• Poorwills at Mitchell Canyon

    This trip is now full. You may register to be on a waiting list in case of cancellations

    We’ll stroll up Mitchell Canyon and Red Roads in the evening looking for the many birds that should still be active as dusk settles. We’ll linger part way out Red Road until full darkness (about 9:00) in hopes of seeing and hearing Common Poorwills and perhaps some owls and bats. 

    The total round trip distance is about 3.5 miles. Walking is on wide, unpaved roads, generally going gently uphill, but with one steep but short section. Bring flashlights as well as your usual birding accoutrement. Check the weather forecast and dress appropriately, since we’ll have a one hour walk in the dark to our cars. Evening birding tends to be ear-birding, so we’ll ask that conversation be minimal and quiet.

    Registration will close at 11pm on May 24, 2022.

    Registrants: If you have any questions email rnakano@goldengatebirdalliance.org or call Ryan at (510) 227-6190. 

  • Brazil – Birding and Wildlife Watching

    This 11 day/10 night trip will explore the birds and wildlife of Pantanal and Chapada dos Guimarães.

    Great Dusky Swift by Anne Koke

    Start in the city of Cuiabá and then head to the famous Chapada dos Guimarães National Park, spending the whole morning looking for bird species like Red-and-green Macaw, Blue-winged Macaw, Chapada Flycatcher, Coal-crested Finch, Guira Cuckoo, Toco Toucan, and Peach-fronted Parakeet. We will drive toward our accommodation, Pousada do Parque Lodge. You will be thrilled with the birding opportunities that this place offers, with species such as Planalto Hermit, Swallow-tailed Hummingbird, Red Pileated Finch, Chopi Blackbird, Pale-crested Woodpecker, Flavescent Warbler, and a good number of night birds such as Nacunda Nighthawk, Common Potoo, Rufous Nightjar, Scissor-tailed Nightjar, Little Nightjar, Pauraque, and Tropical Screech Owl. 

    Birding outside the park includes good targets such as White-rumped Tanager, White-banded Tanager, Collared Crescentchest, Pavonine Cuckoo, Amazonian Motmot, Sharp-tailed Streamcreeper, Brown Jacamar, White-eared Puffbird, and Spot-backed Puffbird. We might also have a chance to see the endemic Crested Black Tyrant, and have time to admire the famous Cachoeira Véu de Noiva (bridal veil waterfall).

    After three nights at Pousada do Parque in the Chapada dos Guimarães National Park, we will drive to Poconé at the entrance to the largest wetland in the world, the Pantanal. During our stay in the Pantanal we will visit and stay at different lodges, which are carefully chosen to provide the best birding and wildlife opportunities.

    During our stay at the Pantanal Mato Grosso Hotel we will do boat trips searching for aquatic species such as Amazon, Ringed, Green, Green-and-rufous, and American Pygmy Kingfisher, Agami Heron, Jabiru, and Cocoi Heron. Here we also might see Blue-throated Piping Guan, Golden-collared Macaw, Black-collared Hawk, Sungrebe, and Giant Otter.

    We will drive along the Transpantaneira, which is the only road that passes through the northern Pantanal and ends on the Cuiabá River. Here we will stay for two nights at the comfortable Hotel Pantanal Norte – Porto Jofre, which will be our base to look for the majestic Jaguar along the Cuiabá River. The chances to see this legendary animal are very high in the Pantanal, and we should be rewarded with more than one sighting. After two nights at Porto Joffre, we will return to Cuiabá, from where you can connect with your domestic flights back to São Paulo and home from there.

    Cost: $4,990 per person, double occupancy; $537 single supplement.

  • Spring Migration at Mitchell Canyon

    This trip is now full. You may register to be on a waiting list in case of cancellations

    Mitchell Canyon on the north side of Mount Diablo is a magnet for migrating birds seeking a refueling stop, as riparian habitat is scarce in these parts. 

    Mitchell Canyon by Rick Lewis

    Along with migrants, we’ll see and hear a number of permanent residents and summer nesting birds.  We’ll look for warblers and flycatchers while enjoying early wildflowers and butterflies. In addition to walking along Mitchell Creek, we’ll traverse chaparral and walk under a variety of mature trees.

    Registration will close at 11pm on April 19, 2022.

    Registrants: If you have any questions email rnakano@goldengatebirdalliance.org or call Ryan at (510) 227-6190. 

  • Iguazu Falls

  • Birding and History in Glen Canyon Park

    The site of America’s first dynamite factory personally licensed by inventor Alfred Nobel and once threatened with alternative uses, including a reservoir, housing development, and viaduct freeway, Glen Canyon Park is a 70-acre urban oasis located in the heart of San Francisco. Learn more about Glen Canyon’s unique history as well as its resident avians on this special walk, co-led by Evelyn Rose, Director and Founder of the Glen Park Neighborhoods History Project (GPNHP) and Megan Jankowski of the Golden Gate Bird Alliance (GGBA). Funds raised during this walk will be shared by the GGBA and GPNHP, the latter in support of the Glen Park Gum Tree Girls Festival being held in Glen Canyon Park on Sunday, July 10, 2022.

    Registration will close at 11pm on April 20, 2022.

    Registrants: If you have any questions email rnakano@goldengatebirdalliance.org or call Ryan at (510) 227-6190.