Climate change. Declining biodiversity. Storm runoff. The urban heat island effect. Nature deficit. The environmental challenges facing us today can seem overwhelming. Where to start? Perhaps just outside the classroom door.
Rare Bird Alert - July 19, 2019
IN MEMORIAM: Hanna Hayman
On July 15, 2013, our beloved volunteer, Hanna Hayman passed away.
For nearly 10 years, Hanna volunteered weekly at Audubon House in Plummer Park, the headquarters and bookstore of Los Angeles Audubon Society. Hanna assisted the staff and other volunteers by greeting visitors to Audubon House, proofreading submissions to the WESTERN TANAGER and helping with mailings to our membership.
Rare Bird Alert - July 12, 2019
Los Angeles River Announcement
You're Invited!
Join us to learn more about the Upper Los Angeles River planning effort!
Learn about the work completed to date, review a summary of the input you provided during the informational meetings, and get an overview of the concepts to be considered in the Revitalization Plan. We want to hear your thoughts about how these concepts contribute to the neighborhoods near the tributaries.
Rare Bird Alert - June 28, 2019
INTERPRETING NATURE: Baldwin Hills Greenhouse Program Research Projects, 2018-2019 school year
Green Feather Award at LitFest Pasadena
Owls in the Southern Sierra Nevada
Birds of the Season — June 2019
March and April in southern California encompass a great deal of change in the avian world. Passerine migration transforms from a trickle to a flood, wintering birds are leaving on their various schedules and breeding activity is pervasive.
From the first early arriving passerines to the waves of birds encountered in April and May, spring migration is a remarkable event to witness. While the quality and quantity of birds can vary from day to day—often due to factors we’ve yet to understand—this is a fantastic time to take to the field.
Shorebirds can briefly be seen in their breeding colors. Loons and scoters are streaming northward along the coast. The weather is generally pleasant and the landscape is lush. It could well be argued that this time of year offers more for birders than any other.
As usual, given the diversity of habitats in Los Angeles County, the variety of birds present in March and April was substantial. Wintering vagrants gradually began to disappear as spring progressed, and there were a few new discoveries to keep things interesting. Typically for this time of year, reports of new vagrants were comparatively scarce.




