Keep Calm and Bird On: November 2025
“If you don’t look, you don’t see. You have to go and look.”
-Edith Andrews
Scissor-tailed flycatcher, state bird of Oklahoma, very rare on the East Coast.
Photo by Trish Pastuszak.
November is potentially exciting for rarities, so it is not a time to give up on birding, rain or shine. But there is more going on this month, starting right with November 1.
Perhaps the most important of Robert "Dr. Bob” Kennedy's many legacies was the founding of the Nantucket Biodiversity Initiative in 2004. He spearheaded an idea for all Island conservation groups, landowners, and other stakeholders to combine forces. With more than a dozen members including MMA participating, NBI is still going and stronger than ever. Collectively we offer small research grants and local facilitation to attract researchers from off-island institutions to work here.
This year we host our Biennial Nantucket Biodiversity Initiative Research Conference, when results are presented to the public, at the Great Harbor Yacht Club on Saturday, November 1. Starting at 8:30am. with coffee, more than 20 researchers will give presentations or posters of their work from the last two years. Lunch and snacks are included. Topics range from marine science, to birds, to plants, to insects (yes, ticks). The presenters will also be available for informal questions from the public. It is an unparalleled opportunity to find out new information about the Island and what is going on around us. On Sunday, there are field trips in the morning and afternoon. For more information and to register visit the website here.
This weekend also marks the annual Vern Laux Memorial Birding Weekend, when local birders and friends will set out to comb the Island for migrants and rarities. Anyone interested can either bird on their own or join a group. The local Bird Club, free and open to all regardless of experience, will meet as usual to car pool at Nantucket High School's Surfside Rd. parking lot Sunday morning at 8am.
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