New video on Snowy Plovers

New video on Snowy Plovers

Check out this new video about San Francisco’s Snowy Plovers by filmmaker Matt Baker!

You can help protect the Snowy Plovers that winter at Crissy Field and Ocean Beach by keeping dogs on leash in areas where plovers and other wildlife are present. Or join our monthly beach clean-up at Crissy Field — the next one is on Monday March 11 from 10 a.m. until noon. See our Volunteer page for details and future dates.

More info on San Francisco’s plovers on the Snowy Plover section of our web site.

Snowy Plover photo by Matt Zlatunich. 

Lights out for spring migration

Lights out for spring migration

Spring migration starts on February 15 — with more than 250 species of birds moving through the Bay Area! You can help them complete their long journeys safely by joining our Lights Out for Birds campaign.

Bright lights tend to draw birds off their nighttime migratory paths. They often end up colliding with buildings or circling the lights endlessly until exhausted. But you can help… by making sure building lights are off from dusk until dawn between February 15 and May 30.

  • Employees: Turn out lights in your workplace at night, especially if you work in a tall building or one with extensive glass windows. If you need to work late, use task lighting rather than overhead lighting, or draw the blinds.
  • Building owners and managers: Turn off non-essential lights such as exterior architectural lighting. Inside, consider installing motion sensors or timers to keep lights off as much as possible at night. Not only will you save the lives of birds, but you’ll save energy and money. PG&E offers rebates to companies that want to install these devices.

Help spread the word! We have Fact Sheets, posters and sample social media messages you can download and share. We can even point you to an online Lighting Cost calculator to help estimate how much money and energy you’ll save by turning lights out.

Visit the Lights Out for Birds page of our web site for more information.

Thanks to our partners at the San Francisco Department of the Environment and PG&E for supporting Lights Out and our Bay Area bird populations!

Thanks to designer Leslie Laurien for creation of the Lights Out logo.

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New office hours

Our new office hours are Tuesdays and Wednesdays, from 1 to 5 p.m. Other times the office is open by appointment — contact a staff member to ensure we are here before you come in.

We’re currently seeking volunteers to help make up for our reduced office staff. If you can help with the phones, data entry, mailings etc. please email Volunteer Coordinator Noreen Weeden. With volunteer help, we hope to be able to expand our office hours. Thank you for your patience with us during this transitional time.…

Great Backyard Bird Count – Feb. 15-18

Great Backyard Bird Count – Feb. 15-18

Get ready for the Great Backyard Bird Count! Co-sponsored by National Audubon and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the GBBC is an annual chance to discover and help the birds in your community.

Take as little as 15 minutes to count the birds in a spot of your choice — your own backyard, a park, etc. Then post your results to eBird or the GBBC web site, to help create a snapshot in time of bird populations throughout North America.

We at Golden Gate Bird Alliance are sponsoring a Kids’ Bird Count at Lake Merritt on Saturday morning Feb. 16 as part of the GBBC. We’ll meet at the Rotary Nature Center by Lake Merritt. Time and more details to come soon.

For information on the Kids’ Bird Count, email Eco-Education Director Anthony DeCicco at adecicco@goldengatebirdalliance.org.

Or to learn about the Great Backyard Bird Count, click here:

January 2013 Gull is available
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January 2013 Gull is available

 

The new edition of The Gull newsletter for January 2013 is now available online, with  a report by Bob Lewis on bird population trends in the Oakland Christmas Bird Count, an open letter from former GGBA Executive Director Arthur Feinstein, upcoming field trips and speaker events,  and more.

 

 

Click here to read it in color:  Gull – Jan 2013

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