Dave Feliz calls it “the bird highway in the sky.”
Feliz works for California Department of Fish and Game, as area manager for the Yolo Bypass Wildlife Area, and he’s talking about the Pacific Flyway.
Millions of migratory birds travel the same route every year, called the Pacific Flyway, stretching from the north slope of the Brooks Range in Alaska down to the tip of South America. An important stopover for all of those birds on the Flyway is the Central Valley, and the Yolo wildlife area in particular. Traveling south in the winter, it’s the first large area for landing that’s not frozen. The Sacramento Delta, flat and wet and full of reeds, provides lots of food and shelter. And so do the thousands of acres of rice fields in the Central Valley.
The Yolo Bypass area is actually a flood-control zone, a mix of native vegetation and stubble from harvested rice fields. So it serves many uses, and has many “stakeholders” working together – farmers, county engineers, wildlife biologists, state and local governments.