Alaska News

Flock This Way: Juneau Is Getting a Planet and Bird Walk

Juneau 探花精选 Society and the Marie Drake Planetarium are collaborating to bring awareness to the far-out bird species of Southeast Alaska.
Single duck on water

Southeast Alaska will soon see the completion of a new  (JAS) project鈥攖he .

JAS, one of five Alaska state chapters of the 探花精选, is an independent nonprofit organization operating with an all-volunteer Board of Directors鈥攎eaning no paid staff鈥攕ince 1977. That board includes Brenda Wright, a retired fish biologist with the U.S. Forest Service and currently a Member at Large. Wright has been on the board since 2000 and has held every position from program director to president.

Over the years, Wright has seen JAS programs and board members come and go. "Each person that joins has this great contribution," she says. However, she says the organization is successful as long as one objective is met. 鈥淚t's still awareness鈥he process of talking about birds and nature.鈥

Bringing attention to birds and nature is done primarily through JAS programming and special projects, like the Planet and Bird Walk scheduled to be completed by summer 2024 at Twin Lakes鈥攁 park operated by the City and Borough of Juneau just down Egan Drive from downtown. And for those who may not be familiar, a planet walk is typically a scale model of our solar system showcasing the distance between the planets and depicted by informative wayside signs along a walking path in a park or public space. For instance, the  is found along part of the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail.

JAS is partnering with the for this project. Wright and the planetarium鈥檚 longtime Board President, Cristina Della Rosa, are old friends and wanted to revamp the now-faded planet walk that used to be found along the one-mile path at Twin Lakes. Della Rosa says the original planet walk at Twin Lakes was created around the year 2000 and overseen by Michael Orlove鈥攁 well-known Juneau volunteer who had been with the Marie Drake Planetarium for more than 20 years. When he moved away, maintenance for the planet walk鈥攖hen markings on the actual walkway itself and a large sign about space on the restroom structure鈥攚ent, too. Orlove died in 2022, and there will be a commemoration of his efforts on the restored restroom sign. 

But there's one thing that sets this planet walk apart. The Twin Lakes walk will include signs for the Sun and the eight planets in our solar system that will also feature a corresponding bird species that can be spotted at Twin Lakes. The signs will educate walkers on our solar system as well as local bird species. 

鈥淚t will be unique, in the whole universe, being a bird and planet walk,鈥 Della Rosa says.

And how did Della Rosa and Wright sell space and birds as a natural pairing to the CBJ Parks & Recreation department?

鈥淭hat was a really fun part for me because I asked a whole bunch of different people which bird would you go with which planet,鈥 Wright says. 

For example, 鈥淓agle鈥檚 pretty easy because that's our biggest bird鈥nd so that goes with Jupiter.鈥 Then Rufous Hummingbird for Mercury, Great Blue Heron for the Blue Planet (Neptune), and so on. And Saturn? That鈥檚 obvious. Ring-necked Duck.

The Common Raven is paired with the sun based on the story , or sometimes How Raven Stole the Light, in Alaska Native lore. The group also wanted to ensure the Tlingit words for the birds and planets would be on the signs, too, as they would be staked into the ground of the 脕ak'w 岣磜谩an Territory. Wright and the group used a Tlingit dictionary for these translations and had their work confirmed by an instructor at the University of Alaska Southeast.

And it worked. CBJ Parks & Recreation is 鈥渢otally excited about having this comeback,鈥 Wright says.

Marie Drake Planetarium volunteer Shellie Hanson designed the mockups of the signs in collaboration with Parks & Recreation. The main sign on the restroom will also include QR codes for audio of the bird calls to the species highlighted along the walk. This will take care of Wright鈥檚 aforementioned mission of the Juneau 探花精选 Society鈥攁wareness of nature. 鈥淭here鈥檚 tons and tons of people that use that use that walk every single day and lots and lots of children,鈥 she says.

Twin Lakes is also a significant spot in Southeast Alaska for birds. It鈥檚 still part of 鈥攄esignated an Important Bird Area in 2007 by the 探花精选鈥攁lthough Egan Drive bisects it from the 3,760-acre Mendenhall Wetlands State Game Refuge. As a whole, the Mendenhall Wetlands network has the third-greatest acreage of vegetated tidal salt marsh of all estuaries in Southeast Alaska and is widely acknowledged to be one of the key migratory waterfowl and shorebird stopover locations of coastal Alaska. 

Approximately 230 species have been observed and reported in the area. That, plus nearly a dozen different mammals, eight anadromous fish species, and an abundance of marine life, .

And of course, is also a stop along the 鈥攐ne of 19 sites in Juneau and Douglas Island. The side-by-side lakes attract both migrating and wintering waterfowl, resulting in common observations like Mallard, Greater and Lesser Scaup, Bufflehead, and Common and Hooded Merganser. More rare ducks, such as Redhead and Canvasbac,k may show up here. American Dippers can be seen in the small stream flowing into the lakes. 

The project may also get plenty of attention this summer since that's the height of tourism season in Juneau and Southeast. According to , nearly 300,000 visitors came to Southeast in 2016, spending $378 million and supporting more than 4,000 jobs. In 2023, Alaska鈥檚 cruise industry drew nearly 1.7 million passengers to the region鈥攚ith no signs of slowing down in 2024. The 2023-launched Southeast Alaska Birding Trail app was designed to highlight these birding opportunities in Southeast, which "would add welcome diversity to an economy that land managers and locals seek to shift away from dependence on extraction-based industries," reads a story about the app recently published in 探花精选 Magazine.

The Planet and Bird Walk project has received funding from the Juneau Community Foundation's Blackwell Fund, Douglas-Dornan Foundation, and donors to the Marie Drake Planetarium and Juneau 探花精选 Society.

For the launch, Della Rosa and Wright have been discussing a party on Summer Solstice. Della Rosa has been kicking around the idea of folks getting a sticker that says, 鈥淚 walked the Planet and Bird Walk at Twin Lakes鈥濃攐r something similar.

So if you鈥檙e in Juneau this summer, get off Uranus and check out the Planet and Bird Walk at Twin Lakes.