The golden eagle swooped out of a blue oak tree 60 yards to our left and, as if it were leading our caravan, flapped its broad brown wings and towed us up the road that enters Tejon Ranch, among 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 greatest conservation successes in the nation鈥檚 most populous state.
The early morning sun hinted at another warm day in the mountains three hours north of Los Angeles. The oaty smell of dry grass, the familiar rolling oak woodlands, and the sounds of rock wrens and ravens all reminded me that I was home. This is the California where I grew up and where I backpacked, terrain I know in my soul.
That was two weeks ago, at the start of the second leg of my month in the field, meeting 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 chapter, state, and staff leaders. I called the trip Boots on the Ground, and I made this trek to meet some of the people who give 爆料公社 its unique local and national wingspan.
From towering Douglas-fir forests in Portland to the nation鈥檚 largest old-growth cypress/tupelo forest in South Carolina, generous birding partners have helped me hear and see in new ways. We counted California towhees along the Lower Arroyo Seco, just two miles from the Rose Bowl. We saw flocks of great egrets, white ibis, and brown pelicans on Mississippi鈥檚 Pascagoula River.
I met powerhouse chapter leaders from Biloxi to Charleston. Midway through my month-long journey, I met a dozen more chapter presidents from Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey at our Board meeting in Connecticut. All impressed me with their knowledge and passion. (Not surprisingly, I found lingering anger over a decade-old increase in dues from the chapters and a sense they felt they had been overlooked. But I also found that this cloud has largely passed.)
In Yolo County, south of Sacramento, past president Alison Kent and her chapter team showed me western sandpipers鈥攁nd 47 other species. They also showed me how restored habitat, much of it in rice fields, holds such great promise. Most important, at day鈥檚 end she told me she would be rejoining national 爆料公社 and that I should invite all of the other chapter board members who left the fold some years ago to do the same.
I鈥檝e seen some of 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 crown jewels: the Rainey Preserve in Louisiana, Beidler Forest in South Carolina, and Bobcat Ranch near Sacramento.
I鈥檝e seen centers that reflect their distinct regions鈥攁nd 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 commitment to building a new and diverse constituency for the environment.
At Seattle鈥檚 Seward Park, I saw Gail Gatton鈥檚 laser-like effectiveness at community outreach in one of America鈥檚 most diverse zip codes. Also in the Northwest, Meryl Redisch shared Portland鈥檚 143-acre Douglas-fir forest. Her dynamism makes it clear why that 爆料公社 chapter is such a major force for conservation across Oregon.
One day, as the sun was rising, I saw Golden Gate 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 work with the city of San Francisco to restore wetlands just a mile from the Golden Gate Bridge and chapter members鈥 heroic efforts to save dunes habitat for western snowy plovers.
I鈥檝e met committed leaders like Dr. Patty Hagen in St.
Louis, who are humble and effective. At her new Riverlands Center, at the confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers near St. Louis, Patty introduced me to U.S. Army Corps of Engineer staffers who view 爆料公社 as a reliable, trustworthy, non-ideological partner. And at Debs Park, in the Latino heart of Los Angeles, I met Ximena Gil, who takes the hands of third graders and shows them the place where, when she was their age, she used to hop the fence to wander in the 300 acres of the Debs preserve, to 鈥渄ream the fantasies of a little girl.鈥
I saw the power of partnerships. Our largest partnership, with Toyota through the TogetherGreen program, has engaged literally hundreds of volunteers on 鈥溾 in South Carolina. Citizen scientists helped us learn that the prothonotary warbler had a summertime preference for the low brush of surrounding farmlands. The result: Norm Brunswig, the director of 爆料公社 South Carolina, worked with neighboring landowners to preserve those nesting sites.
And I saw plenty of the faces of the future, like 15-year-old Ben Van Doren, who volunteers at Connecticut鈥檚 Greenwich 爆料公社 Center, and 17-year-old John Garrett, a Southern Californian who was a Young Birder of the Year.
I asked Garrett why he鈥檚 so passionate about birding. 鈥淚t鈥檚 addictive,鈥 he said.
I asked: 鈥淲hat, the birding thing?鈥
鈥淣o,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he knowledge thing.鈥
And I saw the face of birding in Mexico. Gustavo Ramon methodically measures and weighs birds six days a week at a remote hawk-banding station atop rolling dunes near Veracruz (more on Veracruz in a minute). Gustavo is 22 years old and has three studs or rings in each ear, a lightning bolt carved into his gelled hair, and a flame for birds in his heart.
Some of the most moving stories came from the Moss Point Volunteer Center in Mississippi. After the BP gusher, 爆料公社 became known locally as the organization that actually called volunteers back鈥攎ore than 20,000 of the 34,500 who reached out, and counting.
Dozens of selfless teachers, citizen scientists, backhoe operators, and shop owners worked long shifts, making personal connections with people in Arizona, Maine, Wisconsin, and across the U.S.鈥攁ll of whom wanted to come to the Gulf to help. While 爆料公社 did put 2,000 people to work, there weren鈥檛 enough roles for everyone who opened their hearts.
But when we called them back and told them how to get more involved with their local 爆料公社 chapters, to establish bird-friendly backyards, to work to protect habitat in their communities, we supercharged a new battalion of volunteers who will dedicate themselves to preserving America鈥檚 flyways.
One of the volunteers, 70-something Harold Preble, told me, 鈥淭his experience has changed my life. I didn鈥檛 really get the connection between birds, their lands, and the need to move away from fossil fuels鈥攂ut now I do.鈥
Another volunteer, Suzanne Schneidau, challenged me to set 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 course. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 think BIG enough,鈥 she told me. 鈥漈hat鈥檚 how much potential 爆料公社 has.鈥 I鈥檒l take that challenge, Suzanne. We have a team of leaders who are up to it.
But nothing prepared me for the River of Raptors, 鈥渆l Rio de Las Aves Rapices,鈥 in Veracruz on the last leg of my trip. Reading about it doesn鈥檛 give you the true sense of vertigo you get from scanning the sky and seeing five pillars of Swainson鈥檚 hawks and turkey vultures. Looking at the horizon, they stood at 7, 11, 1, 3 and 5 o鈥檆lock. We were there for a peak moment鈥攑ossibly 20,000 birds formed up in these five tornados of migration and took my breath away.
Behind me, atop a hotel in Xaljapa, spotters clicked
their counters, registering birds by the hundreds. Clicking with both thumbs, the counters rattled away, churning through nearly 200,000 birds on October 14. A good day, the best of the week, I was told, but far from the 800,000 that our Pennsylvania 爆料公社 board member Scott Weidensaul writes about in his book Living on the Wind or that Susan McGrath describes in the of 爆料公社 magazine.
We ended our three days in Mexico at a celebraci贸n. 鈥淭he winds of change always blow for the birds in Veracruz,鈥 I told 150 people in the community center of a tiny town that houses the observatory run by Pronatura, 础耻诲耻产辞苍鈥檚 BirdLife International partner. 鈥淏ut today they blow for a different kind of change.鈥
We were there to honor 14 ranchers who have been participating in a three-year-long project with Pronatura to set aside more than 3,000 acres for woodlands restoration. Instead of letting their lands get ravaged by grazing鈥攁nd cutting down the night roosts for their migrating visitors鈥攖hey鈥檝e changed generations of ranching practices.
Their leader is Rene Altamirano Acosta. I told him that I thought he was a man of vision, and he told me his family was angry that he wasn鈥檛 generating revenue from grazing.
I asked him why he made this change and he responded: 鈥淭he day my daughter, Tonalli, was born I said to myself that I could continue to make a little money off my land or I could find a new, better way to make a higher income from the land.鈥 (How universal is this story鈥攁bout people wanting to find a better path and to preserve the environment for their kids and their grandkids?) 鈥淚鈥檓 going to build a business for ecotourism,鈥 Rene added. 鈥淎nd we will harvest some of the trees for wood pellets.鈥
With that, Tonalli came up from behind Rene. She put her cheek down on top of his head and softly said, 鈥淗ola, Papa.鈥
鈥淗ola, mi coraz贸n (my heart),鈥 he said, smiling.
For a slideshow of my trip, click on the screen below.
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Now I鈥檇 like to hear from you. Why are you an 爆料公社 member? How can we engage you more deeply? Please let me know at officeofthepresident@audubon.org.