2012: February Newsletter - Hilton Head Island Audubon Society
Transcription
2012: February Newsletter - Hilton Head Island Audubon Society
E COBON February 2012 No. 325 Newsletter of the Hilton Head Island Audubon Society Audubon Refuge Keepers PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE by Natalie Hefter Thank you to all who attended our January meeting. It was another ‘standing room’ only presentation, which is a great problem to have! A special thank you to Rick Riebesell for his publicity and program coordination. We’ve been seeing the Audubon chapter in the local newspapers more frequently, which has certainly helped our attendance. Our January program was very informative. Thank you, Clem, for sharing some tips and tricks for seeing the best parts of Pinckney Island Wildlife Refuge. This neighboring island is a true gem and someplace that we all should spend some time. Just remember, there are no restroom facilities or water fountains on the island, so prepare accordingly. We recently organized a small website subcommittee to meet to discuss the revamping of the chapter’s website. Progressive Technology has awarded a grant to the chapter to redesign our website. Several members of the board of directors and other volunteers will be meeting with them over the next couple of weeks. We are excited to have this opportunity for upgrades to the site and looking forward to providing valuable information to our visitors, residents and members. A special thank you to Thea Luba for her efforts with Progressive Technology. The chapter submitted an application to the Hilton Head Island Accommodations Tax committee again this year. We have requested design work and fabrication for some exhibitry panels to be placed at various sites associated with the International Flyway Initiative. We will hear what the Town Council has to say at its special meeting in early February. And, last but certainly not least – thank you to everyone who helped with the Christmas Bird Count. The weather was gorgeous – and the results were very good. It is a major undertaking to organize over 150 birders around southern Beaufort county – so, kudos to Charlotte and to Barry for their dedication! FEBRUARY PROGRAM by Rick Riebesell Thursday, February 9, 2012 - 3:00 p.m. in the Sea Island Room at Honey Horn “It's All About the Light Favorite Photographs and the Stories Behind Them” Jim Crotty, Photographer and Visual Artist Jim Crotty will be presenting “It's All About the Light - Favorite Photographs and the Stories Behind Them” at the February 9 meeting of the Hilton Head Island Audubon Society at Honey Horn in the Sea Island Room at 3:00 pm. The meeting is open to the public and is without charge. Crotty owns and manages Picture Ohio, LLC dba Photography by Jim Crotty. He works as a commercial photographer providing assignment editorial, product and architectural photography, as well as portrait photography services for corporate clients and high school seniors and their families. His studio, gallery, and office is at 32 Palmetto Bay Road #3A on Hilton Head Island. Crotty earned the CPP (Certified Professional Photographer) designation through Professional Photographers of America in 2009. He teaches both introductory and advanced photography workshops on nature and landscape photography, digital editing, work flow, and developing artistic vision. Crotty has a passion for the subjects and places that he photographs, mostly the scenic landscapes and natural details of the South Carolina Low Country and in the Hocking Hills of Southeastern Ohio. He has been involved with photography since starting with a 35mm SLR camera and homemade black and white darkroom in the basement of his childhood home in the late 70's. Crotty is a graduate of both the University of Dayton and Westminster College of Salt Lake City. He is a veteran of the United States Marine Corps Reserve. In 2007 one of Crotty's wildlife photographs was chosen for publication in National Wildlife and Nature’s Best magazines and was shown at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum in Washington, D.C. His images have also been published in USA Today and the Smithsonian Magazine. Installations of his fine art nature prints can be viewed at hospitals and medical centers in Dayton, Columbus, Lima and Portsmouth, Ohio. He has a number of awards through juried print competitions with the Professional Photographers of Ohio. His editorial clients include Great Lakes Publishing, the University of Dayton, Housetrends Magazine, Orange Frazer Press, Gray and Co. Publishers, Ohio State Parks and the Dayton/Montgomery County Convention and Visitors Bureau. “It’s All About the Light” Jim Crotty, Photographer and Visual Artist HHI Audubon Board of Directors: President Natalie Hefter Vice President Clem Dietze Treasurer John Faucette Recording Secretary Marianne Currie Corresponding Secretary Clem Dietze Members‑at‑Large Howard Costa Jack Greenshields Nan Lloyd Barry Lowes Bill Nicol Rick Riebesell Joan Shulman Joan Wilson 304-9789 837-2612 785-2899 681-8525 837-2612 842-9447 715-0340 363-2092 837-3537 671-4721 681-6424 842-9246 837-2874 Committee Chairpersons: Adopt-A-Refuge (Pinckney) Clem Dietze 837-2612 Audubon Newhall Preserve Jack Greenshields 715-0340 Bird Walks/Field Trips Kay Hodnett 342-7485 Bird House Construction Jim Currie 681-8525 Bird Seed Sale Ed Nash 681-5725 Christmas Bird Count Charlotte White 837-4597 Education Mary Jane Major 342-5804 Historian Betsy Pehrson 689-2243 Hospitality Thea Luba 785-3214 Legislation Sherman Barker 342-6596 Membership Thea Luba 785-3214 Newsletter Circulation Marianne Currie 681-8525 Newsletter Editor Joan Wilson 837-2874 Programs Rick Riebesell 681-6424 Publicity & Public Relations OPEN Shorebirds/Conservation Howard Costa 842-9447 Sun City Representative Diane Rand 987-1111 Wetlands/Conservation Sally Krebs H: 757-2973 O: 341-4690 Website: www.hiltonheadaudubon.org FEBRUARY FIELD TRIP by Kay Hodnett On Thursday, February 23, we will travel to Huntington Beach State Park, one of the best birding places in South Carolina. Especially in winter Huntington Beach is a great spot to see various rarities. The park is located about 25 miles south of Myrtle Beach off Route 17. The drive from Hilton Head will take about four hours, so this will be an overnight trip. The Hampton Inn at Litchfield/Pawleys Island is holding 15 rooms for us until February 10, at a group rate of $79 plus 10% tax per room. To reserve a room call 843-235-2000 and ask for the Hilton Head Audubon rate. The hotel is only a couple of miles from the state park. Our guide will be Steve Thomas, a local expert birder who has led the Christmas Bird Count in that area for the last fifteen years. Steve is willing to lead our trip as an unpaid volunteer, although each person should plan on contributing five dollars toward a small gift as a token of appreciation. Admission to the park is also five dollars, or $3.25 for a South Carolina senior. We rendezvous with Steve at 1 PM on the 23rd in the store parking lot inside Huntington Beach State Park (see directions below). After people sign up for the trip we will make arrangements for those wishing to carpool. Cars should probably depart Hilton Head at 7 AM to allow time for lunch. Many of us may wind up eating at Quigley's Pint and Plate, at 257 Willbrook Blvd., a block from the hotel. The afternoon of the 23rd we will tour the fresh water segment of the park, where we will see ducks and if we're lucky something unusual, such as a phalarope. We will be there for low tide, when clapper rails may be walking around in the open on the mudflats. The evening of the 23rd those interested will have dinner at Frank's, a highly regarded restaurant four miles from the hotel. At 8 AM on the 24th we will meet Steve again and take the long beach walk (over an hour each way) to the jetty. Along the way lapland longspurs and snow buntings have sometimes been seen. Around the jetty this winter razorbills have been present. We plan to return from the jetty about 2 PM. Those not up the trek to the jetty may want to visit nearby Brookgreen sculpture garden, also a good birding spot. Some may decide to reserve an extra night at the hotel to have additional birding time, and to avoid driving back to Hilton Head in "hell bent for leather" fashion. To sign up for the trip call Kay Hodnett at 843-342-7485 or 843-338-1445 or email her at sallyportk@gmail.com. Please provide your phone number and email address, and indicate whether you plan to reserve a room at the Hampton Inn, whether you plan to drive your own vehicle or prefer to ride with someone else, and if the former whether you can conveniently take riders with you. Directions to Hampton Inn Litchfield/Pawleys Island (150 Willbrook Boulevard, Pawleys Island SC 29585) Take 278 and beyond Sun City turn right onto SC 170. In about 18 miles turn left onto US 21 North. In about 12 miles merge onto US 17 North toward Charleston. Continue on 17 through Charleston and Mt. Pleasant. After being on 17 for about 130 miles turn left onto Willbrook Blvd. The hotel is one-fifth of a mile on the right Directions from Hampton Inn to rendezvous point in Huntington Beach State Park (16148 Ocean Highway, Murrells Inlet SC 29576) Go on Willbrook to US 17 North. Turn right and go a little over a mile. Turn right into the park. Go across the causeway. Turn right at the intersection. The store will be on the right about a quarter mile from the intersection The Ecobon is a monthly publication (September through May) of the Hilton Head Island Audubon Society. Subscription is a benefit of membership. Direct inquiries to P.O. Box 6185, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina 29938 or call one of the above officers or chairpersons. Page 2 Bird Seed Sale Form - On Line February 2012 NOTES FROM THE NEWHALL PRESERVE by Jack Greenshields The Sea Pines Board is planning to meet on January 24 to review and probably approve the agreement with Hilton Head Audubon regarding the creation of a fuel break on the perimeter of the Newhall Preserve. The project and the agreement will be on the Audubon Board meeting agenda for February 2. Sea Pines CSA has a preliminary plan developed and has been in contact with the local Fire Chief to obtain his input. Upon approval of the agreement by both boards, CSA will present the draft project plan to Audubon and all the impacted Sea Pines Property Owners for review and input. Once all the input have been received and any appropriate revisions made, the final plan will be presented to all concerned parties. There is still much to be done regarding moving this project along, but it is believed that the completion of the fuel break and the resultant reduction in fire risk and improvement in wildlife habitat can be achieved prior to the hot summer weather. Thanks to Sandy Hunter for being our December trail monitor and to Rick Riebesell for handling this task in January. Also thanks to Marianne and Jim Currie for their maintenance efforts. They are always ready to handle a fallen tree with their trusty chain saw! We will hopefully plan on a workday at Newhall near the end of February. If anyone has any questions or comments regarding what is happening at the Newhall Preserve, please call or direct to my new e-mail address at jackg308@gmail.com. 2012 BIRD SEED SALE UNDERWAY NOW by Ed Nash Our annual Audubon Chapter & Wild Birds Unlimited fund-raiser started on January 2, and runs thru February 25. This drive is the principal means for supporting our local educational programs. This includes the Audubon Adventures workbooks that we donate to elementary schools each year , coordinated by Mary Jane Major, our Education Chairperson. Please note that we are offering discounted prices during this sales period only, so you can order as many seeds as you may need for the year, and then pick them up as needed throughout the year. And you can be assured of always getting fresh seeds. Please use the 2012 Bird Seed Sale order form that can be printed from our home page computer menu, or pick up a copy at the Wild Birds store in Indigo Park. We wish to thank all Audubon members and friends (you don’t have to be a member to get the discount!) for their strong support. February 2012 RECENT AREA BIRD SIGHTINGS by Jack Colcolough We have had some excellent winter bird sightings in our area and have completed a very successful Christmas Bird Count, finding a record 156 bird species and a total of 61,000+ individual birds (Final report to be published in detail under separate cover). Huge rafts of Scoters and Scaups (30,000+) were sighted in the Atlantic Ocean off the Palmetto Dunes beach to nearly double the total bird count for our CBC this year. Rare birds reported in our area this month were: Snow Bunting and Purple Sandpiper at Tybee Island, Northern Goshawk at Savannah River Spoils Site, Virginia Rail at Pinckney Island, Brown Creeper at Sea Pines Forest Preserve, Red Breasted Nuthatch in Indigo Run and King Rail and Lincoln’s Sparrow at Savannah NWR. Out-of-season birds reported were: Rare Wilson’s and Black-throated Blue Warblers, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, American Redstart, Painted Bunting, Red-eyed Vireo, Reddish Egret and non-ID Hummingbirds (4). Many uncommon species reported were with following highlights: Golden-crowned Kinglet, Redhead, Common Goldeneye, Piping Plover, Baltimore Oriole, Sedge Wren, White-crowned, Nelson’s and Salt Marsh Sparrows, American Bittern, Loggerhead Shrike, Merlin, American Kestrel, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Rusty Blackbird, Hairy Woodpecker, Blue-headed Vireo and Dark-eyed Junco. Winter ducks and some other birds have been slow to arrive so far as well as the out-of-season birds sightings here being unusually high because of our unseasonably warm weather. Many thanks to all reporting their sightings: Fran Baer, Shelia/Roger Johnson, Dianne Faucette, Carol Clemens, Annette Hausman, Natalie Hefter, Dianne Churchill, Robert Rommel, Mary Helen Rosenstein, Richard Shulman, Doris Lindner, Diane Rand, Dottie Bass, Miram Waterhouse, Nan Lloyd, Rita Kernan, Kay Hodnett, Jim Grove, Joanne McMenamin, several visitors and all the CBC birders. To report a rare, out-of-season, uncommon or first-of-theseason sighting, e-mail: BirdingFriends@yahoogroups.com or call 843-432-2661 (must dial 843). Please state your name, bird sighted, date and location of your sighting and any other pertinent information. Please report your significant area bird sightings for our Audubon Society to share. Page 3 LEGISLATIVE REPORT by Sherm Barker Congress and the SC State Legislature resumed their sessions in January. In Columbia, even with shrinking budgets and appropriations the order of the day, the Coastal Conservation League (CCL) is optimistic about some proposed legislation of particular interest to birders. The CCL anticipates that a bill to ban the manufacture, sale and use of phosphate detergents in order to reduce the harmful levels of it in our lakes and rivers will pass early in the session. There is also legislation pending to clean up the few waste water treatment plants responsible for nearly all of South Carolina’s costly sewage spills. Last year the House passed legislation to extend the life of the Conservation Bank until 2023. Consideration of the Conservation Bank which has been instrumental in preserving many scenic areas of the state is pending in the Senate. The bill figures to pass because it has the backing of the Senate President Pro-Tem, Glenn McConnell and House Speaker Bobby Harrell and other prominent legislators in both houses. Let’s hope it not only passes but is backed with sufficient funding so that the state can keep setting aside environmentally significant land that we and the birds can all enjoy. At the national level, Audubon has made passing the RESTORE Act its top legislative priority for this year. The RESTORE Act has bipartisan support to restore the environment and support the economies of Gulf areas damaged by the BP Oil Disaster. Audubon is a part of a large coalition of environmental groups , developers, citizens and businesses that support directing the fines levied under the Clean Water Act back to the Gulf region not only to assist in cleaning up the environment but also to redevelop those areas that were devastated by the massive oil spill and lengthy clean-up. In the next 6 to 8 months while much of the attention of the country will turn to the presidential race, Audubon will have its hands full lobbying what will most likely be a bitterly divided Congress for adequate funding for programs Audubon considers important. The Geotropically Migratory Bird Conservation Act is one such program. Funding is needed to restore the Everglades, Long Island Sound, Chesapeake Bay and other areas. The Farm Bill is the single largest conservation program within the federal government and it will a be high priority of Audubon to insure support for programs that “maximize the conservation benefits of the Farm Bill and restore and protect as much habitation for birds and wildlife as possible.” Offshore drilling in the Arctic has been in the news lately as the federal government has a new Five Year program for oil and gas leasing that threatens to open up new areas off the Alaskan coast for oil drilling. According to the most recent Audubon news alert “If we have learned anything from the Deepwater Horizon disastrous spill, it’s how unprepared the oil industry is to respond to a major ocean spill. The oil industry has never demonstrated the ability to clean up a major oil spill in the Arctic Ocean, and the nearest Coast Guard station is 1000 miles away. An oil spill in the Arctic Ocean could be disastrous for marine mammals such as the polar bear, bowhead whale, walrus, seals and birds like the Spectacled Eider, Stellar Eider and yellow billed Loon.” Please be ready to submit your comments to the appropriate authorities which the national Audubon Office will soon be asking us to do. NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY CHAPTER MEMBERSHIP FORM 1 YR. - $20 Please enroll me as a member of National Audubon. I’ll receive a full year of membership benefits including the award-winning AUDUBON magazine. Name _ ______________________________________________________________ Address______________________________________________________________________ City ___________________________________________State__________ Zip_ ___________ Phone__________________________ Email:___________________________________________ Mail a check payable to NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY Mail to: National Audubon Society, P.O. Box 422246, Palm Coast, FL 32142-6714 Page 4 U50 C9ZU500Z February 2012 If anyone is interested in observing the Great Backyard Bird Count presentation that Marianne Currie gives to the Hilton Head Middle School students on Friday February 10th, please send an email with the time you'd like to attend. February 14th at the School for Creative Arts may be a possibility as well, or Bluffton Middle School! Mary Jane Major, Education Chair Advice for the Eco-minded CFLs, those curled light bulbs, are much more energyefficient than their incandescent counterparts—and last up to 12 times longer. Despite their obvious appeal, they present a quandary: what to do with them after they go dark. With an average of four milligrams of mercury, CFLs often qualify as hazardous waste, just like the unused oil-based paint and motor oil in your garage, so don’t trash them. Recycle them instead. As incandescents are giving way to CFLs— Americans bought 400 million last year—more drop-off sites for burned-out bulbs are popping up. “By recycling your CFLs you will keep the mercury out of the environment,” says Megan Dobransky, resource editor for Earth911.com, which hosts the country’s largest and most accurate recycling directory. Your local waste management agency may take CFLs (enter your zip code at Earth911.com to find out). Retail stores, including Home Depot and Lowe’s, also have recycling programs. The EPA offers several suggestions, too, including ordering pre-labeled containers to mail used bulbs to recycling centers (epa.gov/cfl/cfirecycling.html). Source: Audubon Magazine May-June 2011 It’s almost nesting time again, and that means time to check your bird boxes and see if they need to be replaced, or to put up your first box if you don’t have one yet. We have blue bird boxes for $30, and screech owl boxes for $45. Steel poles for mounting the blue bird boxes are available. Please call the Curries at 681-8525 to place your order. Festival Centre at Indigo Park 45 Pembroke Dr., Suite 130 Hilton Head Island, SC 29926 843-681-4461 wildbirds@hargray.com • • • • Binoculars & Spotting Scopes Field Guides Nature Books Nature Gifts • • • • Custom Seed Blends Bird Feeders & Houses Bird Baths & Fountains Water Gardening Supplies We Bring People And Nature Together® Visit us at www.wbu.com February 2012 Urgent Notice! Bird Seed Sales are very slow Please order now. You save 12 % and support your chapter FIELD TRIP REPORT Hello all. Today, January 20, the Hilton Head Audubon had a wonderful field trip to the Savannah National Wildlife Refuge. Under the great leadership of Jack Colcolough, and with the expertise of several very knowledgeable birders, our trip yielded a bonanza of 61 species (sorry Jack, I originally counted one species twice)! I have starred the most noteworthy sightings included in the full list below. Besides all these birds, some of us also spotted a few alligators, a vole, and a river otter (dead unfortunately). Northern Harrier (female)* Bald Eagle* Merlin* Red-tailed Hawk Mourning Dove Carolina Wren Marsh Wren* Cardinal Red-winged Blackbird Rusty Blackbird* Eastern Towhee Savannah Sparrow* Swamp Sparrow* Song Sparrow American Coot Common Moorhen Northern Mockingbird Blue-headed Vireo* American Redstart (female -- out-of-season)* Ruby-crowned Kinglet Ringed-billed Gull Red-bellied Woodpecker Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Northern Flicker Gray Catbird Common Grackle Pied-billed Gebe Ruddy Duck Green-winged Teal Lesser Scaup* Gadwall* Kildeer Clapper Rail (heard)* Brown Thrasher Carolina Chickadee Loggerhead Shrike* Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Great Egret Snowy Egret Tricolored Heron Double-crested Cormorant Little Blue Heron Great Blue Heron White Ibis Glossy Ibis* Wilson’s Snipe Sandwich Tern* Belted Kingfisher Turkey Vulture Black Vulture American Crow Blue Jay Eastern Phoebe American Robin Tree Swallow Yellow-rumped Warbler Greater Yellowlegs* Northern Shoveler Bufflehead Blue-winged Teal Ring-necked Duck Happy birding ~ Wendy Hansen Page 5 2012 HILTON HEAD AUDUBON BIRD FOOD SALE ***** FROM MONDAY JANUARY 2 THRU SATURDAY FEBRUARY 25, 2012 ***** SAVE 12% WITH NEW DISCOUNT ON BIRD SEED DURING THIS SALE The new 5% price discount plus no 7% sales tax on these purchases add up to 12% Savings!! You can order seed now for pick-up as you need it. Your purchase with this order form will support our Audubon Adventures nature program workbooks in elementary schools all over Beaufort County. PLACE THIS ORDER WITH VIRGINIA AT WILD BIRDS UNLIMITED FOR THE BEST BIRD SEED NEW! CHOICE BLEND-Black & striped sunflower seeds & chips, safflower seeds and shelled peanuts. PREMIUM OIL SUNFLOWER--This is 100 % black sunflower seed. Favorite of cardinals, goldfinch, chickadees, titmice, woodpeckers, mourning doves, and many others. Nearly an all-purpose food! (Needs protection from squirrels) SUNFLOWER CHIPS--No hulls! This is a cleaner feeding option for the above birds. Good for decks & walkways. SUPREME BLEND--Contains 75 % sunflower seed, 15 % safflower seed and 10 % sunflower chips. DELUXE BLEND--Contains 50 % sunflower seed, 35 % millet, and 15 % safflower seed. Great feeder mix. SAFFLOWER SEED--Liked by cardinals, chickadees, nuthatches, towhees, but NOT liked by squirrels and black birds. THISTLE (NIGER)--Preferred by many goldfinches and sparrows (NO hulls). NEW FINCH MIX – Contains niger plus sunflower chips (NO hulls). NO-MESS S0. EAST MIX--Contains sunflower chips & shelled peanuts (NO millet). Ideal to use near steps & walks. CRACKED CORN--Liked by many birds, nearly same as sunflower. (Needs protection from squirrels.) SHELLED PEANUT HEARTS--Liked by finches, juncos, sparrows, titmice and starlings. (Also squirrels). Name:________________________________Phone No.________________ Date_____________ Address_____________________________ Email Address___________________________________ MIXTURE WEIGHTPRICE QUANTITY TOTAL PREMIUM OIL SUNFLOWER 20 lbs. $25.00 _________ $__________ ………………………………………….. 5 lbs……………… 6.25……………_________…………………..__________ SUNFLOWER CHIPS (N0 Hulls) 20 lbs 44.00 _________ ___________ …………………………………………… 5 lbs…………… 11.00………… _________…………………___________ CHOICE BLEND 20 lbs 27.50 _________ ___________ ……………………………………………..5 lbs----------------- 7.00…………..._________......................... ___________ SUPREME BLEND 20 lbs. 25.00 _________ __________ …………………………………………… 5 lbs……………….6.25……………_________…………………..__________ DELUXE BLEND 20 lbs. 22.00 _________ __________ ……………………………………………. 5 lbs………………5.50……………._________…………………. __________ SAFFLOWER SEED 20 lbs. 24.00 _________ __________ ……………………………………………. 5 lbs………………6.00……………._________…………………..__________ THISTLE SEED (Niger) 20 lbs 29.00 _________ __________ …………………………………………. 5 lbs…………….. 7.25……………_________…………………..__________ NEW FINCH MIX (No Hulls) 20 lbs. 32.00 _________ __________ ……………………………………………. 5 lbs………………8.00……………._________…………………..__________ NO-MESS S.E. MIX (No Hulls) 20 lbs. 42.00 _________ __________ ……………………………………………. 5 lbs…………….10.50……………_________…………………..__________ CRACKED CORN 20 lbs 13.50 _________ __________ …………………………………………..5 lbs…………… 3.50……………._________………………….__________ SHELLED PEANUTS 20 lbs 32.00 _________ __________ ……………………………………………. 5 lbs…………… 8.00……………._________…………………..__________ TOTAL $_________ Make check out to: HHI Audubon Society and mail with this form to: Ed Nash, 27 Scarborough Head, HHI, SC 22928 --OR-- Take this form and check to Wild Birds Unlimited in Indigo Park and place your order. BUY NOW & PICK UP FRESH SEED LATER WHENEVER NEEDED **** THE BIRDS AND THE KIDS THANK YOU FOR YOUR PURCHASE AND SUPPORT **** HILTON HEAD ISLAND/ BLUFFTON AUDUBON SOCIETY www.hiltonheadaudubon.org Hilton Head/Blufton Audubon Society was founded in 1974. We have 600 individual and family memberships. 100% of Membership dues to local chapter will support our local programs. Benefits of Membership to our Local Chapter: Monthly Programs & Field Trips Citizen Science, eg. Christmas Bird Count/ Piping Plover Count Newhall Preserve Birding 101 Nature Photography Education Outreach: Audubon Adventures Discounts to local shops For all membership information, contact Thea Luba at (843) 785-3214 or thealuba@roadrunner.com. Hilton Head/Bluffton Audubon Society Chapter Local Membership Form 1 YR. - $15 - Individual 1 YR. - $25 - Family 1 YR. - $10 - Student/Senior Please enroll me as a member of Hilton Head/Bluffton Audubon Society. Name ____________________________________________________________ Family Members______________________________________________________ Address___________________________________________________________ City ____________________________________State______ Zip_____________ Ph./Cell __________________________ Email:____________________________ Mail Check to: Hilton Head/Bluffton Audubon Society • P.O. Box 6185 • Hilton Head Island, SC 29938 Issue #: 325 Hilton Head, South Carolina 29938 P.O. Box 6185 Organization: Frequency: Issue Date: Title: Hilton Head Island Audubon Society Monthly Sept.-May February 2012 Ecobon Hilton Head Island, SC Permit #39 PAID RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED Non Profit Organization U.S. POSTAGE P. O. Box 6185 Hilton Head Island, South Carolina 29938 ECOBON FEBRUARY ~ MARCH 2012 Calendar FEBRUARY Thurs. Feb. 2 Sat. Feb. 4 Thurs. Feb. 9 Thurs. Feb. 23 MARCH Thurs. Mar. 1 Thurs. Mar. 8 Board Meeting . ....................................................... 1:30 pm at the Jarvis Room, Old Coastal Discovery Museum Membership Drive at Wild Birds Unlimited............ All Day Monthly Meeting . ................................................... 3:00 pm at Honey Horn Field Trip to Huntington Beach State Park............ Overnight Board Meeting . ....................................................... 1:30 pm at the Jarvis Room, Old Coastal Discovery Museum Monthly Meeting . ................................................... 3:00 pm at Honey Horn Monthly meetings of the Hilton Head Island Audubon Society are regularly scheduled at 3:00 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month, September through May, at the Sea Island Room at Honey Horn. Members and guests welcome! Page 6 Printed on recycled paper 0 B E Q U E S T S If you wish to honor a family member or friend with a memorial gift, or remember the Audubon Newhall Preserve or the Hilton Head Island Audubon Society in your will, your gift may be in the form of securities, cash, life insurance, real estate, or other property. Contact your own estate planner or our Audubon Chapter at P.O. Box 6185, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina 29938. Sharing your estate with Audubon not only reduces the taxes on your estate but will help protect birds, wildlife, and their habitat in the years to come. February 2012
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