Longer Hours of Operation at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge

As of May 1, 2012, the hours of operation at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge have changed for the summer season.  Visitors may arrive between 5 a.m. and 10 p.m. to enjoy a variety of wildlife dependent recreational opportunities.

The hours of operation have also changed for the Herbert H. Bateman Educational and Administrative Center, which is now open from 9 a.m to 5 p.m. 

“Whether you are a repeat guest or visiting for the first time, we encourage you to help facilitate harmony between wildlife, habitat, and people by taking time out from your daily routine to go outside,” said Michael Dixon, visitor services manager.

For more information about Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, call 757-336-6122 or visit www.fws.gov/northeast/chinco. 

Premier of Aldo Leopold’s ‘Green Fire’ at Refuge May 11

The first full length, high definition documentary film ever made about legendary conservationist Aldo Leopold and his environmental legacy ” Green Fire” will be shown at the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge Friday May 11 at 7 p.m.

The documentary shares the highlights of Leopold’s shares highlights from his extraordinary career, explaining how he shaped conservation and the modern environmental movement.

 The film illustrates how Leopold’s vision of a community that cares about both people and land  continues to inform and inspire people across the country and around the world, highlighting modern projects that put Leopold’s land ethic in action in a multitude of ways. 

The program is free and open to the public. Refuge admission is free for program attendees. Light refreshments will be served. 

The screening sponsored by the Chincoteague Natural History Association in partnership with the US Fish & Wildlife Service and the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge.

The Day Bidding History Was Made

Prince, the record buy-back, runs in the corral after his vet check.
Prince, the record buy-back, runs in the corral after his vet check.

By Wild Pony Tales

Originally posted August 2007

It was a steamy morning on Chincoteague Island, the weatherman calling for a 93 degree day. A big crowd had gathered early this late July 2007 morning , excited about the yearly Chincoteague Pony Auction which would soon begin. Those planning to bid and those coming to watch had gotten there early to claim their seats.

Also getting up early had been members of the Chincoteague Fire Company who had a lot of work to do, setting up the auction site, preparing to keep records of the sales and most importantly, getting the bucking, excited ponies safely into and out of the auction ring.

In the early morning as the bidders got into their seats no one knew auction history would be made this day. As the auction moved along, a pony that many had been waiting for was brought into the ring. He was a white stallion. The bidding began.

Up to $5,000 it went, then on to $10,000 and the crowd grew quiet except for some gasping as the price edged upward. No matter how high the bidding went a higher bid was called out by a group of women sitting to the right of the auctioneer. The women, known as the Buyback-Babes, had their hearts set on this white stallion pony and they were not to be outbid. When they called out their last bid, $17,500, the auctioneer said “sold,” and a sales record had been reached. The previous record for a pony at the auction was $10, 500 in 2001.

The three-month-old foal was to be named Prince, and the Buyback Babes had purchased another foal to be returned to the herd.

Anyone who has attended the auction knows of this group of women who try to purchase a pony every year to be released back into the wild. These women are from all across the nation. They pool their money together for one lucky pony. This was Prince’s lucky year.

Prince enjoys the warm sun on the southern range of the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge. This photo was taken March 29, 2012 by Robert Boswell. His band of mares was grazing nearby.

Dr. Charles Cameron, from Eastern Shore Animal Hospital, the official pony veterinarian, gave Prince and the others a clean bill of health so he could be released back into the wild after the April roundup. Dr. Cameron and his staff have been giving inoculations to the wild ponies of Chincoteague for 18 years. The ponies are treated for the diseases encephalitis, West Nile, rabies, and equine infectious anemia. They are also treated for worms and given a tetanus shot.

Before Dr. Cameron can treat the ponies they have to be rounded up from both the southern and northern ranges. These ponies are on the Virginia side of Assateague, not to be confused with the Maryland ponies.

This year’s spring roundup began Friday afternoon (April 18) when the Saltwater Cowboys rounded up the southern herd, riding out on the range and shooing them along into a holding area off Woodland Trail. From there they are moved along to the big corral on Beach Road where they spend the night dining on hay and drinking fresh water from tubs.

Once in the corral, bands of ponies that belong to the stallions get mixed together and this often leads to conflict with the stallions who give off various signals of displeasure, with a little biting and kicking to make their points.

After a busy late afternoon on Friday, the cowboys had to be back on the job at 7 a.m., reporting to the much larger northern range for a full morning of riding.

Dr. Cameron’s morning started early too, with breakfast with his medical team and the wildponytales staff at Bill’s Restaurant. After breakfast, everyone headed for the corral where the southern heard was waiting. As Dr. Cameron backed his truck in and got set up, ponies were being separated into groups, by fire department officials.

When he was ready, fire officials ran the ponies into a chute, one by one. It was not a quiet scene. The ponies were kicking and whinnying, making an incredible array of noises. The ponies could not move around much once in the chute, giving Dr. Cameron’s helpers a chance to pry open their jaws. In a quick action, Dr. Cameron then gives each one a squirt of medication through a long tube connected to a pump, a contraption called a drench.

While all this is going on, seven miles away the northern herd was on their way into their corral, awaiting their own fate with Dr. Cameron. It took a huge effort by the cowboys as they worked to get every pony in the corral. At midday Dr. Cameron arrived and he and his assistants went through the same steps over and over until over 100 ponies had been treated.

But it was Prince that got the most attention, Jean Bonde, a member of the Buy-Backs said. “His Misty coloring made him stand out.”

The Buy-Backs knew they wanted to keep a colt when the Pony Association decided to keep males. They settled on Prince. The Buy-Backs only get to see their ponies at the three yearly roundups, but sometimes along Beach Road and from the tour bus run by the Chincoteague Natural History Association.

Prince was not released back into the wild until April 18, 2008. According to Bonde, Prince was kept over the winter at the carnival grounds along with several other foals. The fire department takes care of these foals during the winter months because they need time to grow stronger before released to the owners or back into the wild. Prince has now reached the age of about 15 months old and is living his life on Assateague Island.

Barbara Kelly Wins Migratory Bird Art Logo Contest

Barbara Kelly of Denville, New Jersey is the winner of the 18th Annual International Migratory Bird Celebration (IMBC) art logo contest at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge.  Kelly’s winning submission, a line drawing of a Ruby-Throated Hummingbird, will adorn the celebration’s program flyers, T-shirts, and other memorable keepsakes.

International Migratory Bird Day (IMBD) will celebrate its 20th anniversary this year.  Created in 1993, the event is now hosted at over 500 sites throughout the Western Hemisphere, reaching thousands of youths and adults.  As part of the 20th anniversary, this year’s annual bird theme Connecting People to Bird Conservation will focus on 20 ways people may help preserve birds every day.

“Kelly’s drawing of a Ruby-Throated Hummingbird is the perfect logo for this year’s conservation theme” stated Refuge Manager Lou Hinds.   “Getting the word out about the wonder of birds and how we can help them is what IMBD is all about.”

Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge will host its 18th Annual International Migratory Bird Celebration on Saturday May 12.   The event will again coincide with the Mother Earth Day Celebration at the Robert Reed Park that is being held on the same day.  Come out between 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM and check out the great activities the staff and volunteers at the refuge will have to offer.

Adults and kids can enjoy creating bird houses and hummingbird feeders; learn some basic birding skills on a guided bird walk or bird banding demonstration; and enjoy an entertaining and educational program that features live, non–releasable wild animals with the staff at the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.   Wildlife artists, refreshments, bird crafts, and soap carving sponsored by the Ward Museum, live critters and exhibits with the staff at the Salisbury Zoo and Delmarva Discovery Center will all be featured inside the Herbert H. Bateman Educational Administrative Center.   Outdoor and Nature Photographer Irene Hinke-Sacilotto will share her photographic experiences and love of nature with everyone at 11:00 AM in the auditorium followed by the Children’s Art Contest Award Ceremony at 12:30 PM sponsored by the Historic Main Street Merchants Association.

Come join us on Saturday, May 12th and get involved in bird conservation.  It’s easy to get involved, and like anything, some of your most helpful actions begin at home.  Imagine how many birds you can help finish their migratory journey, have a successful nesting season, raise young, and survive the winter, if you help preserve birds every day.

Susan Fair

Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge

PO Box 62

8231 Beach Road

Phone: 757-336-6122 x300

Fax: 757-336-5273

susan_fair@fws.gov

‘Of Shifting Islands, Cars, and Climate Change’

Reprinted from National Wildlife Association Newsletter.

President’s Message

By Evan Hirsche, President 

It isn’t often that a plan to move a parking lot sparks a major controversy worthy of a Congressional hearing. Surprisingly, this is exactly what transpired in a coastal community over a proposed plan to move the beach parking lot at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia.

Further south, a different controversy has been brewing for more than a decade in North Carolina’s Outer Banks concerning a deteriorating bridge connecting Nags Head to Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge. The Herbert C. Bonner Bridge connects popular beachfront barrier islands that are traversed by a road riddled by washouts and mounting maintenance costs.

In both cases, the mix of sea level rise as a result of climate change, desire for vehicular access and the realities of ever-shifting barrier islands have combined to form a toxic cocktail of vitriol in these coastal communities.

At Chincoteague, a parking lot adjacent to a popular beach visited by hundreds of thousands of people each year is frequently washed out by storms. Most recently, Hurricane Irene destroyed the parking lot just before the busy Labor Day weekend and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) predicts that it will cost $40 million over the next 15-years to continue maintaining the parking lot in its current location.

 

An aerial view of the new inlet severing NC-12 at Pea Island NWR in NC as a result of Hurricane Irene in August 2011. | Tom Mackenzie/ FWS

At Pea Island NWR the situation is even worse. Hurricane Irene cut a new inlet, severing NC-12, the main road on the Outer Banks, and cut off transportation to areas further south on the barrier island. A makeshift bridge traversing the newly-created inlet has cost $10 million. Maintaining the 10-mile-road over the 20 years preceding Irene has been upwards of $25 million. And these mounting costs are all at the taxpayer’s expense.

The FWS has proposed long term solutions for both of these problems. A new parking lot on higher ground at Chincoteague would be less prone to washouts and require fewer maintenance costs in the long term. However, this plan, which would include a tram option shuttling beach-goers from town, has pitted the agency in a battle against many in the nearby town of Chincoteague who believe that anything short of a park and walk to the beach arrangement will serve as a death knell to the local economy.

In North Carolina, the FWS proposed a bridge route for NC-12 that would bypass the shifting sands of Pea Island Refuge altogether. This plan was rejected by the state of North Carolina because of the cost of the project, despite lower maintenance costs in the long term. It is projected now that construction costs of the smaller bridge segments required as a result of the Irene-caused inlets will rival the price of the FWS proposed bridge without including on-going road maintenance costs.

National wildlife refuges have been an integral part of coastal communities for more than a century, beginning with the creation of Pelican Island NWR in 1903. As we are witnessing first hand, climate change is accelerating natural processes and causing disruptive weather events that are quickly and permanently changing the face of many ecologically important wildlife havens, while also raising the specter of dramatic changes for coastal communities. In the immediate, there is the question of whether taxpayers should pay exorbitant sums for short-term solutions of dubious practicality, which also undermine wildlife conservation objectives on our national wildlife refuges.

In the long term, with climate change an underlying and pervasive catalyst for change, these questions are only going to become more difficult and widespread, particularly in connection with the hundreds of coastal and tidal national wildlife refuges. As taxpayers, can we continue to afford footing the bill for pricey short-term solutions that will quickly be undone by the disruptive forces of nature, and how do we begin making smart but hard decisions that look forward 25, 50 and 100 years?

Onward and upward!

Evan Hirsche signature