Churchill: Jun 12—18, 2011

Register NowTour Details

Price: $3,450
includes internal flights
Departs: Winnipeg
Tour Limit: 8
Operations Manager: Margaret Anderson
Download Itinerary: PDF (555.1 KB)

Tour Leaders

Jeri-langham

Jeri Langham

Jeri M. Langham has a Ph.D. in plant ecology from Washington State University, and afte...


More Information

Register for this Tour

You can register for this tour by phone (800-328-VENT or 512-328-5221) or by downloading a printable file of our full tour registration form. Signed and completed forms can be faxed to 512-328-2919 or mailed to our office.

Smith's Longspur

Smith's Longspur— Photo: John H. Boyd

A memorable birding experience at Canada's famous Arctic seaport on Hudson Bay at the edge of the tundra. We will spend many hours standing on the ancient rocks of Cape Merry at the mouth of the Churchill River where the changing tides bring huge ice floes in and out, Parasitic Jaegers chase a constantly changing feeding frenzy of gulls and Arctic Terns, belugas blow loudly as they surface, and hundreds of loons, eiders, mergansers, scoters, and other birds feed, fly by, or drift with the tide waters.

This small seaport is situated on the shores of Hudson Bay where the mouth of the Churchill River attracts Pacific and Red-throated loons, Arctic Tern, Common Eider, Long-tailed Duck, and all three scoters. June in Churchill means melting pack ice breaking adrift, fitful with the promise of far-wandering Arctic birds, seals, and beluga whales. It also means nesting shorebirds in full plumage and spectacular display.

Churchill has long been famous among naturalists as the site of the most easily accessible tundra on this continent. For several decades it was famous as simply the place to find Ross's Gull. However, this highly sought gull has not been seen in the last four years, while sightings of Little Gull have increased.

Both the tree line and the permafrost line run through Churchill, home to such birds as Willow Ptarmigan, American Golden-Plover, Stilt Sandpiper, Hudsonian Godwit, Parasitic Jaeger, Little Gull, Smith's Longspur, and both species of redpolls. Between the tundra and the boreal forest lies the taiga, where several species live at the limit of their ranges: Spruce Grouse, Northern Hawk Owl, Boreal Chickadee, Gray-cheeked Thrush, Bohemian Waxwing, Northern Shrike, Harris's Sparrow, and Pine Grosbeak. The coastal areas of Hudson Bay host an assortment of migrants. A lingering Lapland Longspur and Snow Bunting are sometimes joined by a stray King Eider, Harlequin Duck, Red Phalarope, or Sabine's Gull.

Along with some of the finest scenery of the far north, the combination of our Churchill tour with our Southern Manitoba tour offers participants an outstanding natural history experience and a remarkable cross section of the wide variety of habitats in central Canada. Photographic opportunities abound. Those combining both tours should see some 225 species of birds, including several rarities and specialties, plus an impressive number of mammals. There will be ample opportunity to study bird song and observe bird behavior. Without question, this combination provides one of the most popular experiences in VENT's North American repertoire.

Turboprop plane flight from Winnipeg to Churchill and back; the small bus comfortably holds eight participants, each with a window seat; optional early morning outing before our 7 a.m. breakfast; an optional after-dinner outing most nights; birding both along roadsides and on relatively short hikes; all nights at Churchill at the comfortable Tundra Inn; typically cold and windy, but if winds are from the south, can be hot; some biting insects at times.