North

Power boat cruises through Yukon's 'Swan Haven'

Marsh Lake resident Peter Heebink says something should be done to protect the migrating trumpeter swans from more disruptions.

Nearby resident watched boat disturb massive flocks, twice

Swan Haven on Marsh Lake typically sees thousands of migrating trumpeter swans and other birds stop to rest and feed before continuing their spring migration north. (Ingrid Wilcox)

Yukon's "Swan Haven" wasn't much of one this weekend, according to a nearby resident who saw the birds scared off — twice  by a power boat.

"It seemed like the person was just kind of cruising around in the bay," said Peter Heebink, who watched it happen from his lakeside property on Saturday and again on Sunday. 

'It's a huge disruption,' said nearby resident Peter Heebink, who watched the birds flee the boat. 'They need that shallow water there for feeding.' (CBC)

Hundreds, even thousands, of trumpeter swans gather each April in the shallow water of M'Clintock Bay on Yukon's Marsh Lake. They typically spend a couple of weeks resting and feeding before continuing their spring migration to northern Yukon and Alaska. 

​This year, the swans have arrived about two weeks earlier than usual, and in greater numbers. By Saturday, there were nearly 2,000 trumpeter swans counted at Swan Haven. 

Then the boat came up river and into the bay.

"All of a sudden, you hear the sound of the wing beats, and all 2,000 of them got up and moved out to the point there, well above the river," Heebink said. "They're very sensitive to anything in the water."

Heebink said the birds eventually made their way back to the bay, but when the boat returned on Sunday some of the birds had apparently had enough.

"This time we noticed that 300 or 400 got up and went north, which is a bad sign. Because two days in a row of being disrupted, they move further north — who knows — to the next open body of water," he said. 

The swans are earlier, and more numerous this year. On Saturday, nearly 2,000 had been counted. The numbers typically peak in about mid-April. (CBC)

"They spend maybe two to three weeks staging here and feeding, and that is very critical. So something should be done about it."

It's not clear what might be done, but Heebink suggests signage aimed at boaters entering the bay from the Lewes River, or even pressing charges against the boat owner.

According to Yukon's Wildlife Act, it is considered an offence to operate "a vehicle or a boat in a manner that might reasonably be expected to harass wildlife."

Yukon's Environment department has not yet responded to CBC's requests for comment, nor has the government-run Swan Haven Interpretive Centre yet posted its daily swan count for Sunday or Monday.

With files from Vic Istchenko