Thirty-two birders joined Joe Montes de Oca on Sunday for a morning bird walk at Tropical Park. Birders split into two groups, with Joe leading one group and TAS Field Trip Coordinator Brian Rapoza leading the other. Over fifty species were spotted during the walk, including a nice selection of migrants.
Birding at Corkscrew Swamp and Ft. Myers Beach
TAS Bird Walk at Highland Oaks Park
Fall Birding at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Gardens
Forty-three birders joined TAS President Joe Barros and Field Trip Coordinator Brian Rapoza yesterday morning for a bird walk at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Gardens in Goral Gables. We split into two groups, with each group heading in a different direction but eventually both the upland an lowland areas of the gardens.
O Canada! TAS Walk at Matheson Hammock Park
Nearly fifty birders attended this morning’s TAS bird walk at Matheson Hammock Park. Due to the group’s large size, we split into two subgroups. Each group made a circuit of both the east and west sides of the park, but in opposite directions. Among the many birds seen were eleven warbler species, including a stunning Canada Warbler!
Beach Birding at Crandon Park
Fall Migration Birding in the Florida Keys
Late August Birding at Greynolds Park
A Hot August Day of Birding in the Everglades Agricultural Area
The Birds Thank Whisk Gourmet
Florida Keys Hawkwatch launches Kite Flight 2021
Calling all History Buffs!
Dig in! Bird-friendly Gardening Days
Do you enjoy digging in the garden, learning about native plants that attract birds and other pollinators, or weeding invasive plants? Please join us on the third Saturday morning of every month, 9am-12pm, to take an active role in maintaining our Bird-Friendly Demonstration Garden at our Steinberg Nature Center campus!
In Memoriam
Tropical Audubon Society’s longtime board member and Steinberg Nature Center patron Alan Wolfe Steinberg died June 14, 2021, of natural causes at age 93. He was interred on Friday, June 18 in Miami at Mount Nebo Cemetery. Alan will be remembered fondly and deeply missed by his Tropical Audubon Society (TAS) colleagues.