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Cedar Beach is located off Main Bay View Road on the hog's neck in Southold.  At the south end of the parking area begins the marsh area.  I live close by, so I go there throughout the year.  In fall/winter, I go for ducks & loons, in spring and fall for migrating shorebirds.  In summer I go to experience terns and gulls.  To my mind the late summer & early fall are the best times to visit; you will find many species of shorebirds and waders
As you pass through the gated barrier, at the southern end of the parking lot, there are stone/sand pathways.  As you walk into the area, on the right, there are 2 small ponds where I’ve seen Least Sandpipers. Bearing to the right brings you to a small finger of creek.  Along the shore is a good place to set up a scope to view the exposed flats & edges.  (Along that section of the creek are some of Cornell’s marine experiments.)  Along that shore is a good spot to see fiddler crabs.  Scan the cedar trees for sparrows, finches and mockingbirdsWaders may be on the opposite shores and in the grasses.  As you head back along the pathways to the beach, walk down the beach for a better view of the active Osprey nest.  All around are gulls, terns, cormorants or ducks, depending on the time of year.  Parts of the beach, usually the southwestern most section, are closed off for the nesting terns and one or two pairs of Piping Plovers.
Also nesting are Ospreys. This season, 2005, had three successful fledglings.  In recent years, Willets have nested here and seeing Willets perched in Cedar trees is always amusing!  Mallards, geese, swan & possibly Green Herons nest here also.  And in one surprising sighting, I observed a Clapper Rail with 2 chicks running behind!  Song Sparrows love the cedars and often can be seen and heard singing there.  Goldfinch, Yellow Warblers, Prairie Warblers and Common Yellowthroat are also Cedar Beach nesters.

For me, the fun begins mid/late summer when the shore birds return.  For whatever reason, fall migration is more active with more species in larger numbers than in the spring.  One mid-August day, I had 51 species, with 17 shorebirds and waders!  Amazing!  The fall migration brings in other sparrows & warblers as well, and can be rewarding through September and into October.  An added bonus is that, at this time of year, the marsh is visually beautiful with the heather in bloom, the grasses turning to fall colors, beach plums & rose hips.
In late summer/early fall, when the Ospreys have fledged and the nesting barriers have been taken down, you are able to walk the whole shore to the inlet channel.  This point attracts various gulls, terns, and shorebirds (plovers, turnstones and sanderlings).  It is, perhaps, a half-mile walk to the channel.  In the grasses and on the flats you can see a variety of peeps, herons, egrets, yellowlegs, short-billed dowitches and whimbrel.

Cedar Beach is surrounded by woods, yards & gardens from which emanate sounds of non-beach birds;
wren, cardinal, oriole, woodpecker, catbird, robin, chickadee, titmouse, jays and many others.  Also, as in all marshes, there is a lot of non-bird life going on as well; so be on the lookout for turtles, fish, frogs, crabs and colorful dragonflies. 

Views from Cedar Beach; to the east is Shelter Island, to the south the view stretches to the South Fork.  The peninsula jutting out into the Bay is Jessup’s Neck (part of the Morton’s Wildlife Refuge).
So, whatever time of year you can go to Cedar Beach; whether it’s winter for ducks (& blowing out the mental cob-webs), spring & fall for migration, or summer for birds and a swim, there is always something to see and experience!

Good Birding, Jody
CEDAR BEACH
SOUTHOLD
Birding on the North Fork with Jody
3rd in the occassional series of
places to bird, as Jody wanders
the North Fork in search of birds!

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CLICK HERE FOR MAP
OF CEDAR BEACH
Directions: CLICK HERE FOR GOOGLE MAP TO CEDAR BEACH
From the west take Route 25 (Main Road) to the town of Southold, approx. a mile past the Southold Town Police Station make a right onto South Harbor Road, make the next left onto Bay Water Avenue.  At the end of the road, bear right onto Main Bay View Road.  Stay on that road until you reach a four-way stop sign and continue forward into Cedar Beach Road.  Bear right into parking lot and continue to south end to park. 
From the east, as you pass through the Village of Southold, bear left on Route 25 past two churches (left and right side of road).  Bear left onto Main Bay View Road; pass a gas station on the right.  Continue on Main Bay View Road as it curves left to the beach (3.3 miles).  At four-way stop continue forward onto Cedar Beach Road and bear right into parking lot.  Park at south end of lot. 
Note: There are no facilities (bathrooms or lifeguards.


Cedar Beach is one of the only marsh areas with exposed low tide mud flats accessible from dry land.  Not being a boat person, this fact is important to me because, laugh if you will, I’ve been known to get nauseous in a kayak!  Cedar Beach is now in the hands of Suffolk County, with Cornell Cooperative Extension utilizing sections for marine research and education, as well as a summer day camp for children.  At the entrance, a boat ramp is available with access to the bay.
FOR A FULL LIST OF BIRDS FOUND
AT CEDAR BEACH,
CLICK HERE