December 14th 2022


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LPC At Large Field Biologist, Rachel Ford, builds signs to help protect nesting loons in June.

Pemigewasset Biologist, Taylor Tewksbury, floats a sign to protect nesting loons on Winnisquam Lake in June.

Sunapee Region Biologist, Phil Keefe, releases a rescued loon onto Mountainview Lake in June.

North Country Biologist, Jack Fogarty, collects eggshells from a nest on Back Lake after a successful hatch in July.

Outreach Intern, Kaila Hodges, holds a loon chick during a night of banding on Lake Wicwas.

Lakes Region East Biologist, Emma Purinton, and Volunteer and Outreach Biologist, Caroline Hughes, band a young loon rescued from Lake Winnipesaukee before it is released.

Senior Biologist, John Cooley, rescues an iced-in loon from Kezar Lake last Tuesday.

A Future for Loons

The 2022 Loon Preservation Committee Annual Appeal


*If you have already received and responded to LPC's 2022 Annual Appeal mailing, thank you for your support and please disregard this email.

Dear Caroline,


Life as a Loon Preservation Committee field biologist can land you in some strange situations. LPC’s North Country biologist, Jack Fogarty, found himself in a rocky stream late one night this summer with a net in his hands and a flashlight between his knees trying to find and rescue a seven-week old loon chick that had been washed over the dam on Pontook Reservoir. It wasn’t his first attempt to save this loon, but he persisted in his seemingly hopeless task because he was determined not to let the plaintively wailing chick spend another night alone. Neither the loon nor Jack were alone for long: the chick was reunited with its parents by the end of that night, and every one of LPC’s field biologists had a loon rescue story of their own before the summer was over.


Our rescue work started early this year, with 10 loons in January who were unable to fly from the last small pool of open water on Winnipesaukee captured and safely released to the ocean. We have rescued a record 36 loons this year to date – and there will be more before the year is done. Those rescues are perhaps the most dramatic part of LPC’s work to recover our threatened loon population, but they are just the tip of the iceberg: LPC broke records across the board this year in its groundbreaking management and outreach to ensure a good year for New Hampshire’s loons.


Hope, Emily Dickinson wrote, is the thing with feathers. That hope is LPC’s business, and we foster it through sound science, respect for loons and for people, and the earnest application of care and lessons learned to ensure a bright future for loons. Our LPC members and friends have helped sustain that work in the past. I hope you will support our good work in the coming year with a year-end gift to LPC. I promise that we will put it to good use to help these birds that we love. Thank you for your care for loons, and I wish you and your family a peaceful and joyful Holiday Season.



Yours sincerely,






Harry Vogel

Senior Biologist/Executive Director   


P.S. You may click here here to make a tax-deductible gift to support LPC’s monitoring, research, management, and outreach to protect loons. Thank you!

Please click here to sustain our work for loons with a gift to our 2022 Annual Appeal. Thank you for your support!

JOIN LPC’s LOON LEADERSHIP CIRCLE

 

The Loon Preservation Committee has long relied on the strength and support of our grassroots network of donors, who have provided invaluable financial backing for LPC year after year. In 2021, the Loon Leadership Circle was formed to honor and thank the many supporters who have donated $1,000 or more during a single year.

 

LPC invites YOU to join the Loon Leadership Circle today! Gifts at this level may be single gifts or multiple gifts totaling $1,000 or more. If you prefer, you may split your donation into monthly gifts through our website https://loon.org/donate/. 

 

For more information about the Loon Leadership Circle please contact Betsy McCoy at 603-476-5666.

Loon Preservation Committee | 603-476-LOON (5666) | www.loon.org


Loon Center Winter Hours: Open Thursday-Saturday, 9 am to 5 pm

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The Loon Preservation Committee is dedicated to restoring and maintaining a healthy population of loons throughout New Hampshire; monitoring the health and productivity of loon populations as sentinels of environmental quality; and promoting a greater understanding of loons and the natural world.