Shorebird Watching at a Lake Erie Harbor
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Gail’s TWITTER
Shorebird Watching at a Lake Erie Harbor
NOV 4 waterfowl watching at Lake Flavia…
Numbers & species of waterfowl were greater than my last visit. Weather couldn’t have been better.. high temp 70F with light winds and bright sunshine all day. Wispy white clouds in a blue sky.
Only deterent was a light haze that obscured ‘scoping and heat jigglies at the higher magnifications.
WATERFOWL SEEN:
Canada Geese, hundreds of Common mergansers, Hooded mergansers, Bufflehead ducks, Ring-necked ducks, Pied-billed Grebes, Greater Scaup, Ring-billed Gulls
Oddly enough, no raptors seen today
OFF the WATER:
Driving across the gravel parking lot, near spots where vegetation was visible, I pulled over after noticing birds foraging. Turned out to be 4 Snow Buntings in winter plumage
The Penn Dixie fossil site, at a former shale quarry in Hamburg, revealed plans to build a spacious visitors center — providing that it can dig up the $1.8 million construction cost.
“There’ll be no rock left unturned when we get done,” said Jerold C. Bastedo, executive director of the Penn Dixie Paleontological and Outdoor Education Center.
Bastedo displayed architects’ drawings for the 10,600-square-foot building to the Hamburg Town Board on Monday and outlined plans for construction.
Fossil hunters from around the country, and the world, have put the former quarry on the map as a visitor hot-spot, he said. The 54-acre site drew 78,000 last year, coming from 36 states and six countries.
The nonprofit group that operates the natural history site plans to formally announce the building project at a fundraiser on Nov. 6. The site currently lacks a building to house teaching programs and accommodate visitors.
“It’s an ambitious project, but it’s moving forward,” Bastedo said. In addition to soliciting corporate and public sector donors, the group will offer to put members’ names on the building for donations of $1,000 each, he said.
The fossil center near Big Tree and Bay View roads began 15 years ago — or 380 million years ago, depending on how you look at it.
The Hamburg Natural History Society was formed in 1993 to preserve the paleontological find, unearthed in the 1960s when the Penn Dixie Cement Co. removed about 10 feet of shale for use as an aggregate in cement.
The exposed shale, once the muddy bottom of the sea near the equator of the ancient earth, holds a rich vein of Devonian- era fossils — the remains of Trilobites and other long-extinct sea life.
At the Penn Dixie center, visitors can pay $6 to walk the 3,000 feet of nature trails and dig their own fossils at one end of the site. Visitors can keep their finds, contrary to the practice at most fossil sites. The center operates programs in paleontology — the study of prehistoric life — and in ornithology and astronomy, with the help of telescopes shielded from city lights by the ring of trees that surround the site.
The Natural History Society envisions a visitor center with a meeting room for up to 120 people, a seismograph station to monitor movements in the earth’s crust, plus restrooms and other amenities.
The Town of Hamburg has dropped plans for a scenic overlook at the site of the former Foit’s Restaurant on Lake Shore Road.
Instead, the Town Board is seeking to shift $250,000 in state funding to fix up its Seaway Trail Visitors Center, about two miles to the south.
At its meeting Monday, the board approved a resolution asking the state to shift the funds targeted for the overlook under the Community Capital Assistance Program in 2004.
“There’s risk in moving funds like this to another project,” Councilman Tom Quatroche said. The state could deny the switch and cancel the funding.
But “we need the funds more at the Seaway Trail Visitors Center,” he said.
With no sale agreement in place with the owner of the Foit’s property, plans for the overlook have stalled, Quatroche said.
If the property owner doesn’t clear the site of overgrowth and fix a “chewed-up parking lot,” the town will have the work done and bill the owner, he said. The restaurant building at the site near Camp Road was demolished in 2007.
The visitors center, on Lake Shore near Cloverbank, would get additional parking, increased handicap access, improved site drainage and general building repairs.
A volunteer group that operates the center is seeking a memorandum of understanding with the town to formalize the arrangement and move the center toward financial self-sufficiency.
The group could perform fundraising and user events to cover such operating costs as electricity and heat, said William P. McKeever, board member of the Hamburg center and of the Seaway Trail organization.
The center, a former Wanakah Water Co. building, was completed in 2006 with $670,000 in state and town funds.
With 35 volunteers, the nonprofit group could ramp up the use of the building, particularly in the tourism off-season, by organizing educational events and a monthly speaker series, McKeever said.
“The price tag is right,” Councilwoman Joan Kesner said. “We’re not paying you, you’re doing it out of the love of your heart.” The Town Board withheld action in order to review the proposed memorandum of understanding.
The Great Lakes Seaway Trail is a 454-mile long scenic byway along lakes Erie and Ontario and the Niagara and St. Lawrence rivers.

LONG-NECKED SEED BUG
FAMILY: Rhyparochromidae | GENUS and SPECIES: Myodocha serripes
The family Rhyparochromidae contains the only “true” seed bugs. The most well-known species in Rhyparochromidae is the Long-Necked Seed Bug, Myodocha serripes.
This distinctive seed bug is very common in gardens, lawns, and agricultural habitats in Kentucky. It is about 3/8″ long.
Order: Hemiptera (he-MIP-ter-a) (Info)
Family: Rhyparochromidae
Genus: Myodocha
Species: annulicornis
altricial but alert and active within minutes of hatching. Shiny black skin, no down.