A Most Wonderful Time of the Year

 

Day 2 FedEd volunteer
J. Clark Salyer National Wildlife Refuge in North Dakota. (Photo: Colette Guariglia/USFWS)

“You can’t get too much winter in the winter,” American poet Robert Frost wrote. That’s not true for everybody, we know, but if you enjoy clean, crisp air and the great outdoors, winter is a special time of year at national wildlife refuges in northern latitudes.



Home Depot Richfield Minnesota
Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge in West Virginia welcomes winter visitors with open arms. (Photo: Ken Sturm/USFWS)

This photo essay touches on a few of the things that make winter wonderful at national wildlife refuges: Invigorating recreation … a chance to glimpse wildlife … a serene respite from the daily grind.



Monsanto employees
(Photo: Jennifer Jewett/USFWS)

Snowshoeing can be a blast at national wildlife refuges from Alaska to Oregon to West Virginia to Maine and lots of places in between, including Des Lacs National Wildlife Refuge (above) in North Dakota.



North Face employees at Siletz Bay
(Photos: USFWS)

Ice fishing is fun for kids and adults at Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge (left and top right) in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois, at Selawik National Wildlife Refuge (bottom right) in Alaska and at other refuges across Alaska, the northern Plains, the Great Lakes states and New England. Here are some refuges popular for ice fishing.



North Face in Lincoln City
(Photos: Dorey Rowland, David Sagan, USFWS, Dennis Mudderman)

Get your heart pumping, your muscles stretched and your lungs refreshed with some cross-country skiing at dozens of refuges, including Kootenai National Wildlife Refuge (top) in Idaho,  Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge (bottom left) in New Jersey, Aroostook National Wildlife Refuge (middle) in Maine and Tamarac National Wildlife Refuge (right) in Minnesota. Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge in West Virginia also is a particularly outstanding place for cross-country skiing.



Luann Coen and Miroslawa Gehama
(Photo: Tina Shaw/USFWS)

You can build a snow fort, if you feel like it, as these girls did at Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge (above), about 50 miles north of the Twin Cities in Minnesota.



Kevin Haughtwout and Christy Rosario
Eight North American bald eagles perch in one tree at Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge in California. (Photo: Dave Menke/USFWS)

You can see iconic North American bald eagles at Lower Klamath and Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuges along the California-Oregon border, Camas National Wildlife Refuge in Idaho, Upper Mississippi River National Fish and Wildlife Refuge in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois, Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge in Maryland and numerous other refuges across the country. Check out “Winter at Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuges” (video)



OMRON Scientific Technologies volunteers
(Photo: Kenny Bahr)

You might see curious river otters like these at Missouri’s Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge (above), about 90 miles north of Kansas City, and at many other refuges.



OMRON Scientific Technologies volunteers
(Photo: Steve Gifford/USFWS volunteer)

You might glimpse a brilliant cardinal at or near Patoka River National Wildlife Refuge in southern Indiana, as accomplished amateur photographer Steve Gifford did (above). “For me, being able to get out on the refuge calms my heart and restores my soul a bit, and helps me put things in perspective,” says Gifford. “I think it can do the same for others if we help make them aware that it is there for them to use and enjoy.” More about photographing wildlife at Patoka River Refuge.



OMRON Scientific Technologies volunteers
(Photo: Bob Weaver/USFWS volunteer)

You might see diving harlequin ducks at Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge in Rhode Island. The harlequin ducks, which get their name from their bright clown-like plumage, are rare along the Atlantic Flyway, but impressive numbers of them gather off the rocky shores of Sachuest Point near Newport, RI.



OMRON Scientific Technologies volunteers
(Photo: Lori Iverson/USFWS)

To get fully into the winter spirit, take a horse-drawn sleigh ride among Rocky Mountain elk at National Elk Refuge near Jackson Hole, Wyoming.



OMRON Scientific Technologies volunteers
No, those aren't swans; they’re ice formations at Waubay National Wildlife Refuge in South Dakota. (Photo: USFWS)

We’ve shown just a tiny sampling of the fun that can be had on national wildlife refuges in winter. For more ideas, go to the National Wildlife Refuge System website, scroll down to the blue map and click on your state to discover a refuge near you to visit this winter.



OMRON Scientific Technologies volunteers
A young ice fisherman displays his catch at Montana’s Bowdoin Wetland Management District, one of 38 wetland management districts in the Refuge System. (Photo: USFWS)

And remember to bundle up! As the adage often attributed to Scandinavians goes: “There is no such thing as bad weather, just bad clothing."



Compiled by Bill_O'Brian@fws.gov , December 14, 2016