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Bear Divide field trip: Sat. 18 April, 2026 7:30 am

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
On Saturday, 18 April, we’re going to visit Bear Divide Bird Banding location in the San Gabriel Mtns. above Sylmar, located on the mountain ridgetop between Fwys #14 & #210. The site was embedded in a cloud when we visited last year and the banding station was closed, yet we found another twenty or so people, bundled up, standing around in the fog, hoping to see birds. It became a bit of a party, as when a crowd of birders gather at a rare bird stake-out spot, hoping for a glimpse of a lifer and chattering away while they wait. We located and identified about two dozen species in the fog, including ravens croaking like foghorns in the misty distance, and Wrentits bip-bip-bipping away.
When it’s fog-cloudy, they call off the banding because 1) most of the birds know enough to fly above the fog if it’s not too high, and (in my opinion) 2) it’s cold, fingers get cold, it’s harder to manipulate the tools and the live birds and thus the fun dissipates faster than the fog.
This year, the road up the north slope is closed due to washout and collapse repairs, so we must use the route up the south slope.
Trip reservation necessary
Contact leader: Armando Martinez 310-428-6845 or email armando.martinezmarquez@gmail.com.
If our plans change as they can due to fog/cloud, we’ll need to contact you.
For Carpooling
Contact Armando as above for the north valley carpooling meeting location.
Time: Arrive 6:45 – 7 am. We leave here at 7 am.
Bring: Binoculars, clothing layers, water, snack.
Carpooling:
We recommend gathering at the carpool location as parking can be limited at the banding location. We also recommend that that all visitors read the banding station’s page: https://beardividebanding.com/visit/. Their primary purpose is banding birds, and cooperation from visitors is needed to get the job done in a manner friendly to both birds and birders. They are also happy to take donations. $5-10 per person is suggested. SMBAS is not covering these donations.
Weather Predictions: NWS camp 9, then “hourly weather forecast” is “somewhat reliable” for predictions for this area.
Driving yourself?
Try to arrive by 7:30am at the banding location. You’ll have to figure it out yourself how long that will take you on a Saturday morning. Expect it to take at least 20 minutes to travel up Little Tujunga Canyon Road to the banding site.
Using an in-car GPS routing system? Don’t let it send you on the northern route using Hwy #14 and Placerita Cyn. Rd. or Sand Canyon Rd. The section of Little Tujunga Cyn. Rd. north of Bear Divide is closed due to repairs. You can’t get through that way.
General directions: Exit #210 Fwy at exit #8 Foothill Blvd. Turn north (left), go approx. .2 mile to Osborne St. and turn left. Osborne becomes Little Tujunga Cyn. Rd. Continue uphill roughly 10 miles of winding road to the Bear Divide Fire Station and picnic grounds access road (Santa Clara Truck Trail) and turn left. Bear to the right to large dirt parking area on right and park out of the way.
Altitude: ~1700 ft., might be overcast and foggy, might be sunny.

Alternative in case of thick clouds:
Depending on the fog, we may use the option of birding at Wilson Canyon in Olive View, NE of Sylmar. This spot is often very birdy, especially in spring. If it’s clouded in at the divide there may be extra birds downslope at Wilson Canyon. There is a $5 parking fee which you pay by putting cash into an envelope and then into a slotted box. No credit card or telephone payments possible.
Address: 14450 Olive View Drive, just east of Olive View Hospital.
Directions: Take #210 Fwy to exit #2 Roxford St. Turn north, follow the eastward curve where it becomes Olive View Dr., continue past Olive View-UCLA Medical Center on north side of road to the park entrance road on left (signed). Pay your $5 fee and continue up the hill on the narrow paved road. At the top it becomes dirt. Turn left. In about 1/10 mile, it curves to the right and ends at a large dirt parking area. Meet here, if we decide to come here. You can always come here on your own, by the way. It’s a great birding spot. And…if you ever feel like hiking over the mountain ridge, start from here and end up in Placerita Cyn.; it’s fire roads and trail all the way.


Death Valley Sage
[by Chuck Almdale]
National Public Radio (NPR) recently did a report of the very rare Death Valley Sage (Salvia furneria).

Most of the report focused on the work of botanist Naomi Fraga of the California Botanic Garden. For more than 15 years she has been trying to collect seeds from this plant, which will then be put into a vault for safekeeping, similar to the giant Svalbard (Norway) Global Seed Vault containing the seeds of important crop plants from around the world. She did collect many seeds from many other plants, but so far she’s empty handed with Salvia funeria. In 2026 the desert really bloomed, hope springs eternal, and she trying again.
Read the report, see the photos and listen to the 5-minute interview.
https://www.npr.org/sections/the-picture-show/2026/04/01/nx-s1-5749446/botanist-search-seeds-rare-death-valley-sage
Other web pages on Salvia funeria: Calscape, CNPS, Wikipedia
Read Naomi Fraga’s bio: https://naomifraga.com/naomi/
The California Botanic Garden where Naomi works, has their own website https://www.calbg.org/, well worth a look for anyone interested in native plants. You can:
- Visit their garden Tue-Sat 8am-7pm (what’s beautiful today)
- Become a member, get free admission to the garden,discounts on purchases, and more
- Volunteer
- Buy native plants
- Learn about the seed bank and buy seeds from over 6,000 California plant species
- Get their very interesting 12-page monthly Oak Notes newsletter
- Take classes & attend events
- Attend Seminar series’
- Donate to help
California Botanic Garden
1500 N. College Ave., Claremont CA 91711
909-625-8767 | info@calbg.org

Bear Divide field trip: Sat. 18 April, 2026 7:30 am

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
On Saturday, 18 April, we’re going to visit Bear Divide Bird Banding location in the San Gabriel Mtns. above Sylmar, located on the mountain ridgetop between Fwys #14 & #210. The site was embedded in a cloud when we visited last year and the banding station was closed, yet we found another twenty or so people, bundled up, standing around in the fog, hoping to see birds. It became a bit of a party, as when a crowd of birders gather at a rare bird stake-out spot, hoping for a glimpse of a lifer and chattering away while they wait. We located and identified about two dozen species in the fog, including ravens croaking like foghorns in the misty distance, and Wrentits bip-bip-bipping away.
When it’s fog-cloudy, they call off the banding because 1) most of the birds know enough to fly above the fog if it’s not too high, and (in my opinion) 2) it’s cold, fingers get cold, it’s harder to manipulate the tools and the live birds and thus the fun dissipates faster than the fog.
This year, the road up the north slope is closed due to washout and collapse repairs, so we must use the route up the south slope.
Trip reservation necessary
Contact leader: Armando Martinez 310-428-6845 or email armando.martinezmarquez@gmail.com.
If our plans change as they can due to fog/cloud, we’ll need to contact you.
For Carpooling
Contact Armando as above for the north valley carpooling meeting location.
Time: Arrive 6:45 – 7 am. We leave here at 7 am.
Bring: Binoculars, clothing layers, water, snack.
Carpooling:
We recommend gathering at the carpool location as parking can be limited at the banding location. We also recommend that that all visitors read the banding station’s page: https://beardividebanding.com/visit/. Their primary purpose is banding birds, and cooperation from visitors is needed to get the job done in a manner friendly to both birds and birders. They are also happy to take donations. $5-10 per person is suggested. SMBAS is not covering these donations.
Weather Predictions: NWS camp 9, then “hourly weather forecast” is “somewhat reliable” for predictions for this area.
Driving yourself?
Try to arrive by 7:30am at the banding location. You’ll have to figure it out yourself how long that will take you on a Saturday morning. Expect it to take at least 20 minutes to travel up Little Tujunga Canyon Road to the banding site.
Using an in-car GPS routing system? Don’t let it send you on the northern route using Hwy #14 and Placerita Cyn. Rd. or Sand Canyon Rd. The section of Little Tujunga Cyn. Rd. north of Bear Divide is closed due to repairs. You can’t get through that way.
General directions: Exit #210 Fwy at exit #8 Foothill Blvd. Turn north (left), go approx. .2 mile to Osborne St. and turn left. Osborne becomes Little Tujunga Cyn. Rd. Continue uphill roughly 10 miles of winding road to the Bear Divide Fire Station and picnic grounds access road (Santa Clara Truck Trail) and turn left. Bear to the right to large dirt parking area on right and park out of the way.
Altitude: ~1700 ft., might be overcast and foggy, might be sunny.

Alternative in case of thick clouds:
Depending on the fog, we may use the option of birding at Wilson Canyon in Olive View, NE of Sylmar. This spot is often very birdy, especially in spring. If it’s clouded in at the divide there may be extra birds downslope at Wilson Canyon. There is a $5 parking fee which you pay by putting cash into an envelope and then into a slotted box. No credit card or telephone payments possible.
Address: 14450 Olive View Drive, just east of Olive View Hospital.
Directions: Take #210 Fwy to exit #2 Roxford St. Turn north, follow the eastward curve where it becomes Olive View Dr., continue past Olive View-UCLA Medical Center on north side of road to the park entrance road on left (signed). Pay your $5 fee and continue up the hill on the narrow paved road. At the top it becomes dirt. Turn left. In about 1/10 mile, it curves to the right and ends at a large dirt parking area. Meet here, if we decide to come here. You can always come here on your own, by the way. It’s a great birding spot. And…if you ever feel like hiking over the mountain ridge, start from here and end up in Placerita Cyn.; it’s fire roads and trail all the way.


[By Chuck Almdale]
It’s really easy to add an existing eBird checklist to the California Bird Atlas. If you have checklists for 2026 and noted breeding behavior codes on the list, you can add the entire checklist to the project in about one minute. [They prefer entire checklists.] If you noted any sort of breeding behavior but didn’t select a breeding code, you can select and enter the code during this process.
The California Bird Atlas (CBA) has a nicely done video showing you how to do it, only 2:48 long.
I suggest that you first determine if any of your 2026 eBird checklists have any breeding bird information in them. If you find one, then watch the video below in a separate tab, pausing the video and performing the steps.
You can watch the video here. If you want a transcript to read, scroll down past this video below.
Want a transcript to appear?
Watch the video on the CBA YouTube page.
Just below their name is a colored area with a blurb text beginning with “This video was created…”
Click the “…more” area, then scroll down to find the “Show Transcript” button and click it. The transcript appears to the right of the video and scrolls up as the video progresses.
When you’re done moving a checklist, a little 6-dot icon appears next to it in your ebird “My Checklists.”
Zoom Recording: Building California’s First Statewide Breeding Bird Atlas, with Van Pierszalowski
The recording of this program from 7 April 2026
is now available online

Building California’s First Statewide Breeding Bird Atlas, with Van Pierszalowski.
From the ocean to the deserts to the highest mountains, California is home to tens of millions of birds. But there’s no one definitive resource laying out exactly where the more than 700 bird species that live and breed in California can be found. The California Bird Atlas project aims to change that, by doing the first comprehensive, detailed bird survey of the entire state — all 58 counties, all 163,000 square miles. By the end of February over 100 breeding species had been confirmed, and by mid-March over 50,000 trip lists had been recorded by birders statewide. The leader of the project, Van Pierszalowski, tells us what’s involved in doing one of the most ambitious bird science projects ever, and how everyday birders can contribute to the effort.
Van sent us the following links to the California Bird Atlas Project.
Start Here:
- Join the Atlas and start contributing: CBA eBird Home Page
- New to the project:
○ Quick Start Guide (Text)
○ Quick Start Tutorial (Video)
Learn the Basics:
- About eBird (General)
- How to assign breeding codes (with examples): Breeding Code Overview
- Learn about ‘Atlas Blocks’: Atlas Blocks Overview
Explore Atlas Data:
- Project Effort Map (updated daily)
- Statewide Stats (updated daily)
- Species Maps (example: Bald Eagle)
About the Project:
- CBA Home Page
- Science Advisory Committee
- News and updates
- Town Hall Webinar: Intro to the Atlas
- FAQs
Follow Along:
Donate: Support California Bird Atlas, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization
Contact: info@californiabirdatlas.org
California Bird Atlas is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (EIN: 33-2290415). Donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. No goods or services are provided in exchange for contributions.
As of this posting (April 8, 2026, 3:30pm), the project has collected 68,688 checklists, 3422 atlasers, 5222 blocks with data, 344 species coded and 193 species confirmed.
• • • • • • •
Thousands of community members building
a lasting resource to protect biodiversity.
• • • • • • •
California’s first statewide Breeding Bird Atlas.
• • • • • • •
Forty-four states have completed Breeding Bird Atlases—
globally recognized tools that guide conservation efforts
and strengthen biodiversity.
California isn’t one of them. That’s about to change.
• • • • • • •
“Breeding Bird Atlases are large-scale efforts that tell us not just where birds are, but how birds actually use our landscapes. This initiative is critical to understanding the current status of birds in our state.”
— Morgan W. Tingley, Professor, Dept of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCLA

Executive Director – California Bird Atlas
Van Pierszalowski is the Executive Director of the California Bird Atlas. Van’s childhood was split between Cambria, CA, and Kodiak Island, AK, where he worked on his father’s commercial salmon fishing boat for eight years. After earning a degree in Anthropology at UC Berkeley, he embarked on a successful career as a songwriter and musician, appearing on TV shows like Late Night with Conan O’Brien and CBS News Sunday Morning. Now living in LA, he’s fallen in love with the area’s varied habitats and stunning vagrant birds, and is continually inspired by its diverse birding community. In 2023, Van completed a California Big Year, recording 503 species, becoming only the second birder to surpass 500 in a single year in the state. He is an eBird Regional Reviewer for Los Angeles County, and leads trips for several local organizations, including Los Angeles Birders and the Pasadena Audubon Society.



