Upper tidal marsh with nesting pole seen from the Osprey Overlook just south of the Great Esker Park |
Osprey nesting pole |
The overlook site features an informative panel touching on various aspect of Back River osprey life. Extractions of the panel text are given in the following.
About habitat and diet:
Osprey are often found near water bodies as their diet consists almost exclusively of live fish (99 percent). The Back River is particularly productive for osprey due to its strong herring run—one of the few sources of food for osprey in the early spring. In fact, a healthy osprey population is considered a strong indicator of healthy, productive fisheries, which in turn mean productive estuaries and bay waters.
About tree-nesting:
Like many Massachusetts bird species, osprey are tree-nesters meaning they build and spend their resting time in nests high above the ground, often over water. Their conspicuous stick nests are often constructed atop dead trees, channel markers, cell or radio towers, and even utility poles. In effort to attract nesting pairs to the Back River, several manmade towers have been maintained in the salt marshes since the 1990s, providing safe places for the birds to raise newborn chicks.
About mating and migration:
Osprey mate for life and will return to their nesting sites year after year. Typically they arrive in Massachusetts in late March or early April. The males gather sticks and other materials (grass or seaweed, for example) to construct the nests while the females complete the actual construction. A nest can be as large as four feet across and three feet deep. Hatching typically occurs in late May or early June. Come September, the birds leave Massachusetts to migrate as far south as Brazil, spending their winters in South America. Osprey make this trip in about two to three weeks.
Getting there
The entrance of the Osprey Overlook Park is located at the end of Wharf Street in Weymouth, Massachusetts. It can also be accessed from the north via the Back River Trail through abutting Great Esker Park.Kajakers visiting the Osprey Overlook area |
More to explore
Osprey Overlook Park. North and South Rivers Watershed Association. URL: https://www.nsrwa.org/listing/osprey-overlook-park/.
Osprey Overlook and Great Esker Park. The Wine-Dark Sea, May 5, 2020. URL: https://www.thewinedarksea.com/2020/05/05/osprey-overlook-and-great-esker-park/.
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