Tags: bbc trip
Bibbee Nature Club/BBC Field Trip - March 17, 1996
March 4th, 2008Link: http://www.freelists.org/archives/bristol-birds/03-2008/msg00025.html

BBC and Bibbee Nature Club birding fieldtrip Grayson Highlands State Park, July 22, 1995
The Bristol Bird Club’s "Spring Break 96" came to a close in a church yard at Pipestem, WVA Sunday, March 17, 1996, after BBC retreaters gave a hardy round of applause to Grady and Ann McRae.
The McRaes, from the Bibbee Nature Club of the famous Brooks Bird Club of West Virginia, had finished two days of leading BBC field trips at Blue Stone Lake, Blue Stone National Scenic River area and along the New River National Scenic River.
Bibbee Club President Margaret Hank, of Hinton, joined BBC the first day. To top it all, the McRaes presented each BBC participant a copy of the Stokes' latest book on bird feeding.
The Bibbee Nature Club at Bluefield, in Mercer Co., WV, is dedicated to enjoying natural history near their homes in southeastern West Virginia. They are an active bunch !
The BBC turnout for 1996 had a bigger group than "Spring Break 95" because those who did not go the first year didn't want to miss out two years in a row.
The weekends began when birders talked about students taking a spring break to the beaches each year. Someone suggested BBC go somewhere to the sunny south and take a spring break to go birding.
Then someone came up with a novel idea. BBC should go north for spring break. What a fun idea. It only took minutes before Pipestem Resort State Park was being talked about. Plans for the weekend began to quickly materialize. The park encompassed more than 4,000 acres.
Saturday, March 11, 1995, birders met in a parking lot in Bristol Virginia at 7 a.m. A caravan was quickly organized and the parade rolled north on I-81, heading to the mountains of West Virginia.
Helen and Jack Parris and the McRaes were waiting for BBC. They would meet up with their visitors at the park about 10:30 a.m. and take them birding after lunch.
Sunday's plans called for Park Naturalist Jim Phillips to lead a morning birding trip in the area. Birders would go to Bluestone Dam for waterfowl and then to Sandstone and Hinton. The McRaes would also go.
The group sort of split between having rooms in the big lodge to others who rented cabins.
Saturday night in 1995, BBC had reservations at the nearby Oak Supper Club where birders enjoyed a relaxed evening under the 800-year-old oak and sang happy birthday to Jim Bolinger, the 87-year-old owner and operator, who had greeted them.
The birders also enjoyed the festivities of the Appalachian Weekend celebration being held at the park. Some enjoyed swimming in the park pool. Others took in line dancing and country music.
Some of the fun birds were five Fox Sparrows on the island below Sandstone Falls, American Pipits at Bluestone State Park and 12 Snow Geese flying north along the New River National River between Hinton and Brooks.
BBC enjoyed the fellowship, wonderful natural beauty at Sandstone Falls. Appalachian Weekend with the wild game food tasting, and night owling over crusted snow was special. The group enjoyed one of the funny Lloyd Jones slide shows.
There was "honey tasting" and eating at the Dairy Queen over the river. In 1996 the group enjoyed Tree Swallows along the New River, Common Goldeneye just below Blue Stone Dam and a large flock of Evening Grosbeaks.
At the Dairy Queen in Hinton in 1996, the offering included dinning over the river with bird feeders hanging around the expansive glass windows. Tree Swallows perched within 10 feet during lunch.
In the summer between those two "Spring Breaks" the Bristol Bird Club joined the Bibbee Nature Club at Grayson Highlands State Park on July 22, 1995 and enjoyed cool, high elevation birding near the peak of Virginia's highest mountain -- Mount Rogers.
BBC members taking part in the weekends at Pipestem were Bonita Frazier, Gary Frazier, Tony Decker, Ginny Decker, Louise Tilson, Bill Little, Priscilla Little, Judy Musick, Carolyn Coffey, Wallace Coffey, Janet Coffey, Mary Erwin, Judy Roach, Lloyd Jones, Karen Quesenberry, Marge Olson, Karen Musick, and Larry McDaniel.
from the archives of the Bristol Bird Club.
BBC Field Trip to Outer Banks over New Years - December 31, 1992
March 4th, 2008Link: http://www.freelists.org/archives/bristol-birds/02-2008/msg00104.html

As the New Year's was about to ring in for 1993, the Bristol Bird Club was stretching its wings and fluttering further away for club outings and field trips.
Darkness had fallen over the little community of Manteo on Roanoke Island, NC, hiding just behind the barrier island outer banks of the Atlantic Ocean.
One by one cars arrived from Northeast Tennessee to begin the club's celebration advertised as "New Year's at the Outer Banks." The grand plan called for BBC members to drive to this destination on their own. As soon as everyone arrived it was time to let the fun begin.
Birders established their New Year's Eve base at the Elizabethan Inn just six miles from the northern tip of Bodie Island.
Seven BBC members showed up for the club's much-anticipated New Year's Eve party. Arthur Smith, Rick Knight, Wallace Coffey, Mary Erwin, Mike Evans and Mary Evans greeted one another at the inn. John Shumate was signed up for the trip but cancelled the night before leaving.
A few blocks away the party found dinner at a small seafood restaurant.
Back at the inn, all clocks were temporarily set to a time zone somewhere out in the Atlantic. This moved the New Year's midnight minute much closer so the group could celebrate and still be in bed early enough to get a pre-dawn start on Jan. 1.
Mary Erwin surprised the group with a great soft pack (or wine cask)to help celebrate. Table tops were covered with tins of cookies and the likes. As the clock struck midnight "birder time" the BBC held its first of many future fireworks shows in the parking lot. Everyone was fully expecting either an irate management or the heavy hand of the law. Neither showed up and the popping and cracking and banging went on as long as nerves would allow.
Happy New Year's BBC !
In the twilight of a morning dawn, the group sat on the Atlantic beach waiting for the sun to peak over the horizon. As the flames of sunrise spread warmth over the island, birders bask in the first light of a new year and the first birds of the day were closely focused.
A great birding experience was underway -- three days of birding with the BBC at the Outer Banks !
Rick Knight, who today ranks about 14th on the all time life list numbers of North Carolina birders with somewhere in the neighborhood of 368 species, provided the BBC leadership. In 1993 he had birded there on nearly a dozen trips. Rick knew special places and birds expected.
His plan called for the group to bird Pea Island to include the Oregon Inlet area and then on to Buxton where the party had reservations at the Comfort Inn.
North Pond at the Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge was a sight to behold. Birders were everywhere and the BBC group had to hunt a parking space out on the highway and walk in. Amazingly there were dozens of teenagers and college students birding in groups and carrying scopes. Young people birding in their own small groups was not a familiar scene back home in the mountain.
That first day included thousands of Snow Geese. A Western Kingbird was discovered by Rick. Tundra Swans were abundant and Rick found the Eurasian Wigeon which had been noted on the species report list left nearby in a rack at the refuge station.
Buxton is a neat place at Cape Hatteras on the south tip of Hatteras Island. The group had to double back north to find a restaurant for dinner. Stores and service stations were beginning to close for the remainder of the winter. The BBC group was sneaking just a step ahead and in just in nick of time to find resources.
The next morning (Jan. 2) turned up Black-and-white Warbler and then an Orange-crowned Warbler.
And so it went......
Now, 35 miles off the mainland on the narrow strip of islands which are famous for their wintering waterfowl, BBC pushed on. A nice hike over a long and deep sandy stretch to see birds at the edge of the ocean was some workout.
The Outer Banks provided a list of 84 species despite the fact some of the better and expected species could not be found. The list included Tundra Swans (1500) and Snow Geese (1500 whites) to lead the waterfowl parade which featured many ducks.
Other fun birds along the way included many Red-throated Loons, a thousand cormorants, Northern Gannet, White Ibis, Snow Goose (blue), Merlin, Peregrine, Virginia Rail, American Oystercatcher, Red Knot, Ruddy Turnstone, Gray Catbird and thousands of Yellow-rumped Warblers.
Rick did a masterful job. Not only was he a veteran birder of the area but he had been with the Carolina Bird Club's Nov. 28-29 winter trip to Pea Island and was able to not only scout the birds but also good locations for us to bird as well as lodging and meals.
The North Carolina state operated ferry system provided the continuous access as birders moved further south. This is one of the nation's largest such systems and provides passage over five routes between communities.
BBC birders took the first and free ferry crossing from the cape at Hetaeras to Ocracoke in 45 minutes. With no advanced hotel reservations, the group found lodging and settled in for the night. The hotel was beginning to breakdown its normal operations because the inn would close the next morning. The BBC group ate in the dining room and ordered whatever was left in the kitchen and found themselves grateful.
In the early hours just before dawn, birders encountered a U.S. Marshal searching in the back of a SUV in the parking lot. Bravely, they approached. He looked up with a smile as he found his spotting scope under a birding jacket.
He was from Knoxville and was hunting a few "wanted" life listers during an early vacation. It is not often you see a sweatshirt with U.S Marshall or whatever it says across the back.
Judy Roach and Mary Erwin kept the food flowing in the field. On Jan. 1 they served a great lunch from their van parked at the Coast Guard Station. The last day (Jan. 3)the birds ate breakfast before dawn in the waiting lanes at the Cedar Island Ferry. There were no reservations and you had to get there early. When Rick Knight says early that means EARLY -- before daylight. The ferry left at 7 a.m. The BBC cars were well up front.
Crossing time was two and one-half hours to the mainland at Cedar Point. It was well worth the $10 shelled out per vehicle. Birders gathered on the deck and watched continuously as they rode through open waters that seemed to have more cormorants than whitecaps waves. It was a cold head wind.
What a wonderful trip. Everyone seemed so happy and the group soon departed and headed home over their chosen routes and on their own schedule.
More is to come in 2008. BBC Vice-President John Moyle, who schedules and leads field trips for the club, has another trip to this birding paradise at the Outer Banks set for the weekend of Nov 21-24, 2008. Mark your calendars.
from the archives of the Bristol Bird Club
BBC's "Baby Bald Eagle" Float - Sept 9, 1994
March 4th, 2008Link: http://www.freelists.org/archives/bristol-birds/01-2008/msg00083.html

Sep 9, 1994, living off of BBC's success with having a "Baby Bald Eagle" float in the Bristol Jaycees 4th of July downtown parade, the club had the hit entry in the South Holston Lake boat regatta along with 70 other crafts during the Autum Chase Festival event.
We cut large branches from trees and decorated the boat to make it appear as a "floating" eagle nest. Featured was a costumed replica of an eaglet on board. Other boaters came throughout the evening to show their children the baby eagle and to take photos of the float. The evening was topped off with a roaring fire on the shoreline near the concert and fireworks where we cooked out. Firewood was hauled on the boat to the cookout site along with folding chairs for all.
Aug 1998, BBC won "first place" for its NASCAR-themed float boat entry in the Racefest Regatta. BBC featured a live band aboard a paddle wheel boat at South Holston Lake. The band entertained thousands at the fireworks show. Hundreds of boats pulled together with the BBC boat tied in the middle. Featuring a saxaphone, the band played the National Anthem over the reflections of boat lights and sky-dancing fireworks. For more than an hour the band played requests and popular hits of the past.
Birder John Shumate was the head chef. During the evening members enjoyed a cookout on the boat with sit down dinning at tables.
Birders joined a large flotilia of boats returning to the docks late at night thru the darkness. The procession was led by Tennessee wildlife officers with their patrol boat, complete with flashing blue lights. It was a charming full moon night.
The chief of police of Bristol Tennessee and his wife attended the event as invited and honored guest of BBC and spent the evening on the BBC boat. The chief's wife, Angela, has been typesetting The Migrant, journal of the Tennessee Ornithological Society, for more than 30 years. The Wamplers are casual birders. She is an editorial assistant for the TOS publication.
From the archives of the Bristol Bird Club