Explore BirdCast’s new migration dashboard

  • According to BirdCast, ornithologists didn’t realize the magnitude of migration that occurred at night until the turn of the 20th century.
  • Fall migration timing varies across the U.S. and even within regions, according to BirdCast.
  • In the “before times” — prior to BirdCast’s 3-day migration forecasts for the lower 48 states — birders had to guess which nights would be big ones for migration.

Crossing continents and oceans, birds rarely stay in the same place their whole lives, and their epic fall migration will soon be hard to miss for many North Americans. 

Migration is the best time to be a birdwatcher, says the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Hugh Powell.

As days get shorter and weather slowly shifts, birders are preparing for the spectacular fall migration. BirdCast, launched in 2018 by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, released their migration tools for the 2023 season earlier this month. 

“Twice a year, hordes of birds fly thousands of miles through the night to grace your home turf for a few days or weeks,” Powell writes. “But they don’t come in a steady convoy—it’s more like a stuttering stream of flurries and pauses.”

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