Autumn Grand Manan: Aug 31—Sep 06, 2009

Birds and Whales

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Price: $2,955
Departs: Bangor, ME
Tour Limit: 14
Operations Manager: Greg Lopez
Download Itinerary: PDF (73.5 KB)

Tour Leaders

Barry-zimmer

Barry Zimmer

Barry Zimmer has been birding since the age of eight. His main areas of expertise lie in North and Central America, but his tra...


Brennan-mulrooney

Brennan Mulrooney

Brennan Mulrooney was born and raised in San Diego, California. Growing up, his heart and mind were captured by the ocean. He s...


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Register for this Tour

You can register for this tour by phone (800-328-VENT or 512-328-5221) or by downloading a printable file of our full tour registration form. Signed and completed forms can be faxed to 512-328-2919 or mailed to our office.

Northern Right Whale

Northern Right Whale — Photo: Barry Zimmer

Incredible seabird spectacles, marine mammals, and a picturesque New Brunswick island. Also good for landbird migrants and shorebirds.

Located in the Bay of Fundy (off the coasts of Maine and New Brunswick), the picturesque island of Grand Manan makes an ideal base for experiencing the phenomenon of fall migration on the northeast coast.

This area stands out from other migration hot spots because of the ready availability of exciting pelagic birding. Fundy's famous tides wash through submarine canyons, promoting cold-water upwellings and consistently producing some of the best seabirding and whale-watching in North America.

We will have a full day at sea with excellent chances of finding Manx, Greater, and Sooty shearwaters; Wilson's and possibly Leach's storm-petrels; Atlantic Puffin; Razorbill; Black-legged Kittiwake; Northern Gannet; jaegers; phalaropes; and other surprises. Most years, though, the show is stolen by the impressive North Atlantic right whale, the rarest whale in the world. Finback and humpback whales are also likely.

We'll check the forests and hedgerows of Grand Manan for a good variety of migrant songbirds (20 species of warblers are possible), and scan the rocky shoreline for Great Cormorant, Common Eider, and Black Guillemot.

Good accommodations and excellent food; easy terrain; minimal walking; one boat trip plus three ferry rides; cool to mild climate.