November 7, 2020 All Buffleheads Celebration on Roberts Bay

Dear Readers:

Pease note that this post is still under development as we attempt to find the best way to handle links to “outside” sources (A/V clips etc.). Your reactions to this still somewhat experimental post will be helpful; you can enter them into the “comment slot” at the end of the post.

Thank you

Farrell Boyce and Rick Searle

Buffleheads sighted on November 7 , 2020: three drakes and a hen. All photos and videos courtesy of Rick Searle

Notwithstanding the chilly and threatening weather, 35 – 40 people turned up at 10 am, Saturday, November 7 at the Ardwell beach access on Roberts Bay to participate in the annual All Buffleheads Celebration. The usual mid-October date is chosen to be the Saturday closest to the expected date of the arrivals of Buffleheads from their breeding grounds to winter here on the Coast. The deferral of the date of the 2020 All Buffleheads Celebration to November 7 almost guaranteed that we would see Bufflehead ducks on Roberts Bay. Other birds showed up, too: Common Mergansers, American Wigeon, Mallards and more.

While we take pleasure in observing wild birds we also enjoy this event as an affirmation of the community of people who are onside with the efforts of organizations such as the sponsoring Friends of Shoal Harbour to encourage both the enjoyment and the protection of the wild nature close to where we live. This year we had a good representation of community leaders supportive of our activities (see photos and brief video clips below) In particular we thank the Hon. Elizabeth May MP, Adam Olsen MLA (re-elected), Patricia Pearson, North Saanich Councillor and His Worship Clifford McNeil-Smith, Mayor of the Town of Sidney.

Bob Peart, Chair Friends of Shoal Harbour http://youtu.be/gshaAMMx450

The Hon. Elizabeth May MP https://youtu.be/aTy0HE66O2E

:

Adam Olsen MP https://youtu.be/nX6uQ4uGFVM
Patricia Pearson, North Saanich Councilor https://youtu.be/Ncf0l5BZpGw
Mayor Clifford McNeil-Smith, Town of Sidney https://youtu.be/fnVpl__AnP8
Kerry Finley, our eyes on the beach.https://youtu.be/WEis__54A-7U
Jocelyn Gifford, spokesperson for Friends of Roberts Bay https://youtu.be/G-CSgQ1RFJ0
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Jacklyn Barrs and Brian Koval gather a small sample of beach material, part of an integrated sample that will reveal the productivity of this beach as a supplier of forage fish

Brian Koval (Peninsula Streams) and Jacklyn Barrs (World Wildlife Fund) demonstrated how to sample a stretch of beach for the presence of the eggs of forage fish (sand lance,…..). These small fish are important to maintaining populations of water birds and larger fish. Volunteers to support this program are needed. Contact Brian at briankoval1987@gmail.com

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Brian Koval from Peninsula Streams, organizer of the Saanich Peninsula forage fish surveys. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DIirIzUdujKcTk6sB0U6TI6NrYeDOrkH/view?usp=sharing
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Jacklynn Barrs logging forage fish sampling data. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NmF-seJAhVlNk4zG_3kgAdL5bkwGJDys/view?usp=sharing

The suggestion that the Town of Sidney and the District of North Saanich work together to protect the remaining natural habitat in the 1931 Shoal Harbour Migratory Bird Sanctuary was forcefully expressed in the 1981 report by two BC Ministry of the Environment naturalists Susan Abs and Ken Lozowy.  Thirty years later, in 2011, the Friends of Shoal Harbour Society was formed to advocate for intermunicipal coordination of measures, notably bylaws, protecting the remaining (therefore precious) natural habitat of the Shoal Harbour Sanctuary. Nine All Buffleheads Celebrations later, have we made any progress?

Yes, we believe we have. Listed below are some of positive achievements we take pride in.

FOSH’s partnership with Ottawa-based Nature Canada as emissaries of the compelling concept “Naturehood” (nature in your neighbourhood) has been particularly fruitful.  This concept is now firmly rooted here on in the Capital Region.

We continue to organize local outreach activities such as the annual All Buffleheads Celebration in October, the annual Birdwalk and Tea in March, lectures and workshops. We also maintain a website (www.shoalharbour.com)  and linked Facebook page featuring not only FOSH activities and concerns but also those of our companion organizations (as well as sporadic sprinkling of poems and pictures)

Raising money to enable us to develop and support local school programs that encourage students to explore their “naturehoods”. One such program, the online Migratory Bird Resource, has been created by Rick Searle and Starr Munro..

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1eTDDGzSA924WYDo9Ju5o88wqxruQEQ_HtE8_Co0BCoA/edit?usp=sharing

Setting up the public event in February 2020 that has led to the formation of the Saanich Peninsula Environmental Coalition and contributing to the development and promotion of a Bioregional Framework for the Saanich Peninsula .https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AIINgcuylZdu3ekZUVuCjgq8Zbm7nx_K/view?usp=sharing  Recognizing the Saanich Peninsula as a distinct bioregion is a compelling argument for Peninsula-wide bylaws protective of the natural environment, our common naturehood. The Coalition of serious and knowledgeable  people adds purpose to that argument.

And slowly and surely putting the care and management of the Shoal Harbour Migratory Bird Sanctuary on the agenda for the Town of Sidney, the District of North Saanich and the Canadian Wildlife Service.

We believe that progress is echoed in the A/V clips of the people who spoke at the November 7 gathering and by the people who listened attentively on the day itself.

Song written and performed by Farrell Boyce
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bjLE3P9Q5gQq2EevcI74vXIM7SMAC6WT/view?usp=sharing