• Home
  • Author
  • Clouds
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Rare Bird
  • Marbled Murrelets
  • Lakes
Menu

Maria Mudd Ruth

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
author and naturalist
Homepage-Banner.jpg

Maria Mudd Ruth

  • Home
  • Author
  • Clouds
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Rare Bird
    • Rare Bird
    • Marbled Murrelets
  • Lakes

Grays Harbor Shorebird Migration

April 30, 2013 Maria

Just a glimpse of the 30,000 shorebirds moving through the refuge  now.

  Grays Harbor possesses a subtle kind of beauty, the kind that requires an appreciation for  the dazzling range of gray in the landscape. I have always loved remote, edge-of-the-continent places where big, honkin' tulips and other showy flowers can't get a foothold or survive the battering wind, rain, and salt spray. 

A view from the boardwarlked Sandpiper Trail (my first "stiched" panorama!)

  Just west of Hoquiam, Washington, you'll find such a less-is-more place at Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge. Unless you go now to witness the spectacular show of shorebirds-hundreds of thousands of them --moving onto the estuary's mudflats to refuel as they migrate some 15,000 miles from as far south as Argentina to their breeding grounds in the Arctic. The mudflats offer a bounty of food--clams, worms, grubs, shrimp-like creatures all burrowed down in the mud--many not far enough to evade the probing bills of the hungry birds.

   I had visited the refuge in the past, but, being the Accidental Naturalist, didn't plan around the season or the tides and, while I enjoyed the stroll along the boardwalked Sandpiper Trail, was always a wee bit disappointed that I hadn't seen "anything good." This year, thanks to my Intentional Naturalist friends who told me about the Shorebird Festival, I showed up at exactly the right time--in the middle of high tide last Saturday--to see some 30,000 birds, mostly Western Sandipers, feeding along the shoreline. My camera and binoculars are underpowered for capturing individual birds, but there were several refuge volunteers stationed along the boardwalk with spotting scopes focussed on the flocks; the will be happy to point out the differences between the Western Sandpipers, Dunlins, Sanderlings, Semipalmated Plovers, and two dozen other species migrating through the refuge.  

Weatherproof and bird-savvy refuge volunteers are stationed along the trail.

  Most enjoyable for me was watching the different feeding styles of the different species and seeing waves of birds fly off the mudflats as peregrine falcons swept in to hunt.

Click here for information on the Grays Harbor NWR, best shorebird viewing times, information on the birds, and directions to the refuge. Though the festival was last week, the birds will be migrating for another few weeks. 

Tags Grays Harbor National Widlife Refuge, Grays Harbor NWR, Shorebird Festival, Shorebird migration, Western Sandpipers, Sandpiper Trail
Comment

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive my blog in your inbox.

Thank you!
​Connect with Maria elsewhere  Facebook Instagram
Blog RSS

A Sideways Look at Clouds from Mountaineers Books

A Sideways Look at Clouds from Mountaineers Books

Rare BirdORDER TODAY >>

Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet

“Compelling…  engaging.” —Library Journal

“Rare insights into the trials and joys of scientific discovery.” —Publisher’s weekly

Learn more about Rare Bird...

Enjoy this song by Peter Horne, "Little Bird, Little Boat, Big Ocean... 


The photo for my blog captures the spirit of the accidental naturalist (my husband, actually). The body of water featured here, Willapa Bay, completely drained out at low tide during our camping trip at the Willapa National Wildlife Refuge, leaving …

The photo for my blog captures the spirit of the accidental naturalist (my husband, actually). The body of water featured here, Willapa Bay, completely drained out at low tide during our camping trip at the Willapa National Wildlife Refuge, leaving us a pleasant several hours of experiencing the life of the turning tide.

  • Wild Swimming
  • marbled murrelet
  • clouds
  • A Sideways Look at Clouds
  • Mountaineers Books
  • Rare Bird
  • old-growth forests
  • Open-water Swimming
  • Maria Mudd Ruth
  • Lakes of Washington
You must select a collection to display.

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive my blog in your inbox.

Thank you!
​Connect with Maria elsewhere  Facebook
Blog RSS

©2025 MARIA MUDD RUTH  |  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED