Monday, May 20, 2013

Sylvan Heights Bird Park, Scotland Neck NC

Late last week we took a field trip out to Sylvan Heights Bird Park. The name of this park has crossed my computer once or twice, but we had never had time to go. The opportunity presented itself on a semi-free Thursday, so I signed the kids up for a bird talk with some other homeschoolers and we drove the two hours east from Raleigh.


This park is really a motley collection of birds, mostly water fowl, from four continents. Many of them are rescues or birds kept for breeding and conservation purposes.

It was definitely worth the trip. I will say that I did have my misgivings. As we drove past acres of farm fields and the little bitty town of Scotland Neck, we really seemed to be in the middle of nowhere. Driving down a small entrance road and the small entrance sign, I wondered what we were in for.

We went in to a fairly nice welcoming building with the obligatory gift shop and bathrooms, and immediately, the kids were treated to a wonderful sight. An incubator stood in the entrance hall and inside that incubator, three ducklings were in the process of hatching out of their eggs that very moment.




The kids were pulled away from this, very reluctantly I might add, for a one hour class on bird biology and behavior. This class was to be for middle-schoolers and above, but the teacher was welcoming and willing to let the younger members of the group take part. She talked about eggs and specific features of them and why they are the way they are. She talked about feather types and structure. She talked about bird bones and flight and adaptations. It was a fairly good overview.
















We got to see and gently touch a few birds after this. The first was a White-Faced Whistling Duck. Isn't she cute? Most of the ducks she showed us were hand-raised... so very tame.



This one was a Black-Bellied Whistling Duck from South America. She was a little more nervous.


Third was an Andean Goose, from the Andes, of course. 


I don't have a good picture of the last one, but charmingly, the bird felt most comfortable with it's wings spread out in a hug around the teacher. It was a Magpie Goose from Australia.

After the class we toured the grounds. The birds are in enclosures organized by continent, and I could have spent more time picking the very interesting birds out of the groups, but I think the kids enjoyed the "Landing Zone" the best. This was an enclosure with probably hundreds of parakeets. You can purchase little honey and nut sticks and the birds will very aggressively go after them. You have to be careful where you step, because they seem to also like to pull on people's shoe laces. We spent quite a bit of time in here. They were very amusing to say the least. 

You can also purchase, for a dollar, a small bag of pellets to feed to the flamingos. This was pretty neat, though it was also very clear that picking pellets out of people's hands was a very unnatural thing for a flamingo to do. I do hope those birds don't spend all of their time in that tiny enclosure.








 Some other random sights were some honey bees in the bathroom house on the trail. You open a door to plastic window showing the inside of the entire colony.




There is a beaver dam and a blind for bird viewing near it, though we didn't see anything that day. 

There was also a really nice koi pond with some enormous fish in it.


We actually ran out of time and didn't get to see everything, but I think the trip out there was worth it, and I very much look forward to taking some family members out there the next time they are in town.


 lapwing














Hawaiian Nene Goose






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