#81 I spoke to my niece Amber about how her family might like to see the wintering Snow geese
- Randall Cothren
- Dec 27, 2016
- 7 min read
Updated: Feb 2, 2021


I had talked to my niece Amber about how if they ever got a chance, I would like for them to see the birds nesting and playing out at Pantego. I told her this would be a good time of year to check it out. To my surprise she said that would be fun.
I looked at the weather and it seemed to me on Tuesday it was 70 and Wednesday was 70 and Thursday was like 30 degrees. I told Amber the best thing to do is just get in the car and go and they agreed so we all met and Pantego Tuesday evening
It was of course me and India and then Mike the boyfriend, Amber and the two boys Preston and Jackson.
I have learned Pungo Lake Refuge is where to be. It took India and I several annual visits to learn where to go. The birds are very active in the evenings and first thing in the morning. We rode down to the lake and saw lots of swans. I think that everybody was pretty impressed about the wildlife there. The first time I saw it at Pungo it blew me away. India and I had wanted to see the birds migrating and nesting and carrying on and we went two years in a row and basically got skunked both times. We didn't know where to look or how to go about it and the third year we went we asked for help. We had a guided tour and they showed us right where they were and where to park and where to hang out. There are just hundreds and thousands snow geese and Tundra swans.
It was great for all of us the next morning very early near daybreak when we all went again. because they're very active in the morning as well. I didn't see it clearly but Amber at least saw a bear and that's actually quite a treat because people come from everywhere to try to find black bears and get some photography of them. I knew they were right here because there was lots of scat all over the place. Some of was molding meaning it was many days old but some of it looked kind of fresh which was kind of creepy like last night.
As we want on down towards where they saw the Bears, I actually saw a very distinctive paw print in the mud. We tried to lift it out and it lived for a while but at some point, he got rained on and it melted. It stopped being a bear paw and started being a mud pie.
Preston the older boy wanted to go kayaking and I agreed that we would. We paddled around a little bit and we had a great time on the way back Jackson and Mike standing on the bulkhead of the boat ramps. Jackson the 3 year old just walked right off and fell into the water which was little one of those oh my God you going to drown moments. Mike jumped right In without hesitation and saved the little guy and it was very nice to see him being such a good parent. It really wasn’t that deep but I don’t think that takes away from the hero moment.
After a while when everybody got dried off and calmed down, I said let's just see the birds again and really Amber was the only one who was interested but then next thing you know everybody went. I think India skipped it maybe because she'd seen it so many times, but it was all good. Live and let live. They were particularly beautiful that evening and we got lots of video. The scene is one of the swans and geese coming home for the evening. They come in in waves of 100 at a time and look for a place on the big lake to sleep for the night. It way out there that they find refuge from the predators. Amber people decided that they needed to go back that evening so I said okay but we milled around and left the next day
Doris and Jennifer and the navy jets
The Navy wanted to do jet plane practice in the bird refuge at Pantego. Doris and Jennifer went to congress and testified and they were able to stop the project. It took them years to win and they had no legislative experience and they didn’t pay anybody off they just told their story till the Navy chose another site.
I was so impressed
Here is the story
Varied groups rally Tuesday against OLF
MAY 10, 2006
4:00 A.M.
The battle lines are drawn, and a showdown is looming that pits a bunch of rural North Carolinians against the U.S. Navy. A win for the Navy could spell environmental disaster for one of the state's most pristine wildlife preserves.
The folks from Washington and Beaufort counties are coming Tuesday, May 16, to the state Capitol to oppose the Navy's plans to build an outlying landing field (OLF) along the majestic Northeastern corridor of the state. The Navy plans to use the air strips to practice more than 30,000 war jet take-offs and landings annually in the midst of a major bird sanctuary. Environmentalists have denounced the plan, which is now under court-ordered review.
The fight has brought together disparate partners. Among the speakers at Tuesday morning's rally on the Capitol grounds are N.C. Ducks Unlimited Chairman Lloyd Goode of Raleigh and N.C. NAACP President the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II of Goldsboro, as well Chris Canfield, director of the N.C. Audubon Society and state Senate President Pro Tem Marc Basnight, who represents Dare County.
Goode said opposing the OLF represents the first time in his 30 years of involvement with Ducks Unlimited that the group has taken a stand on a public policy issue.
"This indicates how serious this really is," Goode wrote in a letter to DU members urging them to attend Tuesday's rally. Goode said two letters DU sent to the Navy were ignored.
The Navy will decimate the bird population to maintain the safety of its pilots, Goode said.
"The Navy is ... planning to degrade habitat and eradicate the birds," Goode wrote. "They will remove the birds that the planes could possibly collide with. I have seen farmers in Canada keep waterfowl out of crop fields with propane cannons. Getting rid of these birds will pose no problem for the Navy. If the OLF is built, Eastern North Carolina will be forever changed. Lake Mattamuskeet, Phelps Lake, Pungo Lake, Alligator Lake, Pocossin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge and thousands of acres of other habitat are at great risk."
In 2003, the Navy announced its decision to construct the OLF in North Carolina. The purpose of the OLF is to provide simulated aircraft carrier landings for the F-18 Super Hornet war jets to be stationed in Oceana, Va., and possibly Cherry Point.
Navy documents state that the current OLF site, Fentress Field in southeastern Virginia, meets the Navy's training needs, but the Navy wants to construct a new OLF in response to noise and other complaints by Virginia residents living near the site.
Read More
The Navy estimates 31,650 practice landings and take-offs annually at the proposed OLF. The F-18s train in groups of three, and often fly at low altitude for practicing. Training flights will occur every 15 minutes around the clock, seven days a week. F-18s are 50 percent louder than the now-mothballed Concord, once the loudest conventional jet.
Federal court rulings from U.S. District Court Judge Terrance Boyle have delayed the project, but opponents said strong political opposition is the best way to defeat the OLF.
"This whole process has been political from the beginning," said Jennifer Alligood, chairwoman of North Carolinians Opposed to the Outlying Landing Field (NO-OLF). "The way to stop it is political."
The Navy plans to purchase about 33,000 acres of farmland for the OLF "resulting in one of the largest land grabs by the federal government in our country's modern history," rally organizers wrote in a promotional flier. "The OLF would remove over 100 families from their generational homes and farms and adversely affect the quality of life for thousands of citizens."
Environmentalists estimate more than 100,000 migratory birds live in Pocossin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, which sits adjacent to the OLF site. OLF opponents say Pocossin Lakes "is a globally significant refuge" located on the Albemarle/Pamlico peninsula, an area "considered one of the last pristine and rural assets on our nation's East Coast. The peninsula is a classic example of man's coexistence with nature and is compared to the beautiful and abundant Serengeti, Africa."
The OLF area includes large birds such as snow geese and tundra swans, which can weigh up to 18 pounds. Jeffrey Short, who developed the U.S. Air Force's bird avoidance model, opposes the North Carolina OLF site: "In 25 years of dealing with military BASH [Bird-Aircraft Strike Hazard] issues, I cannot recall a worse place to situate an airfield for jet training."
Opponents say the OLF will be an economic drain on the state. In addition to lost tax revenue from land loss, the Navy will maintain most of its OLF infrastructure in Virginia Beach, which will reap any economic benefits. There still has been no decision as to whether Cherry Point will receive any F-18 squadrons.
The anti-OLF efforts are being led by folks like Doris Morris, who serves as NO-OLF's communications director. Last Sunday, the pastor of her church, First Christian Church-Disciples of Christ in Plymouth, gave a pitch for the rally during the service. It was also mentioned in the church bulletin and newsletter. Morris, who calls Raleigh "a big city," is a native of Washington County. Her next-door neighbor will lose his 1,000-acre farm and his livelihood to the OLF project, she said.
The county is small and poor, and many folks know each other, Morris said. Opposition to the OLF is strong, she said.
Gov. Mike Easley will be sending Department of Environment and Natural Resources head Bill Ross to Tuesday's rally. In response to an interview request, Ross released the following statement: "Gov. Easley and I will continue to raise concerns about the suitability of this site with the U.S. Navy publicly and privately on behalf of North Carolina citizens."
Elizabeth Dole's office released a statement saying the senator has confidence in the court-ordered supplemental environmental impact review that is under way, but she did not oppose the site.
"I know that a number of folks in Eastern North Carolina are opposed to the Navy's preferred OLF site in Washington County, and I will continue to make it a priority to ensure that the Navy is made fully aware of these concerns," Dole said.
Several U.S. House members oppose the site, including Rep. G.K. Butterfield of Wilson, who is scheduled to speak at the rally.
Morris wishes the political opposition were stronger, but she understands the political underpinnings for a state that touts itself as the nation's most friendly to the military.
"We feel like they could always do more than they are, but at the same time we're fighting the Navy," Morris said.
The rally against the Navy's plans to build an outlying landing field in northeastern North Carolina is from 10:30 a.m.-noon on the Capitol's south lawn in Raleigh. For more information, visit www.noolf.com,call Doris Morris at (252) 793-9756, or write NO-OLF, P.O. Box 32, Pinetown, NC 27865.
Comments