Nature & Discovery.
The Holiday Beach Migration Observatory is the working core of Amherstburg's nature-interpretation infrastructure — a non-profit raptor banding station founded in 1986, operating Lake Station and Marsh Station programs alongside the 12-metre Hawk Tower donated by Detroit Edison in 1988. Big Creek Conservation Area's adjoining marsh adds a second IBA on the same Lake Erie funnel, designated by Carolinian Canada as "one of the largest wetlands in Essex County."
The brief.
Spring and fall migration are the windows; species turnover is the draw. HBMO's tower operations run through November 30 each fall, with the Festival of Hawks anchoring mid-September.
Holiday Beach Conservation Area's Important Bird Area designation came in 2000; Big Creek's adjoining IBA is on the same flyway. Day use at Holiday Beach runs 6 a.m. – 8 p.m. mid-April through Thanksgiving via an automated gate.
The site sits roughly 15 minutes' drive from downtown Amherstburg, not within walking distance — plan for a drive even though the address is technically within the town limits.
3. places.
- 01
Holiday Beach Conservation Area
Globally significant IBA; HBMO operates the 12-metre Hawk Tower with cumulative count over 3.86 million raptors since 1974. Tower operations run through November 30.
- 02
Big Creek Conservation Area
Adjoining IBA marsh; Carolinian Canada describes it as "one of the largest wetlands in Essex County."
- 03
Detroit River
The only International Wildlife Refuge in North America runs through the river; staging waters for waterfowl on both sides of the international border.
Today's read.
Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.