Nature at Lake Helena, part 1: shorebirds to the Arctic
Description
This month’s podcast is a portrait of a wetland in May. Some of you know the wetland: Montana’s Lake Helena, a site where Arctic shorebirds stop over and where the marshes support a great diversity of birds and other animals. But whether you know this place or not, I hope this story will transport you there with the sounds of soras, Virginia rails, marsh wrens, and migrating black-bellied plovers. And I hope it will inspire you to deepen your own connection with wetlands wherever you are.
I’m especially excited about this podcast because it’s about a practice that I love: finding a special place in nature and visiting it again and again over the seasons, learning from it, developing a relationship with it. This summer I’m going to be a podcast mini-series on Lake Helena, doing exactly that—revisiting it as the summer progresses, learning its rhythms. This is the first of that series. I hope you enjoy this podcast, and as always, thanks for being part of this storytelling project!
This story features many recordings I made of natural sounds at Lake Helena. From May 16, 2023, we hear a recording of trumpeter swans (Cygnus buccinator). From May 15, 2024, we hear many birds, including least sandpiper (Calidris minutilla), black-bellied plover (Pluvialis squatarola), sora (Porzana carolina), marsh wren (Cistothorus palustris), red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), American avocet (Recurvirostra americana), ring-billed gull (Larus delawarensis), semipalmated plover (Charadrius semipalmatus), and Virginia rail (Rallus limicola).
You can read the written story and see photos of this place here: https://wildwithnature.com/2024/07/01/lake-helena-shorebirds/
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