | Hermit Warbler | Wilson’s Warbler |
Spotted Towhee | Fox Sparrow | Song Sparrow |
White-crowned Sparrow | Golden-crowned Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco |
Western Tanager | Black-headed Grosbeak | Red-winged Blackbird |
Brown-headed Cowbird | Purple Finch | Pine Siskin |
American Goldfinch | Evening Grosbeak |
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the seventeenth installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers a site that is found in the Coast Range of Columbia County: Gunners Lakes Area.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
Rainier Waterfront, Dibblee Point, Rainier Dike Rd (6/24/14 post)
Erickson Dike Rd, John’s Slough (6/25/14 post)
Marshland Drainage District (6/27/14 post)
Coast Range Birding Sites
Pisgah Home Rd, Crown Zellerbach Trail (West), Bonnie Falls (7/1/14 post)
Gunners Lakes (7/3/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Here is a map of all the locations mentioned in this guide.
Gunners Lakes:
Location/Directions: (45.80568, -123.0585) Take the Scappoose – Vernonia Hwy 9.4 miles west from Hwy 30. Turn left onto Pisgah Lookout Rd (not signed). This is pretty much at the top of the pass. On the south side of the Hwy there is a big school bus turn around and parking for the Crown Z trail if one is so inclined to walk the trail. The lakes are about 2.0 miles from the Scappoose – Vernonia Hwy. At this point the road splits – stay to the right to access the lakes.
Habitat and Birds: This whole area can be explored. The lakes can have Wood Ducks, Hooded Mergansers, Mallards, and other ducks possible. The wooded shore lines are great for Woodpeckers, and migrant and breeding songbirds. High elevation birds like Hermit Warblers, Evening Grosbeaks, Red Crossbills and Band-tailed Pigeons have all been recorded in this area. I’m sure Grouse are in the area, I just haven’t encountered them yet. As a bonus I’ve seen Elk on a couple of occasions. May 2014 Update: there is some heavy thinning operations taking place and the road in has been seriously degraded. They have dumped lots of 6 inch minus on the road sot it is pretty rough going. My Prius made it to the lakes but it was dicey in plenty of places and very slow going.
Gunners Lakes (PL) – 36 species, 4 (5/3/14)
Mallard | Lesser Scaup | Hooded Merganser |
Band-tailed Pigeon | Mourning Dove | Rufous Hummingbird |
Red-breasted Sapsucker | Downy Woodpecker | Northern Flicker |
Pileated Woodpecker | Warbling Vireo | Gray Jay |
Steller’s Jay | Common Raven | Tree Swallow |
Chestnut-backed Chickadee | Red-breasted Nuthatch | Brown Creeper |
Pacific Wren | Swainson’s Thrush | Hermit Thrush |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | Orange-crowned Warbler |
Common Yellowthroat | Black-throated Gray Warbler | Hermit Warbler |
Wilson’s Warbler | Song Sparrow | White-crowned Sparrow |
Dark-eyed Junco | Western Tanager | Black-headed Grosbeak |
Red-winged Blackbird | Red Crossbill | Evening Grosbeak |
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the sixteenth installment of the “Site Guide”. It is the first of the sites that are found in the Coast Range of Columbia County.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
Rainier Waterfront, Dibblee Point, Rainier Dike Rd (6/24/14 post)
Erickson Dike Rd, John’s Slough (6/25/14 post)
Marshland Drainage District (6/27/14 post)
Coast Range Birding Sites
Pisgah Home Rd, Crown Zellerbach Trail (West), Bonnie Falls (7/1/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Here is a map of all the locations mentioned in this guide.
Pisgah Home Rd (PL) – 45 species, 3 (6/27/14)
Location/Directions: (45.790581, -122.911799) Along the Scappoose/Vernonia Hwy, 2.5 miles from Hwy 30 take a left on Siercks Rd. Just over a half a mile from S/V Hwy take a left onto Pisgah Home Rd and drive to the top of the hill where it meets Holladay Rd. Continue a short way past this and park opposite Grouse Lane where the pavement ends. Pisgah Home continues as a gravel road/jeep track. Longview Fiber has two gated access points in the area; one along Pisgah Home Rd on the north side of the road (about 1.5 miles up the road) and one a little ways down Holladay. Both are worth a short hike as well.
Habitat and Birds: The trip up starts at Scappoose Creek but is already forested. Just at the start, on the right, there is an old quarry that Belted Kingfishers burrow nest in the face of the cut, at the top where the soil is. (2013,2014) The elevation gain on the trip up is usually enough to bring in some elevational species like Ravens, Red Crossbills, Hairy Woodpeckers, Hermit Warblers, Evening Grosbeaks and Band-tailed Pigeons. At the top there is a regenerating clearcut down slope and an open farmed hill upslope. I usually walk down the gravel road a mile or two through mixed stage coast range forest. High clearance vehilcle could probably drive down the road. Mountain Quail and a Townsend’s Solitaire have been reported from this area.
Pisgah Home Rd.(PL) – 48 species, 4 (6/28/14)
Cackling Goose | Turkey Vulture | Red-tailed Hawk |
Band-tailed Pigeon | Mourning Dove | Rufous Hummingbird |
Belted Kingfisher | Hairy Woodpecker | Northern Flicker |
Western Wood-Pewee | Willow Flycatcher | Hammond’s Flycatcher |
Warbling Vireo | Steller’s Jay | American Crow |
Common Raven | Violet-green Swallow | Barn Swallow |
Black-capped Chickadee | Chestnut-backed Chickadee | Red-breasted Nuthatch |
Brown Creeper | House Wren | Pacific Wren |
Bewick’s Wren | Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Swainson’s Thrush |
American Robin | European Starling | Cedar Waxwing |
Orange-crowned Warbler | MacGillivray’s Warbler | Common Yellowthroat |
Yellow-rumped Warbler | Black-throated Gray Warbler | Hermit Warbler |
Wilson’s Warbler | Spotted Towhee | Song Sparrow |
White-crowned Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco | Western Tanager |
Black-headed Grosbeak | Brown-headed Cowbird | Red Crossbill |
Pine Siskin | American Goldfinch | Evening Grosbeak |
Bonnie Falls:
Location/Directions: (45.80429, -122.93734) 4.1 miles west of Hwy 30 along the Scappoose – Vernonia Hwy. There is a pull off on the south side of the road. There is not much here, but County listers will want to make the stop for the American Dippers that have been seen here (2011 – 2013). Woodland birds are also possible. A small patch list has been generated.
Crown Zellerbach Trail – West, Hale Rd. Access:
Location/Directions: (45.82573, -122.95819) About 6.2 miles west of Hwy 30 along the Scappoose – Vernonia Hwy. There is a parking area on Hale Rd. next to the trail, but do not block the yellow gate. Trail heads in both directions but only the section to the east has been explored at this time.
Habitat and Birds: Woodland and riparian birds along an easy paved path with some elevational influence. This is the second place that I know of where American Dipper has been found in the County. This is a very productive short stretch of the trail.
Crown Zellerbach Trail – West, Hale Rd. Access (PL) – 15 species, 1 (5/10/14)
Current list is from one half an hour stop.
Belted Kingfisher | Hairy Woodpecker | Steller’s Jay |
American Crow | Violet-green Swallow | Black-capped Chickadee |
Chestnut-backed Chickadee | American Dipper | Pacific Wren |
Swainson’s Thrush | American Robin | European Starling |
Black-throated Gray Warbler | Wilson’s Warbler | Song Sparrow |
Black-headed Grosbeak |
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the fifteenth installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers the last of the sites which border the Columbia River and encompasses the Marshland Drainage District west of Clatskanie.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
Rainier Waterfront, Dibblee Point, Rainier Dike Rd (6/24/14 post)
Erickson Dike Rd, John’s Slough (6/25/14 post)
Marshland Drainage District (6/27/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Here is a map of all the locations mentioned in this guide.
Columbia River Birding Areas
24) Marshland Drainage District: If Sauvie Island is the Crown Jewel of Columbia County then this overlooked patch is a diamond in the rough. Here is a map with suggested stops. This bottomland is unique in that it is surrounded by the coast range Willapa Hills except on the north where it borders the Columbia River. I believe this configuration draws in some higher elevation birds like Ravens and Band-tailed Pigeons.
Marshland — Bergman’s Hole
Location/Directions: (46.12722, -123.2417) 2.0 miles west of Hwy 47 in Clatskanie on Hwy 30 turn north onto Pt. Adams Road. Drive 0.5 miles to pull off at Bergman’s Hole.
Habitat and Birds: Passerines are found in the alders and cottonwoods that line the sloughs. You’ll find ducks and waders on the slough and sparrows along the road.
Marshland – River Front Road.
Location/Directions: Continuing on Point Adams Rd in 0.9 miles it becomes River Front Rd. This follows the Columbia River Channel south of Wallace Island for 2.5 miles where Midland Dist. Rd connects. At 2.6 miles Webb Dist Rd connects. At 3.3 miles is the entrance to Jones Beach. At 4.1 miles it ends at Woodson Rd. 0.8 miles along Woodson Rd the Webb Dist Rd comes back in. This is 1.0 mile from Hwy 30.
Habitat and Birds: The River view will have Loons, grebes and rafts of ducks in winter; Bonaparte’s Gulls have been seen once and Caspian Terns frequently in season. There can be lots of Bald Eagles perched in the trees along the river. To the south is pasture land and cottonwood plantations. A scan of the plantations and the perching pylons can turn up raptors, possibly a Rough-legged Hawk.
Marshland – Jones Beach
Location/Directions: (46.13868, -123.29864)
Habitat and Birds: There is an expansive river view here bordered by a Cottonwood gallery forest. There is excellent sparrow kack along the road. American Pipits can occasionally turn up along the beach. Great Horned Owls have nested in the large cottonwoods on the south side of the road.
Marshland – Webb District Wetlands
Location/Directions: (46.12589, -123.30239) 0.6 miles from the Woodson Rd. junction is a place to park next to the pump station. Webb Dist Rd is 2.2 miles long from River Front Rd to the Woodson Rd junction.
Habitat and Birds: Savannah Sparrows can be thick along the southern section of the road. There is good duck habitat in the winter on the wetlands. It is very reliable for Rudy Duck. Check for raptors in the tree tops. Wintering Rough-legged Hawks, Bald Eagles, Northern Harriers, and Red-tails cruise the area. Watch out for odd birds as a local rancher raises all manners of fowl.
Marshland – Woodson Rd
Location/Directions: 1.8 miles long from Hwy 30 to River Front Rd.
Habitat and Birds: The flooded fields and sloughs harbor ducks and possible Horned Grebes. Open country raptors like Rough-legged Hawk in winter cruise the pasture land.
Marshland – Midland Dist. Rd
Location/Directions: Midland Rd. is 3.2 miles long from Bergman Hole to River Front Rd.
Habitat and Birds: There is a good variety of habitat with the flooded fields and the slough holding water fowl and plenty of brushy kack for passerines. Scanning for raptors can be productive.
Marshland Drainage District (PL) – 115 species, 14, (5/31/14)
Greater White-fronted Goose | Cackling Goose | Canada Goose |
Tundra Swan | Wood Duck | Gadwall |
Eurasian Wigeon | American Wigeon | Mallard |
Cinnamon Teal | Northern Shoveler | Northern Pintail |
Green-winged Teal | Canvasback | Ring-necked Duck |
Greater Scaup | Lesser Scaup | Bufflehead |
Hooded Merganser | Common Merganser | Ruddy Duck |
California Quail | Ring-necked Pheasant | Common Loon |
Pied-billed Grebe | Western Grebe | Double-crested Cormorant |
American Bittern | Great Blue Heron | Great Egret |
Turkey Vulture | Osprey | Northern Harrier |
Sharp-shinned Hawk | Bald Eagle | Red-tailed Hawk |
Rough-legged Hawk | Virginia Rail | American Coot |
Killdeer | Spotted Sandpiper | Greater Yellowlegs |
Long-billed Dowitcher | Wilson’s Snipe | Bonaparte’s Gull |
Ring-billed Gull | California Gull | Herring Gull |
Glaucous-winged Gull | Caspian Tern | Band-tailed Pigeon |
Eurasian Collared-Dove | Mourning Dove | Great Horned Owl |
Rufous Hummingbird | Belted Kingfisher | Downy Woodpecker |
Hairy Woodpecker | Northern Flicker | American Kestrel |
Peregrine Falcon | Western Wood-Pewee | Willow Flycatcher |
Pacific-slope Flycatcher | Warbling Vireo | Steller’s Jay |
Western Scrub-Jay | American Crow | Common Raven |
Northern Rough-winged Swallow | Purple Martin | Tree Swallow |
Violet-green Swallow | Barn Swallow | Cliff Swallow |
Black-capped Chickadee | White-breasted Nuthatch | Brown Creeper |
Pacific Wren | Marsh Wren | Bewick’s Wren |
Golden-crowned Kinglet | Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Swainson’s Thrush |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | European Starling |
American Pipit | Cedar Waxwing | Orange-crowned Warbler |
Common Yellowthroat | Yellow Warbler | Yellow-rumped Warbler |
Townsend’s Warbler | Wilson’s Warbler | Spotted Towhee |
Savannah Sparrow | Fox Sparrow | Song Sparrow |
Lincoln’s Sparrow | White-throated Sparrow | White-crowned Sparrow |
Golden-crowned Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco | Black-headed Grosbeak |
Lazuli Bunting | Red-winged Blackbird | Western Meadowlark |
Brewer’s Blackbird | Brown-headed Cowbird | Bullock’s Oriole |
House Finch | Purple Finch | American Goldfinch |
House Sparrow |
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the fourteenth installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers a couple of spots in the Clatskanie area.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
Rainier Waterfront, Dibblee Point, Rainier Dike Rd (6/24/14 post)
Erickson Dike Rd, John’s Slough (6/25/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Here is a map of all the locations mentioned in this guide.
Columbia River Birding Areas
22) Erickson Dike Rd. (OBT):
Location/Directions: (46.12046, -123.19938) From the center of Clatskanie turn north onto Nehalem. Drive to the end of the road (a few blocks) and it becomes 5th. Go west on 5th which becomes Beaver Falls Rd. At 0.8 miles from Hwy 30 take a left turn onto Depot Rd. Staying to the right, go 0.5 miles and turn left onto Erikson Dike Rd.
Habitat and Birds: This is a drive along a dike that follows the channeled Clatskanie River. The rest is agricultural, cottonwood plantations, and one decent gallery type woodlot. Ducks and divers, sparrows, and open country raptors are to be expected.
Erickson Dike Rd. (PL) – 33 species, 3, (5/14/14)
Cackling Goose | Canada Goose | Mallard |
Greater Scaup | Lesser Scaup | Bufflehead |
Hooded Merganser | Pied-billed Grebe | Double-crested Cormorant |
Great Blue Heron | Great Egret | Bald Eagle |
Red-tailed Hawk | Killdeer | Wilson’s Snipe |
Rock Pigeon | Mourning Dove | Belted Kingfisher |
Northern Flicker | Merlin | Steller’s Jay |
Western Scrub-Jay | American Crow | Black-capped Chickadee |
Pacific Wren | Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Hermit Thrush |
American Robin | European Starling | Song Sparrow |
Lincoln’s Sparrow | White-throated Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco |
Red-winged Blackbird | Brewer’s Blackbird | House Sparrow |
23) John Slough:
Location/Directions: (46.15992, -123.14743) – From center of Clatskanie turn north onto Nehalem (stop signal). Drive to the end of the road (a few blocks) and it becomes 5th. Go west on 5th which becomes Beaver Falls Rd. and eventually Quincy Mayger Rd. 5.5 miles from Hwy. 30 turn north onto Kallunki Rd.
Habitat and Birds: This slough is tidal and birds change with the tide. The area also has a channel view of the Columbia that can be scanned for all manner of river birds, loons, grebes, gulls and ducks in season. No patch list has been generated.
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the thirteenth installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers the area in the Rainier area.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
Rainier Waterfront, Dibblee Point, Rainier Dike Rd (6/24/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Columbia River Birding Areas
19) Rainer Waterfront:
Location/Directions: (46.09025, -122.93352) This is a small downtown park. Turn North off of Hwy 30 onto 3rd St and go one block to the park.
Habitat and Birds: The river view can produce Ducks, Gulls, and Grebes. If you get lucky the docks will have roosting gulls in the winter that can be easily picked through. If not, there are still a ton of gulls around but usually on the wing or way out in the channel. This is the best chance of finding a Thayer’s gull in the county, especially if the gulls are roosting on the docks. The Waterfront road to the south of the commercial district can have decent passerines around the buildings and residences.
Rainier Waterfront (PL) – 48 species, 9 (5/14/14)
Cackling Goose | Canada Goose | American Wigeon |
Mallard | Northern Pintail | Green-winged Teal |
Ring-necked Duck | Greater Scaup | Lesser Scaup |
Common Merganser | Western Grebe | Double-crested Cormorant |
Great Blue Heron | Bald Eagle | Red-tailed Hawk |
American Coot | Killdeer | Mew Gull |
Ring-billed Gull | Western Gull | California Gull |
Herring Gull | Thayer’s Gull | Glaucous-winged Gull |
Rock Pigeon | Eurasian Collared-Dove | Northern Flicker |
Western Scrub-Jay | American Crow | Tree Swallow |
Violet-green Swallow | Black-capped Chickadee | Ruby-crowned Kinglet |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | European Starling |
Yellow-rumped Warbler | Spotted Towhee | Fox Sparrow |
Song Sparrow | Lincoln’s Sparrow | White-crowned Sparrow |
Golden-crowned Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco | Red-winged Blackbird |
Brewer’s Blackbird | House Finch | House Sparrow |
20) Dibblee Point:
Location/Directions: (46.10775, -122.98419) Access off of Rainier Dike Rd, 1 mile past the L&C Bridge, turn right over the RR Tracks.
Habitat and Birds: There are river views and a Cottonwood gallery forest. There are rafts of ducks on the river, with gulls, loons and grebes in winter. The Cottonwoods have typical gallery birds. It’s a good place for woodpeckers as well. No patch list has been generated.
21) Rainier Dike Rd:
Location/Directions: (46.09972, -122.96686) Starting from under the Lewis and Clark Interstate Bridge, it is 3.6 miles to the end of the road. – Access from Hwy 30, west of Rainier city center. Look for Mill St or Rock Crest St. to access the Dike Rd.
Habitat and Birds: This area has agricultural fields along the road which flood in winter and make for great duck and goose habitat. Scan the tree tops for raptors. A slough in the middle holds some diving ducks in winter. The roadside kacks harbor sparrows. Short-eared owls have been reported here. There is parking at the end of the road and a dike trail can be walked.
Rainier Dike Rd (PL) – 44 species, 3 (5/14/14)
Snow Goose | Cackling Goose | Canada Goose |
Gadwall | American Wigeon | Mallard |
Northern Pintail | Green-winged Teal | Ring-necked Duck |
Hooded Merganser | California Quail | Double-crested Cormorant |
Great Blue | Great Egret Heron | Northern Harrier |
Cooper’s Hawk | Bald Eagle | Red-tailed Hawk |
American Coot | Killdeer | Eurasian Collared-Dove |
Belted Kingfisher | Northern Flicker | American Kestrel |
Peregrine Falcon | Steller’s Jay | Western Scrub-Jay |
American Crow | Black-capped Chickadee | White-breasted Nuthatch |
Brown Creeper | Pacific Wren | Marsh Wren |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet | American Robin | European Starling |
Spotted Towhee | Fox Sparrow | Song Sparrow |
White-crowned Sparrow | Golden-crowned Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco |
Red-winged Blackbird | House Sparrow |
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the twelfth installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers the area between Trojan Park and Laurel Beach County Park.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
Trojan Park, Carr Slough, Prescott Beach, Laurel Beach CP (6/22/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Columbia River Birding Areas
15) Trojan Park (OBT):
Location/Directions: (46.03591, -122.89386) Entrance to the park is 1.5 miles north of Gobel off of Hwy 30 (old Trojan Nuclear Plant site).
Habitat and Birds: There are a few ponds and a cottonwood gallery forest with walking trails for woodland birds. Ponds hold ducks and the occasional Horned Grebe. Bald Eagles nest in the area. You can also walk north along a paved trail that will take you to a blind and over look of the Carr Slough wetlands.
Trojan Park: (PL) – 38 species, 5 (5/14/14)
Greater White-fronted Goose | Snow Goose | Cackling Goose |
Canada Goose | Wood Duck | Gadwall |
American Wigeon | Mallard | Green-winged Teal |
Ring-necked Duck | Bufflehead | Hooded Merganser |
Common Merganser | Pied-billed Grebe | Double-crested Cormorant |
Great Blue Heron | Osprey | Bald Eagle |
American Coot | Killdeer | Belted Kingfisher |
Northern Flicker | Steller’s Jay | Western Scrub-Jay |
American Crow | Common Raven | Tree Swallow |
Black-capped Chickadee | Pacific Wren | Ruby-crowned Kinglet |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | European Starling |
Orange-crowned Warbler | Yellow-rumped Warbler | Song Sparrow |
Dark-eyed Junco | Red-winged Blackbird |
16) Carr Slough – Graham Rd (OBT).
Location/Directions: (46.04791, -122.89784) 0.9 miles north of Trojan Park turn east onto Graham Rd. There is a small parking area just as you start on Graham Rd. on the south side. Graham Rd. is 0.4 miles long to the RR tracks.
Habitat and Birds: This is excellent duck habitat in the winter. It is a major wintering ground for Tundra Swan – Trumpeters can be mixed in as well. Scan tree tops for the local Bald Eagles. Great Egrets and Great Blue Herons can be thick at times, congregations of Hooded Merganser can get north of 50 birds, the roadside kack is productive year round for passerines swallows are numerous in the spring and Purple Martins have been recorded here.
Carr Slough (Graham Rd) (eHS) – 105 species, (5/14/14)
Greater White-fronted Goose | Snow Goose | Cackling Goose |
Canada Goose | Trumpeter Swan | Tundra Swan |
Wood Duck | Gadwall | Eurasian Wigeon |
American Wigeon | Mallard | Cinnamon Teal |
Northern Shoveler | Northern Pintail | Green-winged Teal |
Canvasback | Ring-necked Duck | Greater Scaup |
Lesser Scaup | Bufflehead | Common Goldeneye |
Barrow’s Goldeneye | Hooded Merganser | Common Merganser |
Pied-billed Grebe | Horned Grebe | Western Grebe |
Double-crested Cormorant | American White Pelican | Great Blue Heron |
Great Egret | Turkey Vulture | Osprey |
Bald Eagle | Red-shouldered Hawk | Red-tailed Hawk |
American Coot | Sandhill Crane | Killdeer |
Greater Yellowlegs | Long-billed Dowitcher | Wilson’s Snipe |
Ring-billed Gull | California Gull | Herring Gull |
Thayer’s Gull | Glaucous-winged Gull | Eurasian Collared-Dove |
Mourning Dove | Vaux’s Swift | Anna’s Hummingbird |
Belted Kingfisher | Red-breasted Sapsucker | Downy Woodpecker |
Hairy Woodpecker | Northern Flicker | American Kestrel |
Western Wood-Pewee | Willow Flycatcher | Steller’s Jay |
Western Scrub-Jay | American Crow | Common Raven |
Northern Rough-winged Swallow | Purple Martin | Tree Swallow |
Violet-green Swallow | Barn Swallow | Cliff Swallow |
Black-capped Chickadee | Chestnut-backed Chickadee | Bushtit |
Red-breasted Nuthatch | Brown Creeper | Pacific Wren |
Marsh Wren | Bewick’s Wren | Golden-crowned Kinglet |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Swainson’s Thrush | Hermit Thrush |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | European Starling |
Cedar Waxwing | Orange-crowned Warbler | Common Yellowthroat |
Yellow Warbler | Yellow-rumped Warbler | Black-throated Gray |
Wilson’s Warbler | Spotted Towhee | Fox Sparrow |
Song Sparrow | Lincoln’s Sparrow | White-crowned Sparrow |
Golden-crowned Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco | Western Tanager |
Red-winged Blackbird | Brewer’s Blackbird | House Finch |
Purple Finch | Pine Siskin | American Goldfinch |
17) Prescott Beach County Park (OBT):
Location/Directions: (46.05076, -122.88797) On Graham Rd. 0.6 miles from Hwy 30 is the entrance to the park. Day use fee is required.
Habitat and Birds: The river view can have all manner of river birds, loons, grebes, gulls and ducks in season. There is decent passerine habitat in pockets. No patch list has been generated.
18) Laurel Beach County Park:
Location/Directions: (46.07097, -122.899504) – This park is poorly mapped on Google Maps. Access is from Laurel Wood Rd. Turn north onto Laurel Wood Rd. stay left at the fork and go about 0.1 miles to the park entrance road – there is a sign for the park. Follow the gravel road down to the parking area.
Habitat and Birds: Rafts of ducks can be found in winter as there is a bit of a sheltered cove. Both Scaup and Common Goldeneye are regular. Some woodland birds can be found in the parking area. This is the easiest place for Goldeneye in the county with Barrow’s possible as a report of one comes from this vantage point.
Laurel Beach County Park (PL) – 27 species, 6 (5/14/14)
Canada Goose | Greater Scaup | Lesser Scaup |
Common Goldeneye | Common Merganser | Western Grebe |
Double-crested Cormorant | Herring Gull | Downy Woodpecker |
Steller’s Jay | American Crow | Black-capped Chickadee |
Chestnut-backed Chickadee | Bushtit | Red-breasted Nuthatch |
Pacific Wren | Golden-crowned Kinglet | Ruby-crowned Kinglet |
American Robin | Varied Thrush | European Starling |
Spotted Towhee | Song Sparrow | Dark-eyed Junco |
Pine Siskin |
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
Site Guide to Birding Columbia County (Oregon)
This is the eleventh installment of the “Site Guide”. It covers the area between the north end of St Helens and north to the Gobel Marina.
This guide will be published in a series of installments:
Overview of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Habitats of Columbia County (5/9/14 post)
Birds of Columbia County – Overview (5/9/14 post)
Birding Sites of Columbia County – Individual installments, and associated Bird Lists of the Sites in Columbia County:
Introduction (5/12/14 post)
Columbia River Sites – South to North
Sauvie Island (5/12/14 post)
Scappoose WTP and Kessi Pond (5/14/14 post)
Crown Zellerbach Trail – East End (5/15/14 post)
Scappoose Bottoms (5/19/14 post)
Scappoose Bay (5/29/14 post)
St. Helens WTP and Knob Hill Park (5/30/14 post)
Gray Cliffs Waterfront Park and Dalton Lake (6/1/14 post)
Dalton Lake Trail, Columbia City, Dyno Nobel, Nicolai Wetlands, Gobel Marina (6/17/14 post)
(A link to a downloadable copy of this guide is found in the first installment of this series)
Columbia River Birding Areas
10) Dalton Lake Trail (OBT):
Location/Directions: (45.87444, -122.8123) At the north end of St Helens there is a stop light intersection. Deer Island Rd goes to the east and Liberty Hill Dr to the west. Take Deer Island Rd and just after crossing the RR tacks turn left onto Oregon St. Drive a short distance to a parking area directly across from the Humane Society animal shelter. A paved trail heads north paralleling Hwy 30 for a while.
Habitat and Birds: There is a wooded trail that leads down to an impoundment lake. Expect woodland birds, migrants, and the lake can have ducks and grebes. There is a view of the river which can be scanned for all manner of river birds, loons, grebes, gulls and ducks in season. I’ve only been here once so I don’t have a good feel for the possible birds but would not expect it to be much different than many locations with the same habitat. It gets a touch of Douglas Fir understory that could add a bit of color. A Clark’s Grebe has been reported from here. No patch list has been generated.
11) Columbia City Water Front:
Location/Directions: (45.890475, -122.806322) In Columbia City off of Hwy 30 take First St. to the east, drive a few blocks to the end and park at the little city park here that overlooks the river.
Habitat and Birds: this is just a tiny city park. The river view can have all manner of river birds, loons, grebes, gulls and ducks in season. An adjacent park area holds residential type passerines. I’ve only been here a couple of times so I don’t have a good feel for the possible birds but would not expect it to be much different than many locations with the same habitat. It’s really just another place to scan the Columbia. No patch list has been generated.
12) Dyno Nobel Dike Rd:
Location/Directions: (45.91545, -122.82756) 1.7 miles north of the stop light on Hwy 30 in Columbia City.
Habitat and Birds: This is a new patch. The land is privately held and requires permission to access. A permit can be obtained at the Dyno Nobel office across the street. This is a pretty nice little patch of Columbia River bottomland. There is a slough that runs under the dike that had wood ducks on it in May. There is a track road that runs along the top of the dike but is not part of the Dyno Nobel property and gated, but there is a graveled road that parallels the cooling water outlet that goes down to the river. There is also a jeep track that goes into a large stand of Cottonwood and also goes out to the river. A couple of hours here turned up over thirty species.
12) Dyno Nobel Dike Rd: (PL) – 33 species, 1 (5/25/14)
Wood Duck | Double-crested Cormorant | Great Blue Heron |
Osprey | Bald Eagle | Belted Kingfisher |
Red-breasted Sapsucker | Downy Woodpecker | Northern Flicker |
Western Wood-Pewee | Willow Flycatcher | Steller’s Jay |
Western Scrub-Jay | American Crow | Tree Swallow |
Black-capped Chickadee | Brown Creeper | House Wren |
Bewick’s Wren | Swainson’s Thrush | American Robin |
European Starling | Cedar Waxwing | Orange-crowned Warbler |
Common Yellowthroat | Yellow Warbler | Wilson’s Warbler |
Spotted Towhee | Song Sparrow | Black-headed Grosbeak |
Brown-headed Cowbird | Bullock’s Oriole | American Goldfinch |
13) Nicolai Wetlands:
Location/Directions: (45.99232, -122.87465) There is a pull-off along Hwy 30 which overlooks this wetland – 1.7 miles south of Gobel and 4.3 miles north of Deer Island.
Habitat and Birds: Viewing conditions are limited and difficult as it right on Hwy 30. A small patch list has been generated from only a handful of short stops. The wetlands have geese, swans, and ducks in winter; waders all year, and passerines in the trees along the Hwy. This area could be very productive if the birding wasn’t such a challenge.
13) Nicolai Wetlands (PL) – 22 species, 2 (5/14/14)
Cackling Goose | Canada Goose | Trumpeter Swan |
Tundra Swan | Gadwall | American Wigeon |
Mallard | Ring-necked Duck | Bufflehead |
Hooded Merganser | Double-crested Cormorant | Great Blue Heron |
Great Egret | Bald Eagle | Belted Kingfisher |
Northern Flicker | Western Scrub-Jay | American Crow |
Black-capped Chickadee | Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Spotted Towhee |
Song Sparrow |
14) Gobel Marina (OBT):
Location/Directions: (46.01596, -122.87413) Turn off of Hwy 30 into the marina area at the only cross road in town. 15 minutes free parking.
Habitat and Birds: This is a good area to scope the sheltered bay. The river can have all manner of river birds, loons, grebes, gulls and ducks in season. Purple Martins nest in the area. I’m not familiar with the area and no patch list has been generated.