Old-timers will tell you that Black-crowned Night Herons were seen and heard pretty often along the South Fork of the Eel back in the day. They recall colonies of the stocky mid-sized heron being a regular feature of river habitat. I remember hearing them at night along the river as far back as the 70’s, and then I realized I wasn’t hearing them anymore when I returned to live along the river again in the 80’s.

A couple years ago I saw one briefly just outside of Garberville at the river and it was a surprise. I wondered if they’d been there all along and I’d just missed them. They roost and nest in colonies, so to just see one made me wonder.

Since that time I’ve been seeing them more frequently, though always one at a time, so I imagined these recent sightings weren’t birds from a steady local population, but rather out-of-towners, just moving through.

This year, however, I have seen more than one several times, and just recently saw a juvenile with an adult. My hope is that they are reestablishing a population around here.

They eat pretty much anything from leeches to turtles, and they rely on proximity to water for foraging and for a protective barrier around the nest. I hope these very local sightings are a sign that they are coming back to not just my neighborhood, but all along the South Fork.
You can read more about Black-crowned Night Herons here:
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Black-crowned_Night_Heron/overview







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