Birds & Habitat > Great Washington State Birding Trail >
Great Washington State Birding Trail
Cascade Loop
The
Cascade Loop, published in September 2002, features 225 of
Washington's 365 bird species.
This loop takes you along the inland coastal
waters of the Pacific Ocean where tides and currents sculpt
dramatic shorelines in a temperate climate. Turning east,
the trail winds through dark, stately conifer forests before
rising over the high open passes of the snow-capped Cascade
Range, sprinkled with clear lakes and fast-flowing streams.
East of the mountains, where winters are colder and summers
are warmer, you'll find sagebrush-grassland plateaus, ancient
canyons, and the legendary "River of the West,"
the mighty Columbia.
Hundreds of thousands of shorebirds, neotropical
migrants, and other birds of the Pacific Flyway depend on
Washington's wealth of natural habitats: some stop here to
rest and eat before continuing north, while others stay to
nest and raise the next generation. Northwest Washington is
famous in winter for its large populations of seabirds, Bald
Eagles, Snow Geese, and Trumpeter and Tundra Swans, and offers
some of the country's best raptor viewing.
Applause to the many dedicated Birding
Trail volunteers, and to the funders: U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Washington Dept. of Fish and Wildlife, Washington’s
office of Business and Tourism Development, Icicle Fund, Puget
Sound Energy, and many individuals.
The map features original art by Ed Newbold
on the cover and along the route of the map.
Click here
to see the trail online and click here
to purchase your map.
Good birding to you! |