- May 14, 2008 WTVG : Bird migration boosts local economy (text and video)
- May 12, 2008 WTOL : EcoTrack 11: Magee Marsh a mecca for birds -- and birdwatchers (text and video)
- Friends of Magee Marsh
- Black Swamp Bird Observatory
- Toledo Naturalists message board / RareBird.org
- Recent postings to the Ohio Birds e-mail listserv
- Ohio Ornithological Society
- Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge - next door to Magee Marsh.
- Best Bets for Birding Crane Creek-Magee Marsh - a blog by Kenn Kaufman, an area resident and well-known field guide author
- Christopher Taylor Nature Photography - Crane Creek / Magee Marsh Ohio Collection - May 2008
- Crane Creek State Park Land Transferred to Magee Marsh Wildlife Area - Magee Marsh and Crane Creek are used interchangeably, but in reality, Crane Creek was the beach and Magee Marsh is the boardwalk and marsh areas. The beach and boardwalk shared the same parking lot, but now the beach formerly known as Crane Creek is part of Magee Marsh.
WTVG Story
Birds bring birdwatchers and they bring money. Cars were on hand displaying plates from Maryland, Oregon, Michigan, Pennsylvania and more [Alaska]. That kind of spending is feathering the nest of local business owners.
Giff Beaton drove all the way from Atlanta, despite high gas prices. "Our hotel is in Oregon (Ohio). We are staying here for a week. We are buying gas and eating all our meals here." Jay Bousliman is the owner of the Garden Restaurant. He says, "It's a significant boost to our bottom line. But more than that, we enjoy the bond we form with these folks." Lance Woodworth pilots the Jet Express ferry service.
"We took 170 people across [Lake Erie to Point Pelee, Canada], birdwatchers. I took one step up from novice to intermediate birdwatcher myself." Bill Yuhasz owns the Kokomo Bay restaurant. He told us, "We had a group of birders staying at a local motel and they've been in our restaurant five times. So this really has a big impact."
More than 10,000 people turned out Saturday for International Migratory Bird Day. How much money do they spend? The last economic study of birders here was ten years ago. Even then, they spent several million dollars.Every spring, I meet people from all over the U.S. who stay anywhere from one week to six weeks in northwest Ohio to birdwatch. The first three weeks of May are the peak time for bird numbers, variety, and visitors.
WTOL Story
It's not just about seeing nature for Kaufman. The BSBO is about infecting people with a passion for wildlife.
"We've been doing all this research, we have all this knowledge about migration, about this rich resource, now we want to take it to the kids. We want to share it with them, inspire them, the next generation, to protect all of these valuable resources that we have," she says.