Whidbey’s lone swan gets a partner

A second trumpeter swan showed up about four days before Christmas.

A historic event has taken place in the Cultus Bay wetlands of South Whidbey, with the arrival of a second trumpeter swan. The large bird, as yet unnamed and of undetermined sex, just showed up about four days before Christmas, joining the previously lone swan living in the wetlands since 2019.

“It’s very exciting,” nature photographer David Welton of Clinton said. “The two swans have been inseparable. We may see a mating pair of birds whose species was almost extinct in the 1930s.”

Welton said he couldn’t believe it when the second swan mysteriously appeared in the 10-acre wetlands of Glendale Valley. He explained the bird could have come from Skagit Valley, where many swans spend the winter, or from as far away as Southeastern Oregon or British Columbia. On Whidbey, the large birds have no direct predators.

There is concern the uncharacteristically cold weather recently may endanger the swans. They have difficulty feeding on submerged grasses when their water is frozen. It’s believed they are sheltering themselves until the weather warms.

The first lone swan, known informally as Zeus or Waldo, arrived in fall 2019 as an apparent juvenile and showed male territorial behavior such as chasing Canada geese. Welton and other observers, such as wetlands specialist Dyanne Sheldon of Clinton, are hopeful for the development of a swan population on Whidbey.

Trumpeter swans are protected by federal law. The population was threatened by hunting and loss of habitat in the middle of last century. The national Trumpeter Swan Society, founded in 1968, led much of the protection and re-population work. The swans are returning to their previous historic habitat in a band from New Hampshire through the Ohio Valley, across the upper U.S. and Southern Canada, and into the lower south coast of Alaska.

In an online story from 2020, Welton quoted the Concord, New Hampshire Monitor newspaper as saying trumpeter swans indicate “clean waters and high-quality habitat that supports countless plant and animal species.”

The swans have a six-foot wingspan and can weigh as much as 30 pounds. They need up to 300 feet of starting distance to become airborne.

After the wetland water thaws, the trumpeter swan pair might be visible from Cultus Bay Road, between Catron and French Roads. Watchers must stay on the road. The land is private property, closed to visitors.