Tuesday, November 3, 2015

The DC Women's Hiking Group will hike Thursday, Nov. 5th at Aldrich Park in Ridgefield.
From Rt. 35 take Farmingville Rd.
Follow until you reach New Rd.  Turn left onto New Rd.
Parking area will be on the left.
Meet at 8:30am.
Contact info or questions:  Mendy Polchinski at mmpolchinski@gmail.com or 203-241-1770 cell.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

The DC Women's Hiking Group will hike this week, Tuesday, Oct. 27th and Thursday, Oct. 29th at Tarrywile Park in Danbury.

From I-84 take the airport exit.
At end of ramp turn right.
Follow through traffic lights and at stop sign turn onto Southern Blvd. ( It will be a sharp right turn).
Follow small brown signs for Tarrywile Park.
The park will be on the right, across from Immaculate H.S.
Meet in lower parking lot at 8:30am.

Monday, October 19, 2015

The DC Women's Hiking Group will meet Tues., Oct. 20th and Thurs., Oct. 22nd at Lake Windwing.

Take Rt. 35 to the traffic light at Limestone Rd.
Turn left on to Limestone Rd.
Follow Limestone, it will turn into Bennetts Farm Rd.
Follow Bennetts Farm Rd. and turn right on to South Shore Dr.
Ridgebury Elementary School will be on the left right before the turn to South Shore Dr.
Turn left into baseball field and parking area.
Meet at 8:30am.

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

The DC Women's Hiking Group will try a new location called Farrington Woods in Danbury, CT on Tuesday, October 13th and Thursday, October 15th.

Take Ridgebury Rd. turns into Saw Mill Rd. 
Past light to go on 84.
At next light take left onto Mill Plain Rd
Take 1st right almost immediately after.
There is a small sign.
Follow road to parking area.
Meet at 8:30am.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Birding with Lars - Sept 12, 2015



There is nothing better on a cool early September morning than to grab a pair of binoculars, a cup of hot coffee and head outside to go looking for birds!  An American Robin greeted us in the parking lot at Bennett’s Pond while we assembled and got a quick lesson from Lars on how to most effectively use binoculars.  We followed the trail up the hill to the meadow area, which used to be the site of Louis D. Conley’s mansion and farm called Outpost Farm.  Although the house and outbuildings are long gone, many beautiful trees from Conley’s tree nursery, a booming business in the 1920s, still remain scattered throughout the park.  Once again we found that the warm sunny spots attract the birds, and the best viewing is with the sun behind your back.  We watched an American Goldfinch fly into the weedy field, perhaps looking for thistle seeds to feed on.  The goldfinches are molting and putting on their drab winter plumage, losing their bright yellow and black coloration and becoming more brown and olive (pictured above).  Large noisy birds, such as the Blue Jay, American Crow, and Gray Catbird announced themselves with their loud raucous calls well before we could see them.  Other easy to recognize bird calls are from the Tufted Titmouse with its peter-peter-peter and the Black-Capped Chickadee with its fee-dee call.  Another bird spotted along the forest edge was a female Eastern Towhee, with its dark brown head, chest and back, rufous sides and white belly.  It was perched on a low tree, but is often found scratching and rummaging in the undergrowth for insects, fruits and seeds.  We learned the different approaches that tree clinging birds take to trees.  The White-Breasted Nuthatch often starts at the top of the tree and works its way down looking for insects and seeds, while the Downy Woodpecker starts low and works its way up the trunk, poking around for insects crawling along or under the bark.  Titmice and chickadees are often found with nuthatches and downy woodpeckers in winter foraging flocks, as food is easier to find as a group and there are more eyes to alert the flock to predators, and more bodies to confuse them in flight.  A good morning walk among the birds was had by all!  Photo credit: www.allaboutbirds.org

Friday, September 4, 2015

The DC Women's Hiking Group is starting a new year of hiking.
Come and join us.
We hike every Tuesday and Thursday during the school year.

We will meet at Topstone Park in Redding on Tues., Sept. 8th and Thurs., Sept. 10th.

Take Topstone Rd. off of Rt. 7.
Follow road over RR tracks until it becomes a dirt road.
Shortly after, a parking area will be on the right side of the road.

 Meet at 8:30am.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

June Birding with Noah - Ridgefield Rec Center


We tried an earlier morning (7 a.m.) start time and the birds were definitely much more active, for as soon as we entered the woodlands off of the parking lot at the Rec Center, the bird calls began.  Of much interest was a warbling vireo which had a nest high up in an aspen tree.  Although they are a rather drab bird with grey up on top and white belly washed with a faint yellow, their warbling song is beautiful to hear.  They forage high in the tree tops, eating caterpillars and other insects.  Brown-headed cowbirds will often lay their eggs in the vireo’s rounded hanging nests.  Because they are “brood parasites”, cowbirds make no nests of their own and rely on other bird species to raise their young.  Also, spotted were gray catbirds.  Related to mockingbirds, they also have the ability to mimic the calls of other birds, as well as producing their own distinctive “mewing” sound which gives them their name.  We had a nice view of some cedar waxwings, with their black masks and slicked back crests.  The red tips on their wing feathers and the yellow tip on the tail were not easy to see.  Robins, common grackles, mourning doves, yellow warblers and phoebes also were present along the wooded trails.  But the big excitement was over at the Norwalk River that runs behind the Rec Center.  There we spotted a family of wood ducks. A female with nine babies trailing behind her was swimming apart from the Canada geese.  Wood ducks will often lay their eggs in other wood duck nests, to be raised by other females, another example of brood parasitism.  Nearby, a great blue heron (picture) posed for a very long time for us and we got many good pictures of this statuesque bird with blue-grey plumage that was standing quite still hunting for fish.  Some of the swallow boxes placed along the river trail were occupied and we watched a mother tree swallow hard at work feeding insects to her hungry, noisy babies. Picture:  Michael Kralik taken on the hike - June 13, 2015