There are now many ways to see what is happening in the local enviroment in more or less real time. This includes weather at various levels of details, tides and of course birds. Below are a number of sources for this information from individual stations at homes to offshore bouys. Given that some of this information is unedited, care should be taken in its use.
Birds - clicking on the links below will bring you to maps displaying recent bird identifications form stations in Beverly. These stations use technology similar to the Merlin smart phone device but on in a fixed location.
Bird Weather/PUC Stations - a pioneering visualization platform that harnesses the BirdNET artificial neural network to monitor bird vocalizations globally through 2000 active audio stations (and growing)
Terra Listens - an AI-powered listening and radio monitoring device that streams nature sounds, identifies bird calls using Cornell's BirdNET, and detects wildlife radio tags to support conservation. Go to the live map and navigate to the local stations.
Weather - various sources of weather information in and around Beverly. Aside from temprature and percipitation which are important to determining if you can get out birding, wind is perhaps a more important variable in determining where to bird. An easterly wind in the winter will bring offshore birds closer to shore while a southeast wind in the spring will push migrating warblers and other species to the coast where they may stop.
CoCoRaHS Precipitation - the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network. CoCoRaHS is a unique, non-profit, community-based network of volunteers of all ages and backgrounds working together to measure and map precipitation (rain, hail and snow).