Wilderness Birding Adventures 2013
Pribilof Islands - St. Paul

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2013 Trips
BIRDING FOCUSED
WILDERNESS WILDLIFE & BIRDING
INTERNATIONAL

PRIBILOFSBirding Focused
May 20-22
3 Days – $3,200 from Anchorage

PRIBILOFS PLUS EXTENSIONBirding Focused
May 20-24
$3,900 from Anchorage

The Pribilof Islands of Alaska are a small cluster of volcanic islands located about 250 miles north of the Aleutian Chain and 300 miles west of the Alaska mainland. They are often described as the “Galapagos of the North.” St. Paul is a top North American birdwatching destination in Alaska and not to be missed. The Pribilofs are the only North American location where the Red-legged Kittiwake can be seen reliably. Other birding opportunities include Red-faced Cormorant, Common and Thick-billed Murres, Parakeet, Least and Crested Auklets, Horned and Tufted Puffins. All of the eiders are possible, as well as many Asiatic shorebirds, waders, waterfowl, passerines and raptors. Rare birds are found here each year during spring migration. Highlights of our 2009 trip include Black-tailed Godwit, Common Tern, Common Snipe, Wood Sandpiper, Common Greenshank and Dusky Thrush. Our 2010 highlights include Lesser Sandplover and Bristle-thighed Curlew. And in 2012, we enjoyed seeing a White-tailed Eagle and a Tundra Bean Goose, as well as many other great birds.

St. Paul Island in Alaska’s Bering Sea is home to millions of seabirds nesting in easily observed colonies along the steep shores of the island. The seabird rookeries have to be seen to be believed! Photographers will revel in the up-close opportunities to photograph the seabird colonies and arctic foxes. As if that weren’t enough, the Pribilof Islands also are one of Alaska’s best birding hotspots for rare Asiatic birds, many blown off course during their migration or dropping in just briefly on their way to other breeding and nesting destinations. Below St. Paul’s cliffs, the beaches serve as haul-outs and rookeries for thousands of North Pacific Fur Seals. The Aleut culture of the village of St. Paul and the Russian and American history of the Fur Seal harvest and trade are fascinating cultural highlights of this trip.

This year for the first time we are offering a 3-day trip to the Pribilofs or the option to extend your stay to 5 days. We’ve typically offered a 4-day trip, but the tantalizing spring birding on the island always makes us want to stay longer, and we’re excited about doing that this year! The advantage of traveling to St. Paul on a WBA trip is that you are traveling as part of a group of sharp-eyed birders with a superb birding guide, maximizing our chances of finding rare birds. Some of the time we will be with other visitors on the local tour buses, and other times we will be out on the island on our own. We will use our flexibility as an independent group to make the most of our birding on St. Paul.

Note: Meals are included in the trip price (a change from previous years). Price is based upon double occupancy. During May, single supplements may be available for $65 per night (plus tax). You are responsible for your Anchorage lodging, meals and other Anchorage arrangements. The trip begins and ends at the Anchorage airport. The flight on Day 1 departs Anchorage approximately noon, and the return flight arrives back in Anchorage approximately 8:15 PM.

More details

Combination Suggestion:

Adak + Pribilofs + Birding Anchorage + Gambell I


Parakeet Auklets - Alaska's Bering Sea

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Red-legged Kittiwake - Pribilof Islands, Alaska


Horned Puffin - Alaska's Bering Sea


Tufted Puffin - Alaska's Bering Sea

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Wilderness Birding Adventures
Pribilof Islands
Cumulative Bird Species Observed
Wilderness Birding Adventures
St. Paul Island, Pribilofs – May 21-25, 2012
Bird Species Observed
1. Tundra Bean-Goose
2. Greater White-fronted Goose
3. Emperor Goose
4. Snow Goose
5. Brant
6. Cackling Goose
7. Gadwall
8. Eurasian Wigeon
9. American Wigeon
10. Mallard
11. Northern Shoveler
12. Northern Pintail
13. Green-winged Teal
14. Common Pochard
15. Ring-necked Duck
16. Tufted Duck
17. Greater Scaup
18. Lesser Scaup
19. Steller's Eider
20. King Eider
21. Common Eider
22. Harlequin Duck
23. Surf Scoter
24. White-winged Scoter
25. Black Scoter
26. Long-tailed Duck
27. Bufflehead
28. Common Goldeneye
29. Smew
30. Common Merganser
31. Red-breasted Merganser
32. Pacific Loon
33. Yellow-billed Loon
34. Horned Grebe
35. Red-necked Grebe
36. Northern Fulmar
37. Short-tailed Shearwater
38. Red-faced Cormorant
39. Pelagic Cormorant
40. Bald Eagle
41. White-tailed Eagle
42. Peregrine Falcon
43. Sandhill Crane
44. Pacific Golden-Plover
45. Semipalmated Plover
46. Common Sandpiper
47. Solitary Sandpiper
48. Gray-tailed Tattler
49. Wandering Tattler
50. Greater Yellowlegs
51. Lesser Yellowlegs
52. Common Greenshank
53. Wood Sandpiper
54. Whimbrel
55. Bristle-thighed Curlew
56. Black-tailed Godwit
57. Bar-tailed Godwit
58. Ruddy Turnstone
59. Sanderling
60. Semipalmated Sandpiper
61. Western Sandpiper
62. Least Sandpiper
63. Pectoral Sandpiper
64. Rock Sandpiper
65. Dunlin
66. Ruff
67. Short-billed Dowitcher
68. Long-billed Dowitcher
69. Wilson's Snipe
70. Common Snipe
71. Red-necked Phalarope
72. Red Phalarope
73. Black-legged Kittiwake
74. Red-legged Kittiwake
75. Sabine's Gull
76. Black-headed Gull
77. Mew Gull
78. Herring Gull
79. Slaty-backed Gull
80. Glaucous-winged Gull
81. Glaucous Gull
82. Common Tern
83. Arctic Tern
84. Pomarine Jaeger
85. Parasitic Jaeger
86. Long-tailed Jaeger
87. Common Murre
88. Thick-billed Murre
89. Black Guillemot
90. Pigeon Guillemot
91. Ancient Murrelet
92. Parakeet Auklet
93. Least Auklet
94. Crested Auklet
95. Rhinoceros Auklet
96. Horned Puffin
97. Tufted Puffin
98. Snowy Owl
99. Short-eared Owl
100. Common Raven
101. Tree Swallow
102. Bank Swallow
103. Barn Swallow
104. Cliff Swallow
105. Pacific Wren
106. Bluethroat
107. Northern Wheatear
108. Hermit Thrush
109. Dusky Thrush
110. Eastern Yellow Wagtail
111. Gray Wagtail
112. American Pipit
113. Lapland Longspur
114. Snow Bunting
115. McKay's Bunting
116. Savannah Sparrow
117. Dark-eyed Junco
118. Brambling
119. Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch
120. Common Redpoll
121. Hoary Redpoll
122. Hawfinch

1. Tundra Bean-Goose
2. Greater White-fronted Goose
3. Emperor Goose
4. Snow Goose
5. Cackling Goose
6. Eurasian Wigeon
7. American Wigeon
8. Mallard
9. Northern Shoveler
10. Northern Pintail
11. Green-winged Teal
12. Greater Scaup
13. Lesser Scaup
14. King Eider
15. Harlequin Duck
16. White-winged Scoter
17. Black Scoter
18. Long-tailed Duck
19. Bufflehead
20. Common Goldeneye
21. Common Merganser
22. Pacific Loon
23. Yellow-billed Loon
24. Horned Grebe
25. Red-necked Grebe
26. Northern Fulmar
27. Red-faced Cormorant
28. Pelagic Cormorant
29. White-tailed Eagle
30. Pacific Golden-Plover
31. Semipalmated Plover
32. Solitary Sandpiper
33. Wandering Tattler
34. Greater Yellowlegs
35. Lesser Yellowlegs
36. Bar-tailed Godwit
37. Ruddy Turnstone
38. Sanderling
39. Western Sandpiper
40. Least Sandpiper
41. Pectoral Sandpiper
42. Rock Sandpiper
43. Long-billed Dowitcher
44. Red-necked Phalarope
45. Red Phalarope
46. Black-legged Kittiwake
47. Red-legged Kittiwake
48. Black-headed Gull
49. Herring Gull
50. Glaucous-winged Gull
51. Glaucous Gull
52. Parasitic Jaeger
53. Long-tailed Jaeger
54. Common Murre
55. Thick-billed Murre
56. Black Guillemot
57. Pigeon Guillemot
58. Parakeet Auklet
59. Least Auklet
60. Crested Auklet
61. Horned Puffin
62. Tufted Puffin
63. Short-eared Owl
64. Tree Swallow
65. Cliff Swallow
66. Lapland Longspur
67. Snow Bunting
68. Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch
69. Hoary Redpoll
70. Hawfinch

Introduction:  St. Paul Island is 14 miles long by eight miles wide, with 45 miles of shoreline. It’s 775 air miles west and slightly south of Anchorage, a 3-hour flight in a twin engine plane.  The island is volcanic basalt with steep cliffs rising out of the Bering Sea, the surface of the island mostly flat and rolling. The maritime climate is cool, wet and windy year round. Temperatures in May range between an average high of 40 F. and an average low of 32.  Fog is not uncommon in the summer.

Fauna: In late May, males of the island’s Northern Fur Seal population begin to arrive on the beaches in preparation for the June arrival of the females.  A complex social system dictates each male’s position on the beach and his opportunities to breed with the females.  Breeding and pupping both occur on the island during the summer season, and the beaches are off limits during the summer to prevent disturbance to these annual land-based cycles. Most of the year, the animals live at sea. In addition to the fur seals, the island is also surrounded by a rich abundance of other marine mammals, such as Harbor Seals, Steller Sea Lions, Walrus, Gray Whales and Killer Whales, and fish and shellfish.  Terrestrial mammals include Arctic Fox and a large herd of Reindeer first introduced to the island in 1911 as a commercial venture.  And of course, the island is full of birds. Nearly 250 species of bird have been documented on St. Paul.  The sea cliffs are packed in the spring and summer with colonies of seabirds, including the Red-legged Kittiwake. The Pribilofs are the only place in North America to reliably see this species.  Excellent access to the sea cliffs provide photographers and birders with unsurpassed opportunities to photograph Tufted and Horned Puffins, Common and Thick-billed Murres, Black-legged and Red-legged Kittiwakes, and Parakeet, Least and Crested Auklets.  During our May visit, we will hope to see some of the rare Asiatic birds that show up each spring during migration.  The natural history of the island is phenomenal. 

Human History:  The cultural history of the island is equally fascinating. Aleuts were the first human occupants of the Pribilof Islands.  In the 1780s, Russians laid claim to Alaska in their eastward expansion in pursuit of seal and sea otter furs.  Russian fur traders “discovered” St. Paul and St. George Island in 1786.  The Russian-American Company colonized these two islands and enslaved Aleuts to harvest the seals and process the furs. When the United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867, the U.S. government continued to operate the Pribilof Islands as colonies for the economic enterprise of harvesting furs and maintained the Aleut inhabitants in indentured service for that purpose.  The U.S. government issued a 20-year lease to the Alaska Commercial Company in 1870 to administer the islands. The company provided food, housing and medical care to the Aleuts in exchange for the seal harvest. The second 20-year lease was awarded to the Northern Commercial Company in 1890, but overharvesting during that period resulted in poverty on the island. Then the 1910 Fur Seal Act ended private leasing, placing the people and seals under the control of the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries.  Conditions for the Aleuts were poor.  During World War II, as combat with Japan moved into the outer Aleutian Islands, these wards of the government were evacuated from the Pribilofs and placed in an abandoned cannery in Southeast Alaska.  In the 1980s, Pribilof Island Aleuts received monetary compensation for the unfair and unjust treatment they were subject to under federal administration between 1870 and 1946. It was not until 1985 that the government ceased to operate the commercial fur seal harvest and oversee all occupants of the islands. The Aleut residents continue to harvest up to 1,645 fur seals annually for subsistence purposes.  The locals also depend upon fish, crab and marine invertebrates from the surrounding waters, reindeer, plants and berries for subsistence food. 

The Community Today St. Paul in 2002 had a population of 522, 87 percent of whom were Native.  It is the largest Aleut community in the world.  The community sits on a peninsula at the south end of the island and has 167 homes  and a port used by the commercial central Bering Sea fishing fleet, two seafood processing plants, a National Marine Fisheries facility, an historic Russian Orthodox church (the primary church in the community), a hotel, as well as other infrastructure.  Tourism brings about 700 visitors to the island each spring and summer. The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971 resulted in formation of the Tanadgusix Corporation (TDX) on St. Paul, owned by the Aleut resident.  TDX owns most of the island and we will be guests of the Native corporation. 

Our Time on St. Paul 
FlightsWe will fly from Anchorage to St. Paul Island around 12:00 noon and we will be checking in for the flight one hour ahead. You will be allowed to check two bags and one hand-carry item. Assume that carry-on items must fit under the seat ahead of you as some of the planes have no overhead bins. Items such as tripods must be gate or airplane checked if they do not fit under the seat.  A sandwich will be provided during the flight.  The flight usually stops in Dillingham or King Salmon, arriving in St. Paul around 4:00 p.m.  Dress for wet, windy weather upon arrival; you will walk off the plane right onto the tarmac. We depart St. Paul at 4:30 PM, arriving in Anchorage around 7:30 PM. The trip ends upon our return to Anchorage.

Hotel:  Our accommodations will be in the new King Eider Hotel. All rooms fit two people and you can expect to be sharing a room.  Shared bathrooms are located down the hall. During May, single supplements may be available for $65 per night (plus tax). Handicapped facilities are extremely limited on the island and the King Eider Hotel is not handicapped accessible.  

Meals:  Meals are taken at the local cannery and are included in the trip cost.  We will bring some snacks; you may wish to bring some of your own as well. The hotel has a microwave where you could prepare an instant soup or similar alternative to the restaurant buffet. Snacks can also be purchased at the store. Mealtimes at the restaurant are set at 7-8 a.m., noon to 1, and 5:30-7 pm. 

Activities: The advantage of traveling to St. Paul on a WBA trip is that you are traveling as  part of a group of sharp-eyed birders with a superb birding guide, maximizing our chances of finding rare birds.  Some of the time we will be with other visitors on the local tour buses, and other times we will be out on the island on our own.  As participants in the TDX tourism program, we will travel around the island on their 22-passenger, bathroom-equipped buses to visit the various points of natural and cultural interest, and to bird extensively.  This is how we will spend most of our time on the island. We will also be able to take walks from various points around the island.  Some of the walks are short and easy. Others may be longer and harder; for example, one walk is 4 miles on a jeep trail along bluffs, while another is 3 miles to Kittiwake Lake and the Lava Flows over rough terrain. Additionally, if the group is interested we will have the opportunity to enjoy a Native dance performance on the 2nd day and to tour the Russian Orthodox Church.

Sources: State of Alaska Dept. of Community and Economic Development; Tanadgusix Corporation. Get ready to visit and bird one of the most fascinating destinations in North America! 

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