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Breeding birds abounding: Malibu Creek State Park, 13 June 2026

July 14, 2026

[Written by Jean Garrett; Photos by Elyse Jankowski; Chuck Almdale, Ed.]

A branchful of young Northern Rough-winged Swallows (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

We had a good crowd of 10 people and immediately we started looking at the Cliff Swallow nests all around the lavatory in the parking lot. It is so nice to be 3 feet away from swallows. Only one swallow had a perfect mud nest while the others seemed to have partial ones or maybe they just had not yet finished the job. 

Young male Western Bluebird (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

The meadow near the second parking lot always has good birds and pulled through again with a Red-winged Blackbird, Western Bluebirds, Lazuli Buntings, Ash-throated Flycatcher and a flock of 40 Rock Pigeons.

Lazuli Bunting male (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

The big old Valley Oak across from the meadow still has the Acorn Woodpeckers circling around giving their ruckus cries. Looking way into the background of the meadow was a Cooper’s  Hawk and then we heard the sing-song of a grosbeak which turned out to be a Blue Grosbeak. 

Blue Grosbeak male (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

A Chat was teasing us with his song just across from the bathrooms in the impossibly dense creekside forest, impossible for finding the bird. The area around the parking lot also gave us a White-breasted Nuthatch and an Oak Titmouse.  Overhead was a sky full of Turkey Vultures, more than I have ever seen before at Malibu Creek. 

Bullock’s Oriole female (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

As we headed toward the bridge, there were Bullocks Orioles, Juncos (they are becoming such a successful species), and then there was a quark sound and a few minutes later someone found the Phainopepla. 

Bullock’s Oriole male (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)
Nuttall’s Woodpecker male (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

Yellow Warblers were becoming common but the sounds of that no-see-um Chat kept haunting us.  A Nuttall’s Woodpecker was seen climbing around the trunk of one of the conifers along with a Cassin’s Kingbird and the requisite Black Phoebe and Scrub Jay. 

Cassin’s Kingbird (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

As we moved toward the river, there were several Cliff Swallows busy picking up mud for their nests. 

Cliff Swallows gathering mud to build nests under the bathroom eaves and the bridge (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)
Snowy Egret apparently suspended mid-air by two Double-crested Cormorants, one drying its wings (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

At the river, there were  Snowy & Great Egrets, Canada Geese with 3 goslings, Killdeer, Double Crested Cormorant, and Green Heron. We ended with a Lessor Goldfinch. The weather was perfect with a slight breeze keeping the area very pleasant.   

Canada Geese & 2 goslings (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

Green Heron creekside (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

Western Tiger Swallowtail Papilio rutulus rutulus & bee (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

We walked the creekside road through the oaks to the bridge and park headquarters. The HQ was closed, so we decided to return via the southern road and across the recently hand-built path of stones across the creek where the low bridge used to be before a heavy rain and creek flow washed it away. With steady walking it was only 15 minutes HQ to parking lot, something to remember if you’re in a hurry.

Western Fence Lizard Sceloporus occidentalis showing blue underside (Elyse Jankowski 6-13-26)

In the checklist below, H = heard only, X = present but number not counted

Malibu CreekStatePark 
Field Trips6/13/2611/8/256/14/255/11/2411/12/1111/13/10
Canada Goose2+3gosl     
American Wigeon 2    
Mallard20141052015
Ring-necked Duck   1
Bufflehead   2
California Quail  20   
Pied-billed Grebe   1
Band-tailed Pigeon 6468012
Mourning Dove31019522
Feral Pigeon3060    
White-throated Swift5 520
Black-chinned Hummer  2   
Anna’s Hummingbird115312
Allen’s Hummingbird1 121
Hummingbird sp. 1    
American Coot101 2015
Killdeer1 1   
Double-crested Cormorant2 11
Snowy Egret3 6   
Green Heron1 2   
Great Egret2 1   
Great Blue Heron112211
Turkey Vulture4031010
White-tailed Kite   22
Cooper’s Hawk12 21
Northern Harrier 1    
Red-shouldered Hawk 24231
Red-tailed Hawk144643
Belted Kingfisher 1 1
Red-naped Sapsucker   1
Red-breasted Sapsucker 1 21
Acorn Woodpecker25162015815
Downy Woodpecker 1 12
Nuttall’s Woodpecker1H510441
Northern Flicker 3 152
American Kestrel221241
Nanday Parakeet 4118H
Cassin’s Kingbird15   2
Western Wood-Pewee  X   
Western Flycatcher1 34  
Black Phoebe424266
Say’s Phoebe 1 32
Ash-throated Flycatcher3 95
Cassin’s Kingbird  42
Hutton’s Vireo   21
Loggerhead Shrike   21
California Scrub-Jay51012626
American Crow20306103030
Common Raven 664810
Oak Titmouse11022102012
Tree Swallow  X   
Violet-green Swallow10 61
Northern Rough-winged Swallow6 205
Barn Swallow  3   
Cliff Swallow30 1020
Bushtit 850101515
Wrentit 48231
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 8 43
White-breasted Nuthatch119366
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  73
Canyon Wren  31
No. House Wren2H3111213
Bewick’s Wren  122
California Thrasher  2   
Western Bluebird2582201
Hermit Thrush 4    
American Robin   1
Phainopepla1 412
House Finch1681010304
Purple Finch 2 62
Pine Siskin   5
Lesser Goldfinch4610101
Lark Sparrow   20
Dark-eyed Junco88483012
White-crowned Sparrow 24 4020
Golden-crowned Sparrow 2    
White-throated Sparrow 1    
Song Sparrow315641
California Towhee4889124
Spotted Towhee4+4H26884
Yellow-breasted Chat1H 21
Hooded Oriole  2   
Bullock’s Oriole5 4   
Red-winged Blackbird6 101
Brown-headed Cowbird  43
Orange-crowned Warbler 185
Common Yellowthroat 210621
Yellow Warbler20H 812
Yellow-rumped Warbler 8X4040
Townsend’s Warbler 1X   
Wilson’s Warbler  X   
Western Tanager   2
Black-headed Grosbeak  2   
Blue Grosbeak1 2   
Lazuli Bunting3 61
Total Species: 95465065474748

June is for Jumpers: Malibu Lagoon: 28 June 2026

July 8, 2026
American Robin, not particularly common at the lagoon
(Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)

[By Chuck Almdale; photos by Ray Juncosa, Armando Martinez & Chris Tosdevin]

This is what June Gloom looks like. Some people complain about it (“It’s summer! It’s supposed to be sunny here!”) but it keeps the temperatures down, and if any Night Herons are around, you can see them out and about instead of hiding in thick tree foliage to protect their eyesight. Surfrider’s Beach, the southern border of Malibu Lagoon, looks extremely thin in this photo below. In reality it’s several hundred feet from lagoon to ocean.

Surfrider Beach looking very thin from the west end of the channels (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

The world’s ten species of night heron are misleadingly named. They have large eyes (for a heron), but they don’t seek the darkness of night; they like crepuscular light, the twilight of dawn and dusk. A Gloomy June day will also do.

Their eyes evolved to see best in dim light, but a gloomy day also works well for a hungry bird. They do like to hide and hunt for small fish and invertebrates in reed beds, but you can also see them on the shorelines when it’s sufficiently gloomy.

A very common view of the Black-crowned Night Heron (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

But our featured fauna this month is not a bird, but a fish. It’s a Mullet, Mugil cephalus to be specific. I prefer the name Jumping Mullet because…well look below. But they have many names, as often happens with common fish. In English alone there are at least 28 names for this Mullet: Black, Black True, Bright, Bully, Callifaver, Common Gray, Common, Flat-head Gray, Flathead Gray, Flathead Gray-, Flathead, Gray, Haarder, Hardgut, Hardgut River, Jumping, Longaram, Mangrove, Poddies, Poddy, River, Sand, Sea, Springer, Striped, Stripped, Yellow-tailed, and just plain Mullet. The most widespread and “official” English name is Striped Mullet. In all languages there are over 500 different names. It’s a common, widespread fish along coasts around the world.

Jumping Mullet (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)
Landing the jump in fine form (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

I’ve never seen so many jumping Jumping Mullet in the lagoon. I started counting their jumps and within 45 minutes I’d gone over 100 and decided to quit keeping track, but within a few seconds it was 110. The most simultaneous jumps were three, and the fastest “run” was 7 jumps in 10 seconds.

Mullet, Mugil cephalus Portugal Sep 2021. Wikipedia: Diego Delso

There was an enormous mullet die-off in Malibu Lagoon back in August 2018. High ocean temperatures, high lagoon water temperatures, and just plain high temperatures lowered the oxygen level in the lagoon to a lethal level, and withing a week perhaps 3000-5000 dead mullet were floating on the surface. No one (to my knowledge) knew that there were that many in the lagoon.

Some interesting Mullet factoids:

  • Their common size is 10-20″ and 1-3 lbs., but can grow as large as 47″ and 18 lbs.
  • Mugil cephalus translates to “suck head.”
  • They have a segments in their stomach that function like a bird’s gizzard. They feed by slurping up sediment, detritus and algae, and the sand and mud help grind up the plant material.
  • They are notorious for jumping out of the water; theories abound as to why (see below).
  • They are euryhaline, able to easily tolerate very different levels of salinity, from hypersaline coastal lagoons to ordinary sea water to brackish water and to freshwater rivers.
  • The adults migrate offshore in late fall and early winter to spawn in massive schools. The hatched juveniles later migrate back to shore and into food-rich, low-salinity estuaries like Malibu Lagoon to grow.
  • In the coastal waters of SoCal and Baja California the large schools of mullet can attract large “sportfish” to feed on them, themselves attracting boats filled with sportfishermen.

Above, clockwise from upper left: Mullets at lagoon’s edge (Jim Kenney 9/28/15), Jumping Mullet (Randy Ehler 9/27/15), Necropsy of lagoon Mullet, nothing negative discovered (Karina Johnston, Bay Foundation 8/24/18), Over 200 dead Mullet (Larry Loeher 8/26/18, Great Egret & dead mullet (Grace Murayama 8/24/18)


These are some of the theories why they jump. I suspect there’s a Ph.D. waiting for anyone who solves this question.

  • Display to attract a mate
  • Escape a larger predator
  • Gulp some oxygen
  • Catch an insect it sees in the air
  • Shake off loose parasites or growths on its skin
  • Catch an invertebrate it sees at the water’s surface and momentum carries them into the air
  • Communicate location to other fish or other schools
  • Show off to the other fish what a great jumper they are
  • It’s fun and feels great slapping back down (my favorite explanation)

It’s probably all of the above, depending on the situation. Fish can be versatile.
Back to the birds.

The Hooded Orioles seem to nest at the lagoon every year now, although we often don’t see them and we rarely find their nests. They prefer to suspend their woven nests from the underside of the central shaft of a palm frond. You’d think they’d be easy to find, but they aren’t. I’ve seen only two, maybe three such nests at the lagoon. Today we were lucky and manage to find four orioles, probably the entire family, in the trees at the back of the Malibu Colony. Here, and in the trees around the parking lot, are their usual locations.

Hooded Oriole Male (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)
Hooded Oriole Female (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)
Hooded Oriole youngsters (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

Willets, when they fly, can look quite spectacular.

Willet’s most distinguishing field mark, the stripe (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)

When then settle down, the stripes disappear. But this time of year, still in some of their breeding plumage, they are attractively spotted. In the winter, all that disappears and they are plain, plain gray.

Willets in spots (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)

Was this Whimbrel startled? Chasing something? Being chased? We don’t know.

Whimbrel (Ray Juncosa 6-28-26)

…and study this bird for a while before reading the caption. Do you know what it is?

Long-billed Curlew at an unusual angle. (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

We have more swallow species than just “the Swallow.” This is not the one that mythically returns to San Juan Capistrano on March 19, St. Joseph’s Day. That’s the Cliff Swallow and they frequently begin reappearing in SoCal in February, back from their sojourn in sunny Argentina.

Barn Swallow silhouette shows long outer-tail feathers (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)
Caspian Tern with small fish (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)

The Heermann’s Gulls are definitely back from breeding on Isla Rasa in the Sea of Cortez.

Heermann’s Gull adult and one-year old (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)

Most of the Glaucous-winged Gulls we get at the lagoon are first-year birds. This one looks like a two-year old, with the two-tone bill and the pale gray back. It’s a bit early for it to be back from the arctic, so it probably never bothered to fly north this year.

Glaucous-winged Gull, back early or never-left? (Chris Tosdevin 6-28-26)
Pied-billed Grebe in a reflective moment (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

We didn’t get a picture of it, but one of the passerines that rarely show up at the lagoon made an appearance. It likely was a young bird and didn’t know any better. This Black-headed Grosbeak was only the fourth one we’ve seen at the lagoon in 348 visits. They prefer brushy hillsides and leafy trees to sparse brush, thus their relative rarity at the lagoon.

And for you butterfly mavens, what is this? Tell us what and why, and we’ll correct this posting with your name credited. Fame and fortune will no doubt rapidly ensue, and you will be able to retire to a lifetime of butterfly-watching.

Dark butterfly, perhaps a Duskywing? (Armando Martinez 6-28-26)

Malibu Lagoon on eBird as of 7-01-26: 9494 lists, 3107 eBirders, 323 species
Most recent new species seen: Canyon Wren, 06/11/26 by Judith Olsen (no photo).

Birds new for the season: American Coot, Long-billed Curlew, Willet, Glaucous-winged Gull, Black-crowned Night Heron, Green Heron, Red-tailed Hawk, American Robin, Black-headed Grosbeak.  “New for the season” means it has been three or more months since last recorded on our trips.

Many, many thanks to photographers Ray Juncosa, Armando Martinez and Chris Tosdevin.

Upcoming SMBAS scheduled field trips; no reservations or Covid card necessary unless specifically mentioned:

  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun. July 26, 8:30 am (adults) & 10 am (parents & kids)
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun. Aug 23, 8:30 am (adults) & 10 am (parents & kids)
  • Malibu Lagoon, Sun. Sep 27, 8:30 am (adults) & 10 am (parents & kids)
  • These and any other trips we announce for the foreseeable future will depend upon expected status of the Covid/flu/etc. pandemic, not to mention landslides, fires, local flooding and atmospheric rivers at trip time. Any trip announced may be canceled shortly before trip date if it seems necessary. By now any other comments should be superfluous.
  • Link to Programs & Field Trip schedule.

The next SMBAS Zoom program: Tuesday, October 6, 7:30pm; TBA

The SMBAS 10 a.m. Parent’s & Kids Birdwalk has again resumed. Reservations not necessary for families, but for groups (scouts, etc.), please call Jean (213-522-0062).

Links: Unusual birds at Malibu Lagoon
9/23/02 Aerial photo of Malibu Lagoon
Aerial ‘film’ flying north over lagoon
More recent aerial photo

Prior checklists:
2025: Jan-June, July-Dec
2023: Jan-June, July-Dec       2024: Jan-June, July-Dec
2021: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec       2022: Jan-June, July-Dec
2020: Jan-JulyJuly-Dec      2019: Jan-June, July-Dec  
2018: Jan-June, July-Dec      2017: Jan-June, July-Dec
2016: Jan-June, July-Dec   
   2015: Jan-May, July-Dec
2014: Jan-July,  July-Dec   
   2013: Jan-June, July-Dec
2012: Jan-June, July-Dec   
   2011: Jan-June, July-Dec
2010: Jan-June, July-Dec   
  2009: Jan-June, July-Dec

The 10-year comparison summaries created during the 2012-13 Lagoon Reconfiguration Project period, remain available—despite numerous complaints—on our Lagoon Project Bird Census Page. Very briefly summarized, the results unexpectedly indicate that avian species diversification and numbers improved slightly during the restoration period June’12-June’14. We also have a newly-refurbished slide show of the reconfiguration from just before it started until the recent 13-year celebration.

Many thanks to Marie Barnidge-McIntyre, Armando Martinez (our new chapter president), Chris Tosdevin and others for contributions made to this month’s census counts. June is typically the month with the fewest birds and lowest diversity.

The species list below was re-sequenced as of 12/31/25 to agree with the eBird sequence. If part of the right side of the chart below is hidden, there’s a slider button inconveniently located at the bottom end of the list. The numbers 1-9 left of the species names are keyed to the nine categories of birds at the bottom. Updated lagoon bird check lists can be downloaded here.
[Chuck Almdale]

Malibu Census 20261/252/223/224/265/246/28
Temperature 47-5549-6365-7655-6460-6361-66
Tide Lo/Hi HeightL+1.31L+0.65L-0.31H+4.32L+0.42H+3.35
 Tide Time084606550640062411261034
1Brant (Black)11112 
1Cackling Goose    1 
1Canada Goose3454  
1Cinnamon Teal 2    
1Northern Shoveler  2   
1Gadwall343515251810
1American Wigeon446   
1Mallard571481215
1Northern Pintail  11  
1Green-winged Teal118    
1Surf Scoter36  1 
1Red-breasted Merganser67431 
2Feral Pigeon 42810 
2Mourning Dove  3132
2Anna’s Hummingbird 11 21
2Allen’s Hummingbird335263
3American Coot50554  3
4Black Oystercatcher3     
4Black-bellied Plover34206332
4Killdeer465633
4Semipalmated Plover   6  
4Snowy Plover174 1  
4Hudsonian Whimbrel3466 7
4Long-billed Curlew     1
4Marbled Godwit341   
4Long-billed Dowitcher  1   
4Willet734  9
4Ruddy Turnstone23    
4Sanderling3510    
4Least Sandpiper202083  
4Western Sandpiper  1329  
5Bonaparte’s Gull  31  
5Heermann’s Gull  2275218
5Ring-billed Gull1743   
5Western Gull454161402229
5American Herring Gull 11   
5California Gull2751409511061
5Glaucous-winged Gull  1  1
5Caspian Tern  31135
5Elegant Tern  247501853
5Royal Tern1228341833
6Pied-billed Grebe223163
6Western Grebe454244351
6Clark’s Grebe 2    
6Red-throated Loon2     
6Pacific Loon 145 1 
6Brandt’s Cormorant3553 42
6Pelagic Cormorant 13212
6Double-crested Cormorant281518262510
6Black-crowned Night-Heron     3
6Snowy Egret331232
6Green Heron  2  1
6Great Egret11221 
6Great Blue Heron533313
6Brown Pelican1310303952864
7Turkey Vulture2234102
7Osprey2  1  
7Sharp-shinned Hawk 1    
7Red-shouldered Hawk 2    
7Red-tailed Hawk121  1
8Belted Kingfisher11 1  
8Downy Woodpecker 1    
8Nuttall’s Woodpecker   1  
7Peregrine Falcon   11 
8Nanday Parakeet2     
9Western Flycatcher    1 
9Black Phoebe332242
9Say’s Phoebe 1    
9Cassin’s Kingbird 13 1 
9Hutton’s Vireo1  1  
9California Scrub-Jay    21
9American Crow11106288
9Common Raven 12111
9Oak Titmouse  1113
9Tree Swallow   3  
9Violet-green Swallow    2 
9No. Rough-winged Swallow  25532
9Barn Swallow   81215
9Cliff Swallow   25203
9Bushtit205811025
9Wrentit221122
9Swinhoe’s White-eye 22   
9Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1    
9Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  1   
9Northern House Wren11 1  
9Bewick’s Wren  1   
9European Starling11013 26
9Northern Mockingbird 1    
9American Robin  1  1
9House Finch710121097
9Lesser Goldfinch726   
9Dark-eyed Junco 12 1 
9White-crowned Sparrow6510   
9Song Sparrow576644
9California Towhee323122
9Hooded Oriole   2 4
9Red-winged Blackbird    2 
9Great-tailed Grackle1035 48
9Orange-crowned Warbler111 11
9Common Yellowthroat121   
9Yellow-rumped Warbler664   
9Black-throated Gray Warbler1     
9Black-headed Grosbeak     1
Totals Birds by TypeJanFebMarAprMayJun
1Waterfowl & Quail677448423525
2Doves, Swifts & Hummers381111216
3Rails & Coots50554003
4Shorebirds128744454622
5Gulls & Terns349214247100522160
6Grebe, Loon, Heron, Pelican1344713443510591
7Hawks & Falcons5746113
8Kingfish, Peckers & Parrots320200
9Passerines8677116709296
 Totals Birds8255586081625491306
        
 Total Species by GroupJanFebMarAprMayJun
1Waterfowl & Quail898662
2Doves, Swifts & Hummers134343
3Rails & Coots111001
4Shorebirds1098725
5Gulls & Terns4510767
6Grebe, Loon, Heron, Pelican9111181010
7Hawks & Falcons342322
8Kingfish, Peckers & Parrots220200
9Passerines172223162119
Totals Species556667525149

Malibu Lagoon bird walks: 8:30am adults & 10am kids, Sunday, 28 June, 2026

June 24, 2026

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Peregrine Falcon: Nature’s self-guided missile
(Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

Pacific Coast Highway: There are reportedly lane closures for fire recovery work this weekend. PCH from Temescal Canyon Rd to Sunset Blvd has a reduced speed limit of 35 mph, and from Sunset Blvd to Carbon Beach Terrace PCH has a 25 mph speed limit. Watch for workers & vehicles. (Active work on Sunday morning at 8am? That’s debatable.)

Special Attractions: Like dinosaurs? Want to see a dinosaur? Then come to Malibu Lagoon. Birds are small dinosaurs, we now know, once rulers of the world, now the last of their kind! Think about that the next time one approaches you, grinning and sparkly-eyed, looking for a handout. At least they lost their pointy teeth somewhere alongside their path of evolution.

Some of the great birds we’ve had in June are:
Brant, Canada Goose, Gadwall, Red-breasted Merganser, Ruddy Duck, White-throated Swift, Anna’s & Allen’s Hummingbirds, Black-necked Stilt, Black-bellied & Snowy Plovers, Killdeer, Hudsonian Whimbrel, Wilson’s Phalarope, Black Turnstone, Sanderling, Dunlin, Least & Western Sandpiper, Common Murre, Heermann’s Gull, Least & Caspian Terns, Black-crowned Night Heron, Little Blue Heron, White-tailed Kite, Red-tailed Hawk, Cassin’s Kingbird, Rough-winged, Barn & Cliff Swallows, Mockingbird, House Finch, Song Sparrow, California Towhee, Hooded & Bullock’s Orioles, TRed-winged Blackbird, Great-tailed Grackle, and Common Yellowthroat.

Canada Geese nest at the lagoon (Chris Tosdevin 6-22-25)

Weather prediction as of 24 June
Temp: 60-63°F; Wind 7-10 mph from South; Sky Cover: 62% > 50%
Tide: Rising from very low: Low: -0.51 ft. @ 3:57am High: +3.35 ft. @ 10:34am
May 24 trip report link

Adult Walk 8:30 a.m., 4th Sunday of every month. Adults, teens and children you deem mature enough to be with adults. Beginners and experienced, 2-3 hours, meeting at the metal-shaded viewing area between parking lot and channel. Species range from 35 in June to 60-75 during migrations and winter.  We move slowly and check everything as we move along. When lagoon outlet is closed we may continue east around the lagoon to Adamson House. We put out special effort to make our monthly Malibu Lagoon walks attractive to first-time and beginning birdwatchers. So please, if you are at all worried about coming on a trip and embarrassing yourself because of all the experts, we remember our first trips too. Someone showed us the birds; now it’s our turn. Bring your birding questions.

Children and Parents Walk, 10:00 a.m., 4th Sunday of every month: One hour session, meeting at the metal-shaded viewing area between parking lot and channel. We start at 10:00 for a shorter walk and to allow time for families to get it together on a sleepy Sunday morning. Our leaders are experienced with kids so please bring them to the beach! We have an ample supply of binoculars that children can use without striking terror into their parents. We want to see families enjoying nature. (If you have a Scout Troop or other group of more than seven people, you must call Jean (213-522-0062) to make sure we have enough binoculars, docents and sand.) It’s a good idea to call Jean anyway so she knows to expect you. If you’re late, they’re probably heading towards the beach.

Directions: Malibu Lagoon – street address is 3999 Cross Creek Rd. – is at the stoplighted intersection of Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) and Cross Creek Road, just west of Malibu Pier and the bridge, 15 miles west of Santa Monica via PCH. Turn towards the ocean at the stoplight, opposite the Shell station. We gather in the metal-shaded pavilion area near the parking lot. Look around for people wearing binoculars and hats. Do NOT go to 23200 PCH, the address for Adamson House, east of Malibu Creek bridge, and a 5-10 minute walk away, plus 20-40 minutes to get into their surfer-packed parking lot.

Parking: Parking machine in the lagoon lot near our meeting area: 1 hr $3; 2 hrs $6; 3 hrs $9, all day $12 ($11 seniors); credit cards accepted. Annual passes accepted. You may also park (read the signs carefully) either along PCH west of Cross Creek Road, on Cross Creek Road, or on Civic Center Way north (inland) of the shopping center.  Lagoon parking in shopping center lots is not permitted.

Black-necked Stilts (Chris Tosdevin 6-23-24)

[Written & posted by Chuck Almdale]

Birders, How to park for free (almost) at Malibu Lagoon

June 22, 2026

[By Lu Plazoules]

It’s not easy these days to park at State Parks near a big city. Parking can cost $12 or more depending on where you want to go bird-watching. I’m a senior and my cost-of-living increases don’t seem to be keeping up with the price of gas (among other items) this year. So here are my solutions for a an inexpensive time at our local State Parks.

1. Advantages of getting old
If you are 62 or above, you can apply for the “Senior Golden Bear” pass from California State Parks. I have had one of these $20 +/- passes for years and I’ve used all the options for obtaining it. You can download an application, print it out on paper, send it in with a copy of your CA Driver License, and wait…especially if you’ve sent in a check with the application. Or you can get it online with a credit card and a pdf or jpeg of your ID (this never worked for me.) The option to use a credit card may be faster, but two years ago, I waited six weeks and then got billed twice for it, and got two passes from two different State Park offices.

By far the most reliable way to score this gem of a deal is to get it in person from the LA District office at Malibu Creek State Park. Just make sure that you call in advance at 310-457-8144 to ensure they have passes on hand and what hours they will be available. Theoretically the passes are available starting in December of the year preceding, however, there have been glaring exceptions. [This year they did not arrive at MCSP until mid-January.] The pass is valid at most State Parks from January through the Friday of Memorial Day Weekend, then the day after Labor Day through the end of the calendar year. Well worth the drive to the Malibu crest. And you can go birding there with your new pass right away!

The office where you get them is near the front gate: turn left just past the front gate fence, drive about 1/20th mile, if that, and [legally] park. Walk a little bit farther to the office. Give them 20 bucks, sign something-or-other, and you now have your pass. DO NOT, repeat DO NOT walk the mile or so up the creek to the Visitor’s Center to get your pass. Tell the gatekeeper where you’re going and you get in free!

2. California State Library Bonus
What to do in summer when your senior pass is not valid? Or because your license doesn’t show that magic 62? For the past four years, funds from the Federal Libraries and Museums programs have been used by the State’s Librarian to give grants to libraries to purchase State Parks passes that are valid for the entire year and are available to library cardholders without fee for the regular checkout period of a book or other material from their local library. (That can be up to 4 weeks!) During the summer months when my Senior Golden Bear is not valid, I go to my Santa Monica Public Library and get a State Parks Pass. I can even reserve it online! That’s a good reason to make sure your library card is up to date! Just as a bonus, remember that most library systems allow you to get a library card as long as you are a resident of the State (not just the district!) That means that if you live in WLA/Santa Monica you can easily drive to Beverly Hills, Marina del Rey or Overland Ave CC (LA Cty. Libr) Brentwood or WLA/Sawtelle to get a State Parks pass as long as you have their card and supply is available. Time to get multiple library cards! BTW It would be great if you sent an email to your Assembly-member and House representative stating how you love to get this benefit, now that you’re old and your knees and hips are making odd worrisome sounds! The current Administration’s budget proposal once again wants to delete the entire Federal fund from existence.

I hope I’ve made your birding easier and less expensive. See you out there!

Don’t forget: Our Malibu Lagoon monthly walk starts at 8:30 am on the 4th Sunday (not necessarily the last Sunday).

Lu

California Bird Atlas Big Weekend 2026 Results

June 16, 2026

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

In our continuing mission to post items about the California Bird Atlas project and get as many people as possible interested in and contributing to this project, here’s an announcement from Van Pierszalowski, instigator and director of this 5-year project.


Hi birders,

I’m happy to report that the inaugural California Bird Atlas Big Weekend (June 4-7, 2026) was a tremendous success! Thank you so much to our partners for organizing 54 (!) field trips and events throughout the state in a single weekend. Special thanks as well to our incredible Regional Coordinators and the broader atlasing community.

Amazingly, 47% of the confirmed breeding codes recorded during Big Weekend represented new confirmations (species breeding in atlas blocks where they hadn’t yet been confirmed). This highlights the strategic approach atlasers took throughout the weekend, focusing their efforts on expanding coverage and documenting breeding evidence where it mattered most. Many atlasers reported using Blockboard to help identify these opportunities.

See a recap of Big Weekend statistics below. For a deeper dive (plus some of our favorite photos from the weekend), check out the News post on the CBA eBird platform.

BIG WEEKEND BY THE NUMBERS

  • 4,180 Atlas checklists were submitted
  • 1,211 atlasers submitted checklists, including 181 first-time atlasers
  • 1,575 blocks received data, including 194 blocks that had not previously received Atlas coverage (see the News post for a map)
  • 26,809 breeding codes were submitted, including 6,121 confirmed-level codes
  • 308 species received breeding codes, including 226 species with Confirmed-level breeding codes
  • 4,865 confirmed breeding “block ticks” (each species in each block = one block tick), including 2,287 new confirmed block ticks

DISCOVERIES

  • What appears to be the first confirmed breeding record of Canyon Wren in Solano County was reported by Eric Pilotte at Stebbins Cold Canyon Reserve on June 7. 
  • Atlasers added two new species to the Atlas’s list of confirmed breeders: Bufflehead (reported by Sam Eberhard in Lassen County) and Green-winged Teal (reported in three different blocks — two in Plumas County, one in El Dorado County).

We will be organizing CBA Big Weekends every year throughout the Atlas period (2026-2030), and it will be exciting to see how the results evolve from year to year. Thank you again to the incredible birding community, and here’s to another great atlasing weekend starting now.

Happy Atlasing,
Van Pierszalowski

Director, California Bird Atlas
CBA website: www.californiabirdatlas.org
Join the CBA eBird project: www.ebird.org/atlascalifornia