Unitarian Universalist Congregation
of the South Jersey Shore

Printable brochure and Registration Form (PDF)

Our Eleventh Annual

BIRDING BED & BREAKFAST

May 14, 15 & 16, 2010 (Friday through Sunday)

Sponsored by the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the South Jersey Shore

Spring Birding at the Jersey Shore!


Songbirds will be singing,
Horseshoe crabs will be spawning,
Shorebirds will be feeding.

Join a group of friendly, interesting,
mostly UU folks, and come birding.

We feature small groups
and local birding guides.

Enjoy a great travel bargain
and help a young, growing, and
dynamic UU congregation.

The Program

Spring is a great time to be birding, and southern New Jersey is a wonderful place to be. Migration is well underway and many woodland birds have returned to nest, including Prothonotary and Yellow-throated Warblers. Summer and Scarlet Tanagers are just arriving, and the woods ring with the songs of birds establishing their territories and seeking mates. Ospreys and Bald Eagles are on their nests. Herons and Egrets have returned, and migrating shorebirds, including Red Knots, Ruddy Turnstones, and Sanderlings, have gathered to rest and feed before continuing north to their breeding grounds. The natural wonder of shorebirds massed to feed on the eggs of the horseshoe crab is beginning to unfold. We also have nesting endangered or threatened species such as the Piping Plover, Least Tern, and Black Skimmer.

Our experienced local guides will know of good places to look for all of the above, and more. Birds will be active and singing, and we can help you find and identify them by both sight and sound.

Our exact itinerary will depend on weather and the location of the birds, but we plan to bird in both Atlantic and Cape May Counties, visiting such spots as Belleplain State Forest, the Delaware Bay Shore, Stone Harbor Point, and Forsythe (Brigantine) National Wildlife Refuge.

Each day will begin early! Those who have birded know that the magic hours occur soon after dawn.

Most of our guests will be chauffeured by our guides, with a few guests driving with a guide in their car providing directions.

For those who have difficulty walking, one of the guides will customize field trips to meet your needs.

The Leaders

Eight members of our UU congregation, who have worked together during our earlier, very successful Birding B&B programs, will serve as birding guides.

John and Betsy Searight have been active birders for over 50 years, and for three years were the instructors for a Spring Elderhostel course, Birds of the Jersey Cape. They are members of the American Birding Association and the Cape May Bird Observatory.

Pam Hendrick has been an avid birder for over 20 years, specializing in woodland warblers. Her husband, Jon Luoma, is a freelance nature writer and a contributing editor to Audubon.

Jack Miller is a self-taught naturalist who has been birding for most of his life. His skills at picking out birds and other fauna for folks to see are exceptional.

Jesse and Jack Connor have been active birders for more than thirty years. Jack teaches writing, ornithology, and natural history courses at Stockton College and is the author of The Complete Birder and Season At The Point: The Birds & Birders Of Cape May. In January 2007 he was part of a 5 person research team from the Wetlands Institute and Stockton College that journeyed to Tierra del Fuego in extreme southern Chile to assess the status of the Red Knot on its wintering grounds.

Kim Peters is Director of Research and Monitoring with New Jersey Audubon Society. Her Ph.D. in Zoology is from Clemson University, where her doctoral thesis focused on shore and wading bird distributions, habitat use, and response to human disturbance, an obvious fit with the interests and concerns of NJ Audubon.

People of all levels of skill and experience with birding are welcome!

Beginners are encouraged to attend, as well as more experienced birders wishing to explore the rich variety of birds in south Jersey (one of Roger Tory Peterson