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Grab your warm clothes, a scope, binoculars and a camera before you stop in at the Balde Eagle Festival in the Grand Coulee Dam Area during February. Even if you can't make it to the festival, up to 300 Bald Eagles winter in the Grand Coulee Dam Area from November through March so you are sure to catch a glimpse. Make sure to visit Othello in late March to catch the three-day Sandhill Crane Festival. Take a crane viewing tour or a special tour of Columbia National Wildlife Refuge during the festival.
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Birding opportunities flourish almost anywhere along the byway. A choice place for birders to start along the corridor is Columbia National Wildlife Refuge. Soda and Migraine Lakes, Crab Creek Access, McManamon Lake and other sites throughout the refuge are home to Canada geese and mallards, tundra swans, peregrine falcons, belted kingfishers, soras, Virginia rails, loons, pelicans, and more. The variety of the birds in the refuge will astound you.
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Birding adventures also lie outside of the refuge. Stop at O'Sullivan Dam to see a variety of waterfowl. Get a glimpse of rare Glaucous and Glaucous-winged Gulls in the spring and American white pelicans and ospreys in the summer. Explore Potholes State Park to see Lewis's woodpeckers, black-headed grosbeaks, red-tailed hawks and other birds. Wherever you decide to stop along the byway, birding opportunities are sure to arise as more than half of the states 365 species of birds can be spotted along Coulee Corridor Scenic Byway.
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