
Many are published authors of works on
natural history subjects, and all are accomplished at finding
and identifying birds and other wildlife, as well placing those
creatures in a broader ecological context. Above all, our
leaders specialize in making participants feel at home,
welcoming questions and ensuring that everyone on the tour is
comfortable and safe.
Mike Anderson
Mike Anderson is Program Director at New
Jersey Audubon Society’s Scherman-Hoffman Wildlife Sanctuary.
Mike has traveled extensively both at home and abroad; included
in his work experience is time as a whitewater river guide in
Tanzania. Mike led our last trip to Belize in 2004.
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Scott Barnes
Scott Barnes began birding at the age of twelve and has been
an avid naturalist ever since. Encouragement and learning
came from his parents and many birders, including members of the
Urner Ornithological Club and staff of New Jersey Audubon
Society. An interest in travel and natural history has led
him from Gambell Alaska through the desert southwest to the Dry
Tortugas of Florida in search of birds and other wildlife.
He began birding at Sandy Hook, where he is the Senior Naturalist
for the Sandy Hook Bird Observatory. Scott is the Region 3
Editor for Records of New Jersey Birds, compiles the Sandy Hook
Christmas Bird Count, co-leads pelagic trips with See Life
Paulagics, and has been a member of the New Jersey
Bird Records Committee for six years. Scott has led tours for the NJ Audubon
Travel Program for over five years, and is particularly
interested in migration, vagrancy, seabirds and shorebirds.
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Pete Bacinski
Pete Bacinski grew up in Lyndhurst, NJ
with an interest in natural history since early childhood. He
attended Pace University in New York City receiving a B.S. in
Biology followed by M.S. in Biology, specialization entomology
and an MBA in Marketing at Fairleigh Dickinson University. Pete
began volunteering for New Jersey Audubon in 1971, leading his
first field trip for the organization in 1973. He has been a
tour and workshop leader for over 25 years, as well as a member
of three winning World Series of Birding teams. Pete was a
member of the New Jersey Bird Records Committee for eleven years
and was a regional field notes editor for Records of New Jersey
birds for eight years. He established and directs the Sandy
Hook Bird Observatory for NJAS and is co-compiler and voice of
the Voice of New Jersey Audubon rare bird alert for the state of
New Jersey. Pete has also been a steering committee member and
regional coordinator for the Birds of New Jersey atlas project
and currently writes a weekly column in the Newark Star Ledger
entitled “Seen in New Jersey.” Pete’s favorite natural
history interests are birds, butterflies, wildflowers, ferns,
insects, “herps”, and mammals. Other interests include
classical music, American History, audio books, weather, public
speaking and photography. Pete currently resides in
Atlantic Highlands.
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Pete is Director of the Cape May Bird Observatory and Vice
President for Natural History Information. Called by the
Wall Street Journal "The Bard of Birding" he is author of twelve
books (including PETE DUNNE'S FIELD GUIDE COMPANION and PETE
DUNNE ON BIRDING) and has written columns and articles for every
major birding and natural history publication. Since 1976
when he served as the first hawk counter in Cape May, Pete has
brought thousands of people to greater awareness and
understanding of the natural world. He has led tours to
Antarctica, Australia, the Bearing Sea, Kenya, Ecuador, and
Panama. He has specialized in teaching birding workshops
since 1979. He and his wife Linda live in Mauricetown, New
Jersey. |
Don Freiday
Don Freiday is Director of Birding Programs at Cape May Bird
Observatory. A New Jersey native, Don’s degree in Natural
Resource Management and Applied Ecology is from Rutgers
University, where for several years he taught Wildlife Ecology
to undergraduates. Don has worked in the field of nature
interpretation and/or wildlife biology for over 20 years, during
which time he has led numerous nature tours to Arizona,
Colorado, California, Montana, Texas, and Wyoming, among
others. He has also studied wildlife in Mexico, Costa Rica and Kenya. Don
was a regional coordinator of the New Jersey Breeding Bird
Atlas, and is a member of the NJ Bird Records Committee. Don is
an author and columnist on nature, with two books to his
credit: A Precious Place: a Naturalist Explores New Jersey, and
Wild Journeys: Migration in New Jersey, which he co-authored
with Brian Vernachio and Dale Rosselet.
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Mark Garland
Mark Garland is an Associate Naturalist for the Cape May Bird
Observatory. He lives in West Cape May and works as a freelance
naturalist. He has held the position of Senior Naturalist for
the Cape May Bird Observatory and
also for the Audubon Naturalist Society, based in the
Washington, D.C., area. He has led eco-tours for various
organizations for twenty-five years, leading well over 150 trips
to date, along with countless field trips within the
mid-Atlantic states. He is author of Watching Nature: A
Mid-Atlantic Natural History and is the Nature Editor for
the Metro Connection program on WAMU, Washington's public radio
station. Mark has led many trips to Costa
Rica, teaming with noted Costa Rican naturalist Charlie Gómez on
numerous occasions. The autumn 2008 Costa Rica eco-tour
will be his 28th trip to this tropical paradise. |
Sean
Grace
Sean Grace has been with NJAS since 2005, and is currently the Sanctuary Director of the Plainsboro
Preserve. His life long interest in the natural world
began as a child in Massachusetts, and he enjoys sharing that
passion with others.
In 1999 he completed the Professional Residency in Environmental
Education, a Graduate Certification offered at the
Teton Science School in Jackson, Wyoming. He then worked as a
wildlife biologist tracking moose, coyote, and elk in different
studies in the mountains surrounding Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Sean completed
his MS in Environmental
Studies at the New Jersey School of Conservation, with a concentration
in Environmental Education through
Montclair State University. In 2001, Sean became Director for
Wildlife Expeditions in Wyoming and trained a team of wildlife
biologists that offered educational programs to the public on
the wildlife and habitats of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
before relocating to New Jersey.
Linda Mack
Linda's interest in birding began twenty
years ago on a Cape May Weekend and has been hooked ever since.
She is a member of the New Jersey Audubon Society's Board of
Directors, an Associate Naturalist, and Co-Bookstore Manager at
Sandy Hook Bird Observatory. She is a past President, Program
Chair, and Conservation Chair for Monmouth County Audubon
Society. Linda has a special interest in seabirds and other
coastal species; she co-leads pelagic birding trips off New
Jersey with See Life Paulagics.
Linda has traveled extensively
throughout North America studying birds and natural history,
with multiple trips to Arizona, California, Florida, Montana,
North Carolina,
Texas, and Utah. Her infectious enthusiasm and willingness
to share knowledge is well known. She has co-led NJAS tours to
Minnesota and North Dakota, Nebraska, New Mexico, the Rio Grande
Valley and Big Bend in Texas, and is a regular leader
on SHBO's long weekend trips to coastal coastal Massachusetts, the
Adirondack Mountains, and Bombay Hook, as well as the Cape May
Spring and Fall Weekends.
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Michael Pollock
Michael Pollock is a teacher-naturalist and habitat
restoration specialist with NJAS's Scherman-Hoffman Wildlife
Sanctuary where he conducts education programs, including a
lecture series and fieldtrips to examine New Jersey Geology.
Prior to moving to New Jersey in 1999, he lived in Oregon
where he earned a degree in Geology at Portland State
University. Michael has long been interested in the
relationship between plants and related ecosystems, and the
associated bedrock geology. While in Oregon, he led
week-long college natural history classes in the Oregon High
Desert and Elderhostel classes in birding and geology in the
San Juan Islands of Washington. He has also conducted
geology and natural history tours throughout the
tectonically active areas of the Pacific Northwest. He has
co-led two successful NJAS Nature Tours back to the Pacific
Northwest in 2005 and 2007. |
Karla Risdon
Karla Risdon is Director of the Weis
Ecology Center in Ringwood. She began at Weis in 1991 after
working for the State Park Service conducting interpretive
programs and at two residential facilities conducting
environmental education programs. Karla received her B.S. in
Biology and Environmental Science, Minor in German, and her M.S.
in Environmental Education. Growing up in rural Sussex
County, Karla was always interested in the natural
world from childhood, but she didn’t begin birding seriously until after
becoming involved with NJAS.
Over the
years Karla has traveled to and birded in Alabama, Florida, the
Outer Banks, Maine, Montana, New Mexico, Washington and Wisconsin where she continues to
add to her natural history background. Foreign birding
destinations include Belize, the Dominican Republic and Ecuador.
Karla co-authored NJ WATERS: A
watershed Approach to Teaching the Ecology of Regional Systems
with Dale Rosselet, Brian Vernachio, Mike Anderson, and Scott
Barnes.
Dale Rosselet
Dale Rosselet has been with New Jersey
Audubon Society 1983. She has worked in the education
department as teacher naturalist, director of education, and
currently is New Jersey Audubon Society’s Vice-president for
Education. Dale is a New Jersey native, having grown up near
the Great Swamp in northern New Jersey and now resides in Cape
May County. She has been leading domestic and foreign tours for
New Jersey Audubon Society for the last 12 years. Domestic
tours led include South Florida and the Dry Tortugas, Texas (Rio
Grande Valley and Big Bend area), Washington State, and
Montana. She has also led tours to Churchill and Manitoba, Costa
Rica, Venezuela, Panama, Peru, and Mexico.
In addition to the above, Dale is
co-author of the Society’s teacher education curriculum guides;
Bridges to the Natural World, New Jersey WATERS: Watershed
Approach to Teaching the Ecology of Regional Systems, and the
Society’s newest book Wild Journeys: Migration in New Jersey.
She has written for New Jersey Audubon as well as co-authored
articles with her husband, Kevin Karlson, for Wild Bird
magazine.
Patrick Scheuer
Patrick is currently the Teacher-Naturalist at Lorrimer
Sanctuary in Franklin Lakes, NJ. Growing up in the shadow of
the famous Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvania, his interest
in birding and natural history began at an early age. He
carried this interest with him to Penn State University where he
earned a degree in Earth Sciences. After completing school
Patrick worked as a naturalist and guide for several years in
the Pocono Mountains before coming to New Jersey Audubon
Society. In addition to birding, Patrick’s interests
include fishing, backpacking, boating, and gardening.
Brian Vernachio
Brian Vernachio is the former Director of New Jersey Audubon
Society's Plainsboro Preserve, and former co-coordinator of the
Eco-Travel program. He currently teaches Biology and
Environmental Science at Toms River High School. A New
Jersey native, Brian's degree is in Environmental Studies from
Stockton College of New Jersey. Brian has worked in the
field of nature interpretation and/or wildlife biology for over
20 years, during which time he has participated in numerous
biological counts, resource inventories and environmental
education initiatives. He has traveled extensively,
leading tours for NJAS as well as for his own enjoyment.
Brian co-authored two NJAS publications, including NJ WATERS:
A Watershed Approach to Teaching the Ecology of Regional Systems,
as well as Wild Journeys: Migration in New Jersey.
In his free time you will often find him wandering the sandy
roads of his native Pine Barrens. When not leading tours
or teaching, Brian spends time with his family and enjoys
birding, fishing, hunting, magic and cooking.

For tour itineraries, to register, or for more
information contact:
NJAS Eco-Travel at: (908)-204-8998
9 Hardscrabble Road
Bernardsville, NJ 07924
or email
travel@njaudubon.org.
If you are not a member and would like to become one, consider
Joining New Jersey Audubon Society.
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