Monday, September 26, 2022

Birding Quimby Country!

[We first did this post after returning home from Quimby Country in September 2022. After a wonderful week in 2023, we've revised a bit and added a few memories.]

Way back in 1893, a man named Charles Quimby bought half of a fishing camp in the northeast corner of the Northeast Kingdom. He bought the other half a few years later, set up some tents on platforms, and invited friends to come and fish Forest Lake and nearby Great Averill. 


Forest Lake





Great Averill - and "The Rock"

When Charles died in 1919, his daughter Hortense took over. Hortense was a powerhouse! She decided that the beautiful camp shouldn't be just for fishermen so she renamed it Quimby's Cold Spring Club and started advertising. Over time, she replaced the rustic tents with over a dozen cottages plus a good-sized lodge and a club house right on the lake. 

The Lodge





inside The Lodge

Club House

Ms. Quimby ran the camp with a firm hand. Guests were not allowed to share in the justly famous meals without being properly attired, and parents of misbehaving children were expected to remove their offspring from the dining room immediately.



A group of friends took over the management of the resort in the 1960's, changing the name to Quimby Country and continuing the tradition of providing family fun during July and August - with boating, archery, bocce, tennis, hiking, biking, nature walks, swimming, arts and crafts, and many other games and activities. 



clay tennis court






 

Four years ago, Vermonters Lilly and Gene Devlin became owner/managers of Quimby Country. Summer family camp is very popular, run by the Devlins and a staff of ten (including their three sons). In June and September, Gene and Lilly manage with a much smaller staff. Guests tend to be single adults, couples and small groups who relish quiet and peace and beauty. "Shoulder season" is also great for weddings, reunions and other celebrations. And every September the cottages fill up for the annual Women's Weekend, with hikes, yoga and many other activities. 


It's hard for us to get away in June because of our huge vegetable garden, but it's a popular time for many others. Vermont Center for Ecostudies has held several staff retreats then. The blackboard below lists the 69 bird species VCE members saw on two June days recently.



Maeve spent a few days at Quimby Country in 2019, and Bernie and Maeve stayed there in September 2021, 2022 and 2023. (And we've got reservations for another full week in 2024!) The whole area has amazing birds during spring and fall migration, in large part due to the wide diversity of habitats. Quimby Country has forest, two lakes, marshes, rock ledges and shrubby areas.






wild raisin attracts robins, waxwings and many other species





Great Blue Heron looking for prey in sedges



The shrubby, untamed area immediately behind this sign is a particularly strong bird magnet. 


Two of our visits featured almost constant rain, but in 2023 we finally reached the same bird total that VCE tallied: 69! Over thirty of those species were seen right in that small area behind "Albert's Way". (Overheard in 2023, from two kids riding bikes: "Who do ya think is Albert??")

Impressive flower plantings, lovingly maintained by gardener Lou, attract lots of pollinators all spring, summer and fall, hummingbirds during the summer, and seed-eaters in the fall. 








Lou's flowers are used to decorate tables in The Lodge and cottages.



Common Loons are a big draw for most visitors. VCE maintains a nesting platform on Forest Lake and two on Great Averill.


(photo from 2019, earlier in September)


When we stayed five nights in September 2022, we were entertained by two adult loons and two good-sized "teenagers". One day we watched one parent and the two youngsters passing the same small fish back and forth for over twenty minutes.

In September 2023, we watched two important moments in a young loon's life. First, it tilted its head back, opened its beak a little, and let out a weak and wobbly imitation of a yodel. Second, after sticking close to a parent for weeks and being fed a huge number of times every day, one morning the larger bird brought up a small fish. The youngster immediately swam closer - but the parent turned its head away and swallowed the fish! The young loon had just had its first lesson in "you're almost on your own, sonny!"

Our total bird list for three September stays is at the end of this post - but here are a few. 


juvenile Cedar Waxwing

Hermit Thrush

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Eastern Phoebe



True to Quimby Country's origin as a fishing camp, cottages are named for trout flies.





The Lodge has photo albums going back over a hundred years!


Quimby Country is uniquely an "unwired" location. There's WIFI in the Lodge but guests are asked not to use their cell phones or tablets during meals. The absence of phones, TVs, etc. makes for a wonderfully quiet experience. - But staying at Quimby Country isn't roughing it! Meals in the Lodge are very good. (Three meals a day are served during the summer, breakfast only in June and September.) Cottages are comfy, with wood stoves, good beds, and full bathrooms. Several cottages also have full kitchens. Click here for specifics.






Now for more photos of fall splendor in the northeast corner of the Northeast Kingdom - QUIMBY COUNTRY!













the "birdiest" part of Quimby Country - lots of diverse vegetation of many different heights 














OUR SEPTEMBER QUIMBY BIRD LIST

Canada Goose  
Wood Duck
Mallard    
Hooded Merganser   
Common Merganser
Ruffed Grouse
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Spotted Sandpiper
Greater Yellowlegs   
Common Loon  
Double-crested Cormorant 
Spotted Sandpiper
Great Blue Heron
Turkey Vulture
Osprey   
Sharp-shinned Hawk
Bald Eagle   
Great Horned Owl 
Barred Owl  
Belted Kingfisher 
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Downy Woodpecker 
Hairy Woodpecker  
Northern Flicker  
Pileated Woodpecker
Eastern Wood-Pewee  
Eastern Phoebe
Eastern Kingbird   
Blue-headed Vireo 
Red-eyed Vireo
Blue Jay  
American Crow  
Common Raven     
Black-capped Chickadee
   Ruby-crowned Kinglet    
Golden-crowned Kinglet  
   Red-breasted Nuthatch  
White-breasted Nuthatch
Winter Wren     
Gray Catbird
 Veery 
Hermit Thrush
American Robin  
Cedar Waxwing
Purple Finch  
American Goldfinch 
Chipping Sparrow  
White-throated Sparrow  
Song Sparrow  
Lincoln’s Sparrow
Swamp Sparrow
Dark-eyed Junco
Common Grackle  
Ovenbird
Tennessee Warbler  
Nashville Warbler
Common Yellowthroat  
Northern Parula
Magnolia Warbler
Bay-breasted Warbler
Blackburnian Warbler
Yellow Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler  
Pine Warbler  
Black-throated Green Warbler   
Cape May Warbler
Black-throated Blue Warbler  
Yellow-rumped Warbler 
Northern Cardinal
Rose-breasted Grosbeak 



Text by Maeve, photos by Bernie and Maeve


Comments from others:

We have been to Quimby Country too.  It's amazing.   The walk to the lake through the woods.....ahhhhhhh!

It looks like paradise!

We stayed at Quimby Country for a week earlier this month. We loved it so much that we rebooked for next September.