Two beautiful mornings with Kenwood Elementary and The Meadow School in Sonoma county

Its getting spooky up in the northern part of the state. The mornings are colder, sometimes frosty, and the days are short.
Kevin explains how to look for a bird in a field guide and why field guides are useful.

photo from www.bird-friends.com

Yet, the Black Phoebes keep on catching the highest perch on the playground, and the students continue to find them in the field guide.

With Bird School, students are encouraged to go out into the field, observe nature, record their observations, ask questions, and repeat the process. This is the same method used by former professor of natural history at UC Santa Cruz, Kenneth M. Norris. He called it "spinning the wheel." This practice has proven to be extremely transformative in the lives of budding naturalists and has helped to create some of the top naturalists, interpreters, scientists, and land managers in California. 
Kenwood Elementary's 4th graders "spin the wheel." 
This week we worked with some very bright 3rd and 4th grade students from Kenwood Elementary and The Meadow School. They asked many questions and learned how to answer their questions through observation. Ms. Cagle and Ms. Forester's classes at Kenwood even watched the power of their observations be put to work as we taught them how to record their sightings on ebird.com, an international database for bird observation run by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. More on ebird soon!

We're looking forward to more schedules like the one below. Bay Area here we come!
The schedule for Mr. Wright's class.

Songbirds and shorebirds in Sonoma county

We had a very full day working with the various classes of the brand new University Elementary in Rohnert Park. We were set up to teach 4 classes--two 1st/2nd grade classes and two kindergarten classes! We only had a short amount of time with each, but we were able to learn bird sounds, bird identification, and we went out for walks on their sports field. 

The kids quietly walking forward to get a closer look at a perched Black Phoebe
Learning about the Western Scrub-Jay
Watching the Chestnut-backed Chickadees that were visiting the feeders of a neighboring house

Today, we had the day off and decided to go birding--all day! We first went to Bodega Bay on the Sonoma coast and got some good looks at the shorebirds despite the stormy weather. 
Birding at Bodega Bay!


A solitary Eared Grebe

Can you find the Savannah Sparrow? Look out for those bright yellow lores above the bill!

The beautiful open wings of the Willets and the cinnamon color of the Marbled Godwit!

 We finished up by birding around our friend Adam's farm. We saw some beautiful Cedar Waxwings, Northern Flickers, and had a great look at a Sharp-Shinned Hawk. Adam went to UC Santa Cruz and was a part of the recreation department and Wilderness Orientation program, both of which we worked for when we were in school. He now lives up in Sebastopol and owns New Family Farm. They raise pigs and grow produce for the community and they do most of it the old-school way--by horse-drawn plow! Check out their facebook page at Facebook.com/thenewfamilyfarm.
Feeding Bertha and her new piglets at New Family Farm in Sebastopol!