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Your Perfect Ojai Day

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Fishing Ojai

Fishing Ojai

BIRDING The Ojai Valley

Story by Tom Maloney, executive director, Ojai Valley Land Conservancy

Black-Crowned Night Heron

Ojai’s rural nature and abundant open space provide visitors with many opportunities to see the birds of Southwest California. Our conservation lands present plenty of options to find chapparal, woodland and more montane birds. However, like most arid regions of the Southwest, for diversity, Ojai is a “just add water landscape.” Bird diversity really jumps around water and a few spots provide opportunities for these species as well. The following spots in the Valley and further afield offer great spots to go birding.

Ojai Meadows Preserve

The Ojai Valley Land Conservancy’s 58-acre preserve next to Nordhoff High School is so convenient that it’s worth a visit. Winter and early spring migration are the best times of year. The small pond can hold wintering American widgeon and green-wing teal in addition to the more regular mallards and American coots. The restored oaks and coyote bush provide habitat for white-crowned sparrows, western bluebirds, acorn woodpeckers and wintering yellow-rumped warblers and ruby-crowned kinglets. Thanks to the restored habitats, spring migration can be really fun and the “Meadows” is always a good place to check for migrants headed north.

Lake Casitas

Lake Casitas offers visiting birders with a chance to see water birds not normally found in the rest of the Valley. Western grebes are abundant as are a good complement of diving ducks such as bufflehead. Egrets and herons (black-crowned night heron and great blue heron) and shorebirds can regularly be found. The campground and surrounding habitats can hold fun sparrows and other birds in the wintering season. Best to visit on a weekday since this is a very popular recreation area. There is a day use fee.

Matilija Dam and Floodplain Forest

For local birders, this is the premier birding spots in the Ojai area. The Dam site and the

woodlands provide a diversity of wetlands and forest that are both scarce resources for migrant birds. The reservoir has largely silted in so there isn’t a lot of open water but what little there is can hold interesting ducks that you can pick out from the overlook on Matilija Canyon Road. The surrounding chaparral can have typical chapparal birds like rufous-crowned sparrow, wrentit and occasional black-chinned sparrows. To watch birds in the woodlands, drive down past the dam overlook to the first flat spot and find an unmarked trail into the woods on the west side of the road. This can be an outstanding spot to find migrant birds resting and feeding on their long journeys.

Acorn Woodpecker

Green Winged Teal

Ferruginous Hawk The habitats of the Monument represent the largest intact remnant of the once vast desert grasslands that covered the San Joaquin Valley. For birding, the winter and early spring are by far the best time to make the trip from Ojai. Impressive numbers of wintering raptors (ferruginous, red-tailed and occasional roughlegged hawks as well as prairie falcons and golden eagles) make the 1.5 hour trip from Ojai worth the beautiful drive from Ojai. In the early Spring, birders from all over try to find the elusive LeConte’s thrasher on the Monument.

Western Bluebird

White headed sparrow

Golden Eagle

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