Jump to Birding Sites by Location

The following featured birding sites and geographic breakdowns are based on locations featured in the book A Guide to the Birds of Lancaster County last published by the club in 1991. The sites mentioned in this section represent just a handful of the more than 100 birding hotspots in the county. Please view the eBird hotspot listing for the county for a complete list of birding locations in the county.

Birding Locations in Northern Lancaster County

Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area

The Middle Creek WMA is located along the Lebanon-Lancaster County line about one mile south of Kleinfeltersville. It is an area set aside by the Pennsylvania Game Commission for the protection, propagation, management, preservation, and controlled harvest of wildlife. This area of slightly more than 5,000 acres is comprised of: a 1,700 acre oak-hickory forested ridge; a 400 acre shallow lake; 70 acres of potholes, ponds, and smaller impoundments; 1,300 acres of cultivated farmland; and several picnic areas. The remaining portions have been kept in an undisturbed condition.

There are several parking lots and a boat launch area which provide opportunities to view the large lake. Many of the potholes, ponds, and impoundments can be viewed from the roads that cross through or border the area. There are eight hiking trails of varying difficulty that provide access to the wooded areas. A Visitor Center is open to the public on Tuesday thru Sunday. It provides free nature displays, a contour model of the area, and a place to purchase Pennsylvania Game Commission publications.

Hammer Creek and Speedwell

The Hammer Creek Valley is a collection of waterways, pastures, and woodlands about five miles long and a quarter mile wide, an area with a variety of habitats easily acccessible to the motoring birder. The valley is dominated by the Pennsylvania Fish Commission’s Speedwell Lake, a man-made impoundment a little over a mile long and an average of two hundred yards wide.

Although the main habitats of interest to birders are the lake and the Hammer Creek, the adjacent overgrown pastures and woodlands can also be productive. The pastures are in various stages of plant succession and therefore offer a variety of bird species. Some are grazed closely, but the majority have weeds, bushes, tangles and trees of varying sizes.

The Lancaster County Park system maintains a park along Hammer Creek. Access to the trails in this park is found at a small parking lot just to the north of the Speedwell Forge Road where it crosses Hammer Creek at the far end of the lake.

Furnace Hills (State Game Lands 156) & Seglock Run

The Furnace Hills lie along US 322 between PA 501 and PA 72 in the northern part of the county. Secondary deciduous woods, some of which are state gamelands, spread over much of the area. There are a few farms and residential areas interspersed. The two areas for the best birding opportunities are the State Gamelands 156 and Pumping Station Road, and the Seglock Run area.

Northern Susquehanna Area

Birding Locations in Central Lancaster County

Lancaster County Central Park

Amish Farmland

Rock Hill and Safe Harbor Dam

Washington Boro

A chain of wooded islands and interconnecting mudflats (the Conojohela Flats) lies just offshore from the small settlement of Washington Boro. Here the river is wide and calm. Its bayward journey is momentarily slowed by the Safe Harbor Dam, located a few miles downriver. Regardless of the season, these river islands provide some of the county’s most unusual birding. Many of the recently-added birds to the county’s list have been discovered here.

Birding Locations in Southern Lancaster County

Located in the southeast portion of Lancaster County, this 90-acre park (part of the County Park System), was named after the late Theodore A. Parker III, an internationally-known ornithologist who grew up in Lancaster County. The site is nestled within a glen created by Stewart Run. The tract includes impressive flora in the spring and abundant wildlife.