READ ABOUT THE HUMMINGBIRD LADY

Check this active EagleCam from the Norfolk Botanical Gardens

visit woodbury

meet the directors

chickadee chronicle
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field checklist of birds
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Check out the new Stanton Bird Club hats & T-Shirts.  All the fashionable birders are wearing them.


VIDEOS
RealPlayer may be required to play some of these files
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Oriole Video (5 MB) (9MB)
Female Oriole (4MB) (7MB)
Orioles at Jelly (3.8MB) (7MB)
GoldFinch (2.6MB) (6MB)
Goldfinch at Feeder (2.75MB) (5.3MB)
Goldfinch Chick Begging (.8MB)
White-crowned Sparrow (1.8MB) (3.4MB)
Red-winged Blackbird (1.7MB) (3.2MB)
Summer Tanager (3.5MB) (6.5MB)
Starlings (3 MB) (6MB)
Starling Bathing (1.8MB)
Red-tailed Hawk(1.8MB)
Common Mergansers (1.8MB)
Northern Shrike (1MB)
Pileated Woodpecker (1.9MB)
Cooper's Hawk (1.6MB)
Great Cormorant (1.1MB)
Juncos (1.9MB) (7MB)
White-throated Sparrows (1.3MB)
Fox Sparrow (3.4MB)
White-breasted Nuthatch (1.8MB)
Immature Eagle (2 MB)
2 Eagles on Nest (7.4 MB)
Peregrine Falcons (8.2 MB)
American Redstart (1.5MB)
Red-winged Blackbird (1.75MB)
Puffins & Razorbills (7MB) (15MB)

 

Check out some great new video clips at Maine Nature Diary.
watch a Catbird bathing, Orioles eating jelly, and a Sapsucker eating an orange


Wednesday Morning Summer Bird Walks
With Stan & Joan DeOrsey

Check the new schedule for this popular series


Check out the new 2008
SBC
Calendar of Birds

SBC Member
Dan Marquis
is pleased to announce an
exhibit of his photos at the Women's Health Pavillion on Sabattus Street
through August 25th

Stop in and check it out

Help support our work

The Stanton Bird Club was founded in 1919 and named in honor of Dr. Jonathan Y. Stanton, a professor at Bates College in Lewiston. Over the years, a number of parcels of land were donated to the Club. These donations eventually grew to encompass 357 acres, known as the Thorncrag Nature Sanctuary, in the heart of Lewiston, Maine's second largest city.
The Club also owns and manages the 160 acre Woodbury Bird Sanctuary in Monmouth.

The Club is made up of people from a wide range of ages and backgrounds, but they all share a love of nature in general, and birds in particular. Today there are some 300 club members, including about 21 Junior Naturalists and 8 Junior Stewards. A Board of Directors oversees the Club's finances and activities, both of which have grown tremendously in the last decade.

Although almost all of the Stanton Bird Club's activities are free of charge, membership is encouraged because dues helps finance stewardship programs at Thorncrag and educational programs of the Junior Naturalists, as well as help fund and the Club's two other sanctuaries. Anyone interested in membership can request a membership brochure.


2007-2008 Schedule 

Regular meetings are held on the first Monday of the month from November through May, starting at 7:00 pm at the Auburn Public Library at the corner of Spring and Court Streets. Visitors are always welcome and the meetings are free and open to the public.

2007-2008 Schedule 

The Stanton Bird Club offers numerous field trips throughout the year to a variety of local hot spots in the Lewiston-Auburn area, as well as state-wide and even to the coast of New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
All trips are led by  experienced birders.  
We hope you'll join us in the field
.

Be sure to check back on the field trip page to see the results of each outing, along with any photos from the trip!

FIELD TRIP RESULTS ARCHIVES

2007 CHRISTMAS COUNT RESULTS NOW AVAILABLE


JUNIOR NATURALIST PROGRAM

The two most active outreach programs are the Thorncrag Volunteer Nature Guide Program and the Junior Naturalist Program. Through the Nature Guide program we offer trained guides to take groups of all ages, mostly school groups, through Thorncrag on nature walks with any of  nine different themes that highlight the various habitats found there.

L-A... IT'S HAPPENING HERE

 


Check out Jim Walker's Puffin Photos in the Photo Gallery


Winter finches invading Maine
This is a good winter for an invasion by the northern "winter finches"! They are just about everywhere this year. Keep an eye on feeders for Common Repolls, and on fruiting trees such as crabapples, for Pine Grosbeaks & Bohemian Waxwings.
(read about them in the current issue of the Chickadee Chronicle)

Photos by Dan Marquis
Common Redpolls, like this one, will swarm to a thistle feeder


Pine Grosbeaks, like this male above, and female below, love crabapples in winter


Bohemian Waxwing, by Jim Walker

See more Grosbeak photos
by Peter Elias



Great Gray Owl
Seen winter '05 in Belgrade


A Mandarin Duck spent winter '04 - '05 in Ogunquit
.
See photos & videos.

 

 

 

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This site was written and is maintained by Dan Marquis, Stanton Bird Club.

Please send comments and suggestions to my attention.