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The Catskills, New York

Birding in The Catskills, New York

The Catskills sit on the Atlantic Flyway, one of North America's four great bird migration corridors, and the result is a birding calendar that delivers something genuinely different in every season. Winter brings bald eagle concentrations along the Delaware and Beaverkill corridors that most visitors have no idea exist — dozens of birds visible from the road in bare sycamores above open water from December through February. Spring migration in April and May moves warblers and raptors through the ridge forests, and fall reverses the flow from August through October with hawks streaming south along the same ridgelines that turn gold beneath them.

Right Now (May)
Good Season
Great conditions with fewer crowds.
12-Month Calendar
PeakGoodOkaySkip
Best months at a glance
January
Peak
February
Peak
March
Good
April
Good
May
Good
June
Okay
July
Okay
August
Okay
September
Good
October
Good
November
Good
December
Peak
About this activity

The experience runs from accessible to serious depending on how deep you want to go — a first-timer with binoculars leaves with a list worth talking about, and dedicated birders find enough here to plan multiple trips around different seasons. For a region this close to New York City, the diversity and the quiet in which you find it are both genuinely surprising.

Conditions

Weather & Conditions

MonthHigh / LowRain DaysConditions
Jan32° / 13°F12Peak
Feb36° / 16°F10Peak
Mar46° / 25°F12Good
Apr58° / 35°F13Good
May69° / 45°F13Good
Jun77° / 54°F13Okay
Jul82° / 59°F12Okay
Aug80° / 57°F11Okay
Sep72° / 49°F10Good
Oct60° / 37°F11Good
Nov48° / 28°F12Good
Dec36° / 18°F12Peak
Locations

Where to Go

Hub Town
Woodstock

The cultural center — galleries, restaurants, bohemian energy.

Mountain Village
Phoenicia

The outdoor base camp. Esopus Creek tubing, fly shops, the Diner.

Hamlet
Accord

Pastoral and quiet. Where Inness is.

Village
Livingston Manor

Western Catskills — fly fishing country and the craft brewery scene.

Trout Town USA
Roscoe

Junction Pool — where the Beaverkill meets the Willowemoc.

Mountain Town
Hunter

Hunter Mountain ski area. Kaaterskill Falls nearby.

Reserve
Catskill Park

700,000 acres of protected forest. The backbone of it all.

Natural Feature
Kaaterskill Falls

New York's tallest two-stage waterfall. Peak flow in spring.

Fly Fishing
Beaverkill River

The birthplace of American dry-fly fishing. Brown and rainbow trout.

River
Esopus Creek

Tubing, swimming, and trout fishing through the mountain corridor.

Swimming Hole
Peekamoose Blue Hole

The most coveted swimming hole in the Catskills. Cold, clear, worth it.

Natural Feature
Shawangunk Ridge

World-class rock climbing and ridge hiking on the Catskills' eastern edge.

Practical Intel

Know Before You Go

01
October books months in advance

Peak foliage weekends at Piaule, Inness, Wildflower Farms, and Troutbeck fill by May. If you want a top lodge in October, book in spring — not September. The color peaks around October 10–20 most years and the demand around it is genuine.

02
You need a car

Trailways buses reach Woodstock and Phoenicia, but that is where car-free travel ends. The trailheads, fishing access points, swimming holes, and most lodges are not walkable from town. Rideshare exists in Woodstock and essentially disappears everywhere else.

03
Weekdays are a different place

On weekends from May through October, Route 28 through Phoenicia moves slowly, the Phoenicia Diner has a line before 8am, and every trail with a named waterfall is busy by 10. Tuesday through Thursday the mountains are genuinely quiet. The experience is not the same.

Where to Stay

Wildist-vetted hotels for The Catskills, New York coming soon.