It’s In Your Nature: Assateague Island a nature hot spot worth visiting
Over the next few months, I’d like to highlight a few nature areas that I’ve enjoyed.
You can probably guess that these locales include some great birding areas.
I’ll begin with maybe my favorite go-to spot: Assateague Island. Yes, it’s not in our backyard, but from most places in Carbon County you are looking at about a four-hour drive. If you vacation in Ocean City, Maryland, you are only about a 15-minute drive away.
Assateague Island is one of the barrier islands up and down the Eastern Coast of the United States. Up until 1962, Assateague Island was actually part of the same barrier island that hosts Ocean City. A nor’easter stalled for a few days offshore and it breached the island, so now OC is separated.
Assateague Island is mostly National Park Service land. Some of the northern end is Assateague Island State Park managed by the State of Maryland.
The good news for me, other nature lovers and campers is that the same powerful storm that cut the island in two also wiped out an aggressive plan to have vacation homes built across the island.
The widespread damage ceased the plans, and the homesite dreams of developers were lost. Fortunately, some conservation-minded people saw a better way to use the island and it became Assateague Island National Seashore.
My family, in 1985, began camping at the state park, and the island’s varied wildlife got me hooked. I could take a before-sunrise jog north along the beach and watch dolphins breaching just offshore while laughing gulls, common and least terns dove into the surf for small fish. Sanderlings, willets and rare piping plovers raced each receding wave to find crustaceans and crustacean eggs in the wet sand.
But you don’t have to jog to find birds.
The national seashore has paved bike paths beside the roads and the multiple spits of land that jut into the bay. Here you can find terrestrial mammals and, of course, a great variety of birds in the loblolly pines and sandy tolerant shrubs and trees. I can’t commit that this is my all-time favorite birding area, but it just might be.
Depending on the season, you can see warblers, swallows, raptors, and thrilling to me, sometimes hundreds of great and snowy egrets, tri-colored and little blue herons, and even a few duck species/
If you try a birding trip here in May, smaller birds may dominate. If you only decide to try birding here once, I would recommend the last week or two of September. I wouldn’t steer you wrong; it has varied bird life, wild ponies, white-tailed deer, red foxes and even introduced sika deer. Go for it ….
Test Your Outdoor Knowledge: True or False: Assateague and Chincoteague Island are one and the same.
Last Week’s Trivia Answer: Hawk Mountain records indicated that in the autumn of 1975 only 19 bald eagles flew south past the lookout. What a wonderful rebound the eagles have made.
Nature note: A friend and reader of this column noted the following: Jeff Gilbert of Washington Township sent a video of a whitetail doe with triplet fawns. I have only seen this once. Maybe if one of you have had the same experience, drop me a note. Thanks …
Email Barry Reed at breed71@gmail.com