Many birds in the United States have started their fall migration.
Tuesday evening an estimated 124,100 birds crossed Lehigh County, according to BirdCast with more are expected to migrate.
Tonight, 285 million birds are expected to migrate across the United States and it's forecasted to be high in the Lehigh Valley. Tomorrow night, an estimated 382 million are expected to migrate across the states.
According to BirdCast, 202 million birds are predicted to migrate across the states.
Courtesy BirdCast
What can you do?
It's important to turn off or dim the lights at night so birds can use the starry night sky to navigate.
Bright lights attract and disorient nocturnally migrating birds, potentially causing fatal collisions with buildings or exposure to additional daytime hazards, according to BirdCast.
Help protect any birds that pass through our region by turning off all non-essential lighting from 11:00 pm until 6:00 am.
The peak migration period is typically mid-August to mid-October, according to BirdCast. However, some species may migrate earlier or later in both spring and fall.
BirdCast began as a collaboration among EPA, the National Audubon Society, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Clemson University Radar Ornithology Laboratory, the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, and GeoMarine, Inc
BirdCast provides live and local bird migration alerts throughout the continental US by employing real-time analysis of bird migration traffic as detected by radar. You can use this tool to determine whether birds are migrating in your area tonight in low, medium, or high densities
Learn more and find out what birds are migrating - https://birdcast.info/
Why support WGOLV:
How you can give and be a part of something wonderful for our community:
What makes What's going on in the Lehigh Valley unique?
What's going on in the Lehigh Valley is a mom-owned and-run news publication for nearly 14 and has become a trusted source of information for thousands of people in and around the Lehigh Valley.
With nearly 80k followers on Facebook and another 5k plus on a music page, What's going on in the Lehigh Valley has become an important source of information, news, and events for many years. In addition to articles on WGOLV, I add weather and traffic alerts, safety alerts, breaking news, food, and product recalls, Amber Alerts, information from police and state police, townships, city officials, missing persons/pets, and inform the community on special events, to the Facebook page of What's going on in the Lehigh Valley (as well as the website).
WGOLV also adds live broadcasts and in-person interviews to make it enjoyable and educational. Subscribers to the Facebook page can also receive additional content and have the ability to express their appreciation with a badge for the hours and effort that go into creating the content on the Facebook page. It's completely optional.
As a mom-owned and run business, it takes a great deal of time and income to run What's going on in the Lehigh Valley and has been all self-funded.
"News never stops" - There's always breaking news and information to publish each day to keep the community informed.
How WGOLV gives back and helps the community:
Raises income for those in need -
WGOLV gives back by helping many in the community - raising thousands for those in need with cancer, pediatric cancer, and those who've experienced tragedy and fires for many years. That's done through writing articles and sharing them to social media. It can be a GoFundMe sent in or something I come across - someone in need - a child, an adult - even a business.
I've always had a heart to help others. Articles reach thousands and thousands. A great deal of income has been raised over the years for people in need.
Helps non-profits, missing persons, missing pets -
WGOLV helps newly formed non-profits get word out to the community through articles, drawing out thousands to events, raising thousands for them, and helps with locating missing persons - I often speak to family members who contact me directly - many who have been found over the years - I get the word out via articles on the website and Facebook page.
WGOLV is educational and provides a great deal of information:
WGOLV has also worked closely with Wolfpack Search and Recovery for many years on missing persons. WGOLV also gets word out on missing pets, recalls, alerts, weather alerts, breaking news and so much more - lots of very important and critical information for the community. Safety for the community has always been a large component of WGOLV - even through various articles I've written on weather safety, riptides etc.. - educating the public to help keep them safe. As a previous teacher, I enjoy educating and informing the public. I also add a lot of very interesting information on What's going on in the Lehigh Valley.
Helping people in the community, small businesses, animal rescues, food bands, musicians
One of my main goals has been to help people in our community for years and I also believe in
helping support our small business owners in the community, animal rescues, food banks, and promoting our Lehigh Valley musicians.
WGOLV answers messages at all times of day (even into the early morning hours) from those writing in for help.
WGOLV is also a proud supporter of our First Responders, military, and Veterans as well as local animal rescues, K-9's and Mounted Patrol.
Each year WGOLV is a Sponsor of National Night Out in the community.
Each donation makes a difference -
Because WGOLV is all self-funded, every donation make a difference. I can't do this without the support of the community. It takes a great deal of time to write articles and create content. Unlike other publications, WGOLV is all self-funded and run by one person.
Each donation helps to provide the news and information you see each day on the website and on the Facebook page. It helps with all the many expenses to keep the website running and the time invested to bring you the news every day and give back to the community.
Donations can be any amount. It can also be set up so you can give monthly.
Thank you so much for your support.
LoriLee,
Owner, Reporter, Journalist
What's going on in the Lehigh Valley