Birding
Resources Page
This page has information about
birding in and around Kitsap County.
Visit the Purple
Martin Page Learn about the recovery effort led by
Kitsap Audubon members.
Where
to Find Birds in Kitsap County: Kitsap County is bordered on the
west by a natural fjord, the Hood Canal. On the north and east, it is
bounded by Puget Sound. Its 236 miles of salt-water shoreline offer more
marine habitat than any other county in the lower 48 states. Surrounded
almost entirely by saltwater, the Kitsap Peninsula is visited regularly
by more than 200 species of birds. Some 115 species nest here. Marine
birds are abundant from November through March, with over-wintering loons,
grebes and cormorants readily seen along the shores. Waterfowl are also
plentiful in the winter months, including wigeons, scoters, mergansers
and goldeneyes. Although spring and fall migrations often bring surprises,
the species noted for each location are those you are most likely to see.
* In county parks, restrooms may only be open from April through September.
Download the Kitsap County Checklist:
"
Kitsap County Checklist (2006)"
should print beautifully in seven columns landscape format on 11x14 paper.
Download KAS's Publication "Where
to Find Birds in Kitsap County"
Kingston Area 1 - Kingston Marina/Park, Appletree Cove • Marine
and mudflat habitats on quiet bay • American and Eurasian Wigeon, gulls
• Public fishing pier, visitors dock, walkway viewing sites 2 - Arness
County Park • Marine and slough habitats • Opposite side of Appletree
Cove with added view into Carpenter Creek slough • Portable toilet, small
parking area
Point No Point, Hansville Area 3 - Pt.-No-Pt. County Park, a designated
IBA (Important Bird Area) • Extensive views of Admiralty Inlet • Marine,
sandy beach, marsh, and wooded habitats • Best known for alcids, loons
and cormorants, as well as large numbers of Bonaparte’s and Heermann’s
gulls in the fall • Viewing platform, trails and beach access • Portable
toilet, limited handicap access 4 - Buck Lake County Park • Aquatic and
wooded habitats, open fields • Hooded Merganser and Pied-billed Grebe,
warblers in migration • Extensive trails
Serious birders have been know to fly halfway around the world to add
a rare bird to their life list. But the good news for those with more
modest goals and means is that you don’t have to travel far to find great
birds. You can stretch your budget and conserve energy but seeking out
local treasures. Kitsap County is blessed with wonderful winter birding.
For many of the species that breed in the Arctic, the sheltered, ice-free
shorelines of Kitsap County are almost tropical, compared to the Arctic
in winter. Point-No-Point County Park It’s hard to pick a favorite birding
spot, but Point-No-Point County Park in Hansville is high on most local
lists. As an important stopover for migrating birds, it’s one of National
Audubon’s official IBAs (Important Bird Area). Thousands of songbirds
pause here before crossing the Admiralty Straits on their annual journey
north. It’s also an important rest stop on the return trip. The tidal
eddies around the point provide an upwelling of nutrients that attract
both fish and the birds that feed on them. Birders watch with anticipation
for the annual vists of migrating Common Terns, Red-necked Phalaropes
and both Heerman’s and Bonaparte’s Gulls. Parasitic Jaegers often tag
along, and put on great aerial “combat” displays. The Point is also a
popular winter hangout for Ancient Murrelets, Marbled Murrelets, Rhinocerus
Auklets, and a variety of wintering loons, grebes, scoters and other marine
birds. There is often a surprise or two, bringing birders from every corner
of the State A trail that skirts the shoreline features a viewing platform
funded by the Kitsap Audubon Society. It looks east across Puget Sound
and west toward an extensive wetlands. The tangle of shrubs that line
the trail are often alive with smaller birds. The trail leads from the
lighthouse to a hilltop park that offers prime wooded habitat. Norwegian
County Park A short distance away, next to the Hansville general store,
Norwegian County Park is fairly new. Like nearby Point-No-Point, it looks
across the Admiralty Straits toward Whidbey Island, and gets much the
same marine activity. Rafts of birds wander back and forth, so it’s worth
checking out both view locations. The Hansville Greenway links this area
with trails through Buck Lake County Park, where Ospreys nest in the summer
and Eagles reign in winter.
Port Gamble Area 5 - Port Gamble Marine habitat of the Hood Canal,
wooded slopes, open lawns, bluff viewing platform, small park, no facilities
6 - Salisbury Point County Park Marine habitat of the Hood Canal, wooded
habitats, boat launch, beach access, trails
Poulsbo Area 7 - Poulsbo Marina and Waterfront Parks • Marine,
mudflat, and wooded habitats • A great diversity of marine birds in the
winter • Public docks, boardwalk, trails 8 - Oyster Plant Park • Marine
habitat, pocket park • Public dock and kayak launch • No facilities
Bainbridge Island 9 - Faye Bainbridge State Park • Sandy beach,
open marine and wooded habitats • Marine birds, Bald Eagle, Osprey • Trails,
beach access, views across Puget Sound 10 –Battle Point Park • Ponds,
fields, woods • Winter ducks, summer passerines 11 - Ft. Ward State Park
• Rocky shore, marine and wooded habitats • Marine birds include Surf
and White-winged Scoter, Western, Red-necked and Horned Grebe and Long-tailed
Duck • Trails, beach access • Views across Rich Passage
Silverdale Area, Dyes Inlet 12 - Island Lake County Park • Aquatic,
riparian and wooded habitats • Walks and trails • Ring-necked Ducks and
Hooded Mergansers in winter 13 - Silverdale Waterfront County Park • Pebble
beach and open bay marine habitats • Panoramic view of Dyes Inlet • Best
as a marine birding site in winter 14 - Old Mill County Park and Clear
Creek Trail • Pebble beach and open bay; marine, estuarine and riparian
habitats • Contiguous with the Clear Creek Trail system • Limited parking
at park, none along trails • Purple martin nest box site
Bremerton, Port Washington Narrows Area 15 - Lion’s Field Park
• Rocky marine habitat along the “narrows” • Both Pelagic and Double-crested
Cormorants, as well as Long-tailed Ducks in the winter 16 - Lower Rota
Vista Park, north end of Elizabeth Ave. • Rocky marine habitat • Large
Pelagic Cormorant roost and Peregrine Falcon nest under Warren Ave. Bridge.
• Walkway down bluff to viewing area • Limited parking, no facilities,
no handicapped access Port Orchard, Sinclair Inlet 17 Pt. Orchard Marina
and Park • Open bay marine habitat • Thousands of White-winged Scoters
and American Wigeons in winter, as well as Western Grebes • Best viewing
from park at east end of Marina
Numbers correspond to map locations
OTHER "HOT SPOTS" THAT LOCAL BIRDERS HAVE FOUND
Bainbridge Island: Heron Rookery, off Day Road, across from cemetery.
Visually seen in March, before leaves on trees obscure nest sites:
Belfair: Mary Theiler Wetlands - great walks
Bellingham: 262 Hovander/Tennant Lake ..Boardwalk and viewing tower.
If very wet, boardwalk gets under water.
Chimacum: Across Hood Canal Bridge, SR-19, Beaver Valley Rd to
Chimacum.. Intersection … closest to Chimacum Café, Left/North (on ?W
Valley Rd ) about 1 mile, in winter small flock of swans. Flock is reportedly
slowly growing each year
Hansville: N on Bond Rd, W on Hansville Rd (7.5 mi) Point No Point
Lighthouse area (Hansville Rd 7.4 mi, R on E Pt No Pt Rd) shore birds
& marsh birds Bucks Lake (with trails). (Hansville Rd 7.4 mi, L on NE
Buck Lake Road and follow signs. Nature Conservancy land and trail. Follow
Hansville Rd to end, follow L on Twin Spits Road along the shore, approximately
2.7 miles. On Left, minimally marked trail entrance (between 2 No Parking
Dusk to Dawn signs and across from red mail box address signs for 3476-3480).
Trail goes out to Hood Canal. Probably nicer as a walk than specific birding
location.
Hood Canal: Shine Tidelands State Park, North across Hood Canal
Bridge (on Jefferson County end) and immediate right, follow signs.
Lacey: Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge, Exit # 114 off I-5.
Manchester:
Port Townsend: Marina, walk along the trail … ? direction. Kingfisher
nest holes in cliff. Kah Tai Lagoon, behind McDonald restaurant, usually
see Ruddy Ducks and Mergansers. Fort Worden Various sites, from shore,
from cliff above, from outside…
Poulsbo: Liberty Bay. Park in downtown parking lot. Walk from the
Poulsbo Marina, and right (North) along the boardwalk.
Seabeck: Big Beef Creek, frequently an eagle, occasional year large
numbers in May - June, feeding on salmon. Seabeck Marina Wildcat Lake
Skagit Valley: Eagles, Snow Geese, Swans (December thru March)
Fir Island fish wildlife Refuge - Snow Geese area Debay Slough, Swan preserve.
Off I-5 , East on College ; North on… Padilla Bay Reserve
Silverdale: Clear Creek Trail and Old Mill Park Old Mill Park (between
Silverdale Hotel & Christa Shores)
Washington Coast: (see Bob Morse's "A Birder's Guide to Coastal
Washington") Grays Harbor Shorebird Festival, approximately last weekend
in April (high tide) (See http://www.ghas.org ) Bowerman Basin Area (Grays
Harbor) Ocean Shores
Whidbey Island:
Our Mission is to preserve the natural world through education, enivronmental study, and habitat protection; and to promote awareness and enjoyment of local and regional natural areas. Check out our new Brochure!
Kitsap Audubon publishes a monthly newsletter called the Kingfisher. The Kingfisher is published eight times a year, September to May.
©
Paul Carson
Submissions from readers are welcome. Email text or photographs to genebullock@comcast.net or mail them to Gene Bullock, Kingfisher Editor, 1968 NE Lind Ct., Poulsbo WA 98370. Our deadline is the 15th of the preceding month.