Jekyll Island - Shorebirding: the Sequel
Saturday March 6 was our last day on Jekyll Island and I was still a few birds shy of 200 on my life list. For me to obtain this milestone on our trip, we decided to visit one remaining locale where it was plausible to add some additional species: the Jekyll Island causeway. This approximately six mile stretch of Georgia State Route 520 is an estuarine habitat providing mud flats for shorebirds to congregate and feed. A few shorebirds that I had not seen were the Short-Billed Dowitcher, the Western and Least Sandpipers, and the Black-Bellied and Semipalmated Plovers. Shorebirds of the Jekyll Island Causeway The best viewpoints of the causeway are either at the visitor center for Jekyll Island (in which you can climb up an observation tower to overlook the estuary) or you have to park on the side of the causeway and view birds in mudflats from the road shoulder (see map). To best view birds at these locations, a spotting scope is a necessity. For those who are not birders, a spo...