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If your neck is sore from being on a swivel this weekend, may I suggest swiveling with your hips to get through the rest of the month? If you’ve blogged about your weekend experience, you should include a link in your comment. How about you? What was your best bird of the weekend?
I have it on good authority that many of you have already ridden the roller coaster of this season’s migration madness and are now recovering from strained eyes, sore necks, and bloated lists. If you’ve blogged about your weekend experience, you should include a link in your comment. How about you?
The sun was shining, the grounds are beautiful, and I know a little bit more about art now so I could appreciate what we were looking at as something other than a jungle gym, though I was still sorely tempted to see if I could still climb those giant orange doohickeys.
When I look at all these changes condensed into one mesmerizing blog post, the differences seem staggering. Email lists, blogs, websites, forums, Facebook groups, and of course eBird (see below) has completely revolutionized the way birders get their business handled. Let’s get to it then. 2) The internet has changed everything.
New Content Marketing Objectives: First-Party Data Collection Cookie-Based Third-Party Data Isn’t Recovering If your client thinks data privacy is just a fad they can wait out, they’re sorely mistaken. According to a report by iab , 95% of data/advertising decision makers expect continued legislation and signal loss.
Alison Vilag’s “Extralimital” started out as an exceptional personal blog post about spotting a Common Swift while guiding birders on St. Some of these essays have been published before, mostly in literary magazines or limited distribution publications.
It is a very interesting read, and as I stated in the post I wrote on my blog , part of the team that wrote the plan is the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, one of the states proposing a Sandhill Crane slaughter. He and his mate were one of the few successful pairs in the whole eastern flock!
Plenty of other species stopped by, of course, but they were sorely outnumbered. If you’ve blogged about your weekend experience, you should include a link in your comment. A mundane weekend makes for mundane birds, so I had to settle for watching House Sparrows chew through my feeders. How about you?
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