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There was a time when I thought each bird species had its own individual song. Then I found out that there was this vocalization called a ‘call,’ so I thought each bird species had its own individual song (but just the males) and individual call. But then, somewhere along the time I saw my first Common Raven, I realized that not every bird species sang, some just called.
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For a second time in a month, we have a new double India Pale Ale featuring a species of bird famous for its appearance on the classic vintage Guinness advertisements drawn by artist John Gilroy in the 1930s and ‘40s. Two weeks ago, it was a pantless thunder goose – er, ostrich. This week’s avian star – with two appearing on the can of the Canopy 2 Double India Pale Ale by The Warbler Brewery of Delmar , New York – is the toucan, the most famous member of Gilroy’s advertising stable – er, aviary
I settled into the wooden rocking chair on my parents’ porch at about 8 in the morning, early for some but hopelessly late for most birders. Taking a sip of coffee, I knew I had none of my usual birding accoutrements with me – no binoculars, no bird list, no field guide. In fact, if I am being 100% honest, I was in my pajamas. But for a week of mornings during a trip to Maine, none of that bothered me, because I was on the lookout for only one species: the American Goldfinch.
Balangshan is a mountainous area in Sichuan complete with a pass at an altitude of 4500 meters. And it is a great place for birding. China’s massive investment in infrastructure has indirectly benefited birders. Two sections of the old road – one short one at a lower altitude, one longer one including the mountain pass – are no longer part of the main traffic route, having been replaced by tunnels.
Shorebirds – or “shorbs” for the cuteness factor (as if that needed any enhancement) – remain one of the most fascinating families of birds for me. There is something about the challenge in identification, the mysticism of the more you look, the more you see. Add to that their incredulous migration facilitated by physiological capabilities we can barely imagine.
Weekends are like opinions: everyone has one, but you usually need to go online to find people who want to hear about yours. The same analogy applies to bird sightings, but here we are, so let’s hear what you saw this weekend! This is about the time of year American Goldfinches look their sharpest, especially when artfully staged atop one of my purple coneflowers.
Weekends are like opinions: everyone has one, but you usually need to go online to find people who want to hear about yours. The same analogy applies to bird sightings, but here we are, so let’s hear what you saw this weekend! This is about the time of year American Goldfinches look their sharpest, especially when artfully staged atop one of my purple coneflowers.
We have always known that Pied Oystercatchers nest in the same areas that Sand Goannas roam. We have often suspected that the Sand Goannas would steal eggs as a food source from the Pied Oystercatcher nests if they found them. There have been occasions over the years where it looks like it may have happened, but never a lot of substantial evidence. During this last week we went to check on the two pairs of Pied Oystercatchers between the Surf Club and Gantheaume Point.
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Those infinitely patient saints who read all my ramblings know that over the past year I have been obsessed with the gradual disappearance of Mexico’s second-largest lake, Lake Cuitzeo, just north of my home city of Morelia. This lake, with a surface area of up to 150 square miles in good years, is my go-to site for dozens of waterfowl and shorebird species, so I take its health personally.
Nordmann’s Greenshank on the Cairns Esplanade [Adrian Walsh]. Down here in Australia one can be a birder for a long time without experiencing a proper twitch. Now by a ‘proper twitch’ I mean chasing a rarity or a vagrant and going [or being] an I.D.I.O.T [Incredible Distance In Ornithological Travel]. The main reason is that, unlike the Northern Hemisphere where bird migration is rife such that rarities appear relatively commonly, Australia has far less migration and thus records rarities far
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