The Great Salt Lake’s wetlands are a haven for waterfowl—at least for now
| Photo by Emma Penrod Utah’s Farmington Bay: Mecca for Birds and the Birders Who Love Them It's early autumn and the reeds surrounding me are mostly dead, but they still sound very much alive, filled with the rush of the breeze, creaking insects, and the shy songs of birds. My guide, long-time Utah birdwatcher and Audubon Council president John Bellmon, tells me that my keen ear, which hears elusive bird calls all around us, is a gift. Many people bird by ear, he says—you learn to identify the bird songs then follow the sound to its source for a glimpse of a new feathered friend to add to your "life list." I am not so easily convinced I have an aptitude for the hobby given my difficulty in actually locating birds of any note. I detect some movement in the reeds across a pond, prompting Bellmon to set up his sighting scope and peer inside. Mallard ducks, he declares. They're the most common type of duck in Utah—nothing to write home about. Not that home, for me, is very far.
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