This is intended as a way to let us stay more in touch through this time with less opportunity to get together in person. I encourage everyone who wishes to share their best bird sighting/find of the past week in the comments section below. All you need to do is click on the little Talk bubble symbol beside the title, leave your comment, and I’ll review for spam and it will be live. I believe once I’ve approved one of your comments, the rest will get up without my manual approval. Sorry about the delay in approving some of the comments. I got busy birding!
Last week in comments grosbeaks ruled, with both Evening and Black-headed Grosbeaks getting multiple votes.
This week as another great week of migration. Ken and I got east of the Cascades Friday and Saturday, and it’s hard to say which of the 26 FOY birds was my best. I guess I’ll go with the calling Flammulated Owl that was calling at the same time as a Western Screech Owl and Common Poorwills up Dry Creek Rd out of Wenas Creek Campground Friday night.
You will also find a link to the latest Bird Banter Podcast episode with Nate Swick of the ABA there too so you will be entertained while you drive to your next birding stop.
This is intended as a way to let us stay more in touch through this time with less opportunity to get together in person. I encourage everyone who wishes to share their best bird sighting/find of the past week in the comments section below. All you need to do is click on the little Talk bubble symbol beside the title, leave your comment, and I’ll review for spam and it will be live.
For me the best bird of the last week was a Sora. Will, Bruce, Peter and I did a Pierce County Big Day (also my birdathon) and while scoping for ducks and shorebirds at the Mountainview Cemetery Marsh a Sora called loudly and all four of us shouted “SORA” almost in unison. How about the rest of you ABCer’s?
ABC was privileged to host Blair Bernson on his inaugural presentation of his 50-50-50 Project, a presentation he intends to exhibit at many venues over the coming months and perhaps incorporate into a book. With his excellent photos and his insights into the people and places he’s experienced, we believe this would be an excellent contribution to this growing genre of birding adventures. He has enough material already just by culling his really great blog: https://blairbirding.com/2020/02/20/fotos-friends-and-fabulous-weather/#like-23601
Title of the presentation was, “50/50/50 – A Passionate BIrding Adventure,” and Blair turned out to be passionate about not just the birds, but the adventure and all that means. It was a way to become optimistic about the world for him, and he communicated that very well.
A whirlwind of activity filled every month over a couple of years, birding every month except July last year. As any birder knows, May is BUSY! He had a 15-state marathon in May 2019! His modus operandi was to plan 2 days at the minimum wherever he went, one day for birding and one day for travel. His “rule” was to see 50 birds in ONE DAY, and he never had to break that rule.
He called “coordinating with others” a logistical complaint, but it was also a highlight for him, getting to know people all over and following up leads on who to contact. He has a bunch of new lifelong friends now that he’ll continue to follow. His local birding companions numbered 300!
To sum up, he saw 491 birds on his 50 project days and 660 on project trips. Whew!
He did take a few plane trips, but managed a lot of his travel with rental cars, having planned to do the “next state” next door to where he was.
Blair Bernson is not “Just a Birder,” as he claims, but someone we are happy to know. He was also willing to move up his presentation for us when we had a cancellation, which is why we happened to see it before anyone else! So we’re all lucky that way, too1
I was a little nervous when I volunteered to lead a group of ABC Birding Club birders on a 6-day birding trip in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. My previous birding trip leading experience was mostly as Ken Brown’s assistant, and on local one day or at most 2 day trips in Washington. Still, I had decided to spend a month in the valley, and figured that with the first part of the trip spent birding with Ken Brown and Bruce LaBar (hear about this on our podcast episode here), I’d be confident enough to make it work out. When the group filled with mostly birders I knew from the club it seemed OK, then three more signed up that I had not birded with previously adding an unknown variable to the mix. You can read my trip report of the time with Ken and Bruce here. and here and here.
Well, it worked out just fine. On Feb 3 several of the ABC participants got notification from their airline that extreme weather expected in Dallas might delay or postpone their flights planned for Feb 5th, and so they rebooked flights for Feb 4th. This added a bonus day to the planned week-long visit with 7 of the 10 getting the early flight. All arrived about 8 PM on the 4th, and Richard, Mary and Steve came to stay in the extra rooms at my Airbnb, while Kay, Kathy, Ellen, and Susan went off to La Quinta(s) for the night. The first two nights there were two different hotels due to booking confusion, but by night 3 that was consolidated to simplify getting each day started.
For the bonus day I took the group west in hopes of finding a flock of Red-billed Pigeons, yes 13 Red-billed Pigeons, that had been seen at Chapeño the afternoon prior. While I was there Fred Matthei called to let me know he had the flu, and wouldn’t be able to join us that day, reducing the trip to 11 members. The day turned out to be a very cold and windy day, with temps barely breaking 50, and strong winds. None of us were dressed for the weather, and overall the birds were laying low. Still, we managed to see good birds and have fun. No pigeons to be found, but we explored the old El Rio RV Park at Chapeño where many years ago Ken Brown, myself and a group had found the Brown Jays that flew across the Rio Grande each morning to feed on dog food placed on a platform there. Birding was slow, but everyone got their first look at Mexico across the river.
From there we went to Salineño, where IMHO the best feeding station in the valley is kept up by winter visitor volunteers who have been coming every winter for over a decade. A pair of Audubon’s Orioles gave great looks, Greater Roadrunners, Plain Chachalacas, Green Jays, Great Kiskadees, Olive Sparrows, Ladder-backed and Golden-fronted Woodpeckers, White-tipped Doves and more gave most of the group lifers and a feel for the special birds of the area. We tried along the river but no seedeater.
Falcon State Park so windy and cold, with the feeder station empty, that we struck out there completely. I did show them a skeleton of a marshmallow as a hint of their use there to attract Orange-crowned Warblers and more.
That night Edie and Jodie arrived to complete the group and the next morning we headed to Estero Llane Grande, where as is usual this fabulous area gave good looks at many waterfowl, waders and a few passerines. The water level was higher than the earlier trips there and very few shorebirds were found. That afternoon we tried for the Fork-tailed Flycatcher in Mercedes. No luck, and as it turns out the day prior was the last reported sighting as of the date I write this post. We did get to see lots of valley hawks near burning sugar cane field, with good numbers of both vultures, White-tailed, Harris and many morphs of Red-tailed Hawks. We finished the day at the Westlaco Red-crowned Parrot roost, treated to well over a hundred Red-crowned Parrots with other non-listable parrots like Yellow-headed and Red-lored scattered in the flock.
On day 2 we stayed close to home, starting at Anzalduas County Park where the field that had been so spectacular a couple weeks earlier for Ken, Bruce and me was fully groomed, ready to plant, and devoid of raptors except for American Kestrels. We did get glimpses of the Vesper Sparrows though, and headed for the park when it opened at 8AM. For me, one of the trip highlights was looking for Sprague’s Pipit at Anzalduas. Ken, Bruce and I had found them in a field there, so I had that experience in finding them, but it was really fun to line the 11 of us up across half of the big field. The grass had been mowed shorter, making it easier to see birds, and after just a short in-line-formation walk we flushed several pipits. I had everyone stay put, got close, got them in the scope, and the group slowly came up for great close-up looks. The birds were very cooperative, and we spent a half hour stalking them slowly to get closer and closer looks. This is a tough to find bird, hard on their northern prairie breeding grounds and generally secretive and camouflaged so everyone was happy to get them, and it got the trip off to a splendid start. Also at the park we saw the unusual for south TX Rock Wren, House Finch (very local in S TX), and lots of other birds.
Next we birded the National Butterfly Center where we had lunch and saw the resident McColls sub-species of Eastern Screech Owl.
The day prior at Bentson Rio Grande State Park a female Rose-throated Becard had been seen. We headed there for a try. This is a huge park, but it was seen between feeders #3 and #4, so after looking around the gardens near the center HQ we walked there. Most of the group was beat by then, and took a tram ride around the park. Several of us stayed to try for the Becard. I sat Marian and Steve at station 4, I went to station 3, and Mary stayed part way between. It was hot, and birding was slow. Steve, as was his usual modus-operandi, decided to take a walk down to the river. Just after he got up to head that way a bird flew right across the road in front of him. He got on it and it was the Becard. He was maybe 200 yards from me at the time. Fred called about that time to let me know he would not be coming mid-week, and Steve phoned Mary to try to get us all on the bird. Mary grabbed me, and I ran the distance to the bird. At least one other birder not in our group knew a running old man with binos and a camera must mean a great bird so he ran behind me. I got there along with Mary and we got the bird pretty quickly. It posed beautifully for photos and then flew into the brush. The rest of the group got back on the tram about then, and I managed to walk around to a different path and relocate the bird for everyone. Another trip highlight for all but Richard who stayed back at HQ to avoid a painful long walk.
On the way home we tried for the Burrowing Owl and Granjero, no luck, but did find the Monk Parakeets near their roost at Hidalgo. We finished the day for dinner at the Chipoltle in McAllen literally underneath the big Green Parakeet roost site. Lots of lifers all around. I was beginning to worry that the rest of the trip would be impossible to meet the expectations being set by the first 2 days.
We decided to make day 3 a bigger driving day. We headed for the Brownsville Dump, a place famous mostly as the ABA place for Tamaulipas Crow, not seen in recent years, but our visit was really for the spectacle. Thousands of gulls, vultures, blackbirds, cowbirds, Cattle Egret, and at least one Chihuahuan Raven. I managed to find an adult Lesser Black-backed Gull, which before I could share the scope was obscured by a bulldozer not to be relocated. Jody and Edie thought they picked a Zone-tailed Hawk out of the flock of vultures for just a second but we could not relocate it.
Next was an unsuccessful try for Common Black Hawk at the Univ.
Texas RGV Campus in Brownsville. A cool campus, fun to see, but a quick try
yielde rpm there d no COBH.
From there we headed to Rte 100 and the Aplomado Falcon viewing area. Everyone got great looks at two falcons roosting on the hacking platform, and at the great photos on the phone of a professional photographer of the Hook-billed Kites he’d seen an photographed that AM at Santa Ana NWR.
From there we headed to S. Padre Island and the Birding and Nature Center there. Everyone saw Bid Padre, the alligator there, along with great looks at all the waders on an incoming tide. Everything was really close, in great light, and we all ogled the birds there. Black Skimmers were working and roosting, at least 2 Reddish Egrets were very close to the boardwalk, and Steve located two tan birds hiding in the reeds like American Bittern are prone to do. He called them bitterns, and I looked quickly and agreed. I took a cool video of the birds, posted it to Facebook, and quickly got excellent feed back that the two juvenile Black-crowned Night Herons were fun to look at. Egg on my face, and lesson learned. Look carefully and critically at what I see, don’t jump to ID too quickly. Fun and educational for me.
We went across the island for a quick beech stop, adding
Forester’s Terns and Sanderling to our list, took a barefoot walk in the surf,
and had dinner while waiting for the sun to set to avoid a long drive into a
setting sun home.
Day 4 was spent north of McAllen, birding Brushline Road, the Rio Beef Feed Lots (could not get into the lots) and then Delta Lake. It was cold, windy and very slow on Brushline Rd. Hundreds of Morning Doves, lots of RWBL, and not much else were seen, Marian helped a lot by hanging back, following in the car when we walked, staying warm ;.) and taking a great photo of a Lark Sparrow we flushed but did not see which landed about 8 feet from her car window. We managed an obscured view of one later but hers was by far better.
The planned highlight of the day was to go to the Edinburg Scenic Wetlands. I had everyone excited about going, telling everyone it is my favorite place in the area. We stopped at Delta Lake for lunch, and watched a Peregrine Falcon chase both Roseate Spoonbill and an Anhinga, but again no kingfishers. When we got to the Edinburg place, it was closed on Sunday. My first big screw-up of the trip, so we settled for a walk around the Hidalgo Pump House WBC area. Not much special was seen there really, and we called it a day.
Day 5 was our day to go to Santa Ana with hopes for the Hook-billed Kites that have been seen there, and whose photos seen at the Aplomado site had everyone hopeful and excited. We checked the feeders (adding the first Clay-colored Thrush of the day for just Kathleen and Kathy). When we got to the tower, with a capacity for 10 people, there were already 8 birders on top. I took Kathleen up and we set up the scope for a look. Within minutes I found the kite, not too far away, but Kathleen on the bird, along with all the other birders (hoping it would satisfy them and they would go down so others could come up) then ran down and sent up the group two at a time. The first 2 got the bird, but before the next 2 were able to see it, the bird flew down. After a bit the others left, and we all got on top. Steve decided to explore the refuge, but shortly after I again found the bird and got everyone onto it for great looks. Some distant digi-scope photos were had, but it didn’t seem to want of fly. Other highlights of Santa Ana that day were looks at Green Kingfisher, and nice looks at the young Hooded Oriole that has been hanging out by the feeders.
We had lunch there and spent the afternoon at the Edinburg Scenic Wetlands, now open on Monday. I love this area, so easy to bird, so birdy, and near where I was staying. We added lots of great bird there. Yellow-throated, Wilson’s and Black-and-white Warblers, several Clay-colored Thrushes for everyone to see, the Audubon’s Oriole again, a Ringed Kingfisher, and lots more. A great day overall. We finished the day with a couple of easy lifers for most, Black-bellied and Ferruginous Whistling Ducks at Bannworth Park in Mission. As cool as these were a Double-crested Cormorant that swallowed a huge fish as we watched, and fighting domestic Muscovy Ducks stole the show.
Our last day we spent going back west to Salineño and Chapeño. Again no Red-billed Pigeon, but although it was again cold, it was less windy and not as cold as our first day for the early-arriving group. Again the feeder was good, though slower than last time, but Kathy found us the seedeater. She saw a bird low in the reeds when she sat on her portable chair. I got on it and it was the male Morelet’s Seedeater. A 8 of th4 11 in the group saw it as it foraged very low, popped up for a few second perch, but flushed a long flight up river as I tried to get the others to hurry over for a look. Kathy again got looks at the bird later, but we never got the rest of the group onto the bird.
Stops at Falcon Dam State Park were not terribly fruitful, and we ended the trip with the long drive back to McAllen, and a brief stop at the urban jewel of a place, Quinta Mazatlan WBC. It is right in McAllen, and has great birding, over30 bronze sculptures, and a rich history.
A nice last supper at a R&R Indian food restaurant wrapped up the trip. The list for the 6 days we all birded together was 162 species, with many lifers and great looks at most of them. No injuries, no one expressed much regret at birds missed, and I felt like the trip went really well, in significant part to participants who were just happy to get birding in a fabulous area, and in large part to the great trip Ken Brown, Bruce LaBar and I had together to help me get up to speed in the area.
Shout outs to local experts like Mary Gustafson who several times helped me get out on chases for uncommon birds here (listen to her on The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #48 with Mary Gustafson) and other local and winter Texans who shared tips and birds generously.
Ken Brown and Bruce LaBar joined me in McAllen, TX for a 9-day birding adventure, and headed back home yesterday. We had a great time, saw lots of birds, places and stuff, and overall rocked the valley. You can follow my birding notes most days on the Ed’s Birding Notes tab on the Bird Banter website. The guys were also gracious enough to record a podcast episode after our last full day of birding, and it is now published as episode #46 and you can listen where ever you get your podcast feeds, or on the Bird Banter website where there are links to Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, and Spotify feeds, or you can just listen right there. Stay tuned, as today I met with Ryan Rodriguez, a 12-year old birder from McAllen and his Dad to record an episode. I had a blast meeting him, hope to get out birding with him while I’m here and plan on publishing that episode later this week.
You can find photos from this trip on my flickr album.
A bit over a week until the ABC contingent descends on the valley to see the specialty here and have fun birding together.
As I left the University Place library when they finally kicked us out at closing time after our Big Year party, the librarian commented to me that she couldn’t remember a group having such an obviously good time as we did! Luckily she was smiling when she said it.
2019 was a great year for ABC’ers. Many of you attended our festivities and told about your year or showed your 5 best photos from 2019. We had many goodies provided by members, too, and Carole Breedlove brought some bird books to give away as she continues to try to tame our huge collection.
To start out, a slide was shown of Bruce LaBar (#1 in Pierce County) and Ken Brown, taken by Ed Pullen yesterday, from Texas, where they were shown in big winter coats complaining about the unseasonal cold snap. They all sent in their 2019 photos, but they received no sympathy for being in Texas! Ed is expecting some ABC’ers in February, so they were scouting an itinerary for that. We kept the boys’ image up while announcements were made of upcoming meetings.
We mentioned Bud Anderson’s FRG retirement and had a card for those who know him to sign.
Speaking of Ken’s diabolical quizzes, one of the photos he sent was titled, “Find the Bird.” Sure enough, there was no obvious bird in the picture, but as soon as the photo appeared, I started hearing whispers of “pauraque” from the group. This is a sharp group that can see pauraques instantly!
We had some great Big Year reports including Tahoma Audubon’s 50th Anniversary Big Year, where many of us “shared” our reports with TAS. The final report will be posted on their website in the near future, but preliminaries included birds from Australia, Colombia, Chile, Morocco, Tanzania, Taiwan, China, Mexico, Japan, New Zealand, Panama, Hong Kong, and many states in the U.S. A pretty fun way to do a big year! New presenter Jane said it was the TAS Big Year that made her start her own, and we really enjoyed her great photos, starting with her favorite, the Bald Eagle.
Starting off the Big Year reports, I tooted my own horn by saying my Big Year number was 4: In Chile, my 4th total eclipse and my 4th and last Avocet of the world! I showed the write-up in the November ABA Birding magazine detailing that.
We read Ed Pullen’s Big Year report of birding in Cambodia, Thailand, and Washington. Then we started pulling people up for theirs. One highlight was Bryan Hanson’s report, with Ryan Wiese’s input, which included how to use eBird to find out what birds you still needed for any year and where to get them. Bryan and Ryan used this to good effect this year.
One highlight was Blair Bernson’s great photo of the sadly famous Ross’s Gull which he clicked right before the criminal Bald Eagle murdered it, witnessed by many birders.
We really enjoyed Brian Pendleton’s photos from Washington, Portugal, and Spain. He had mentioned he might come to the meeting, but unfortunately got tied up in Seattle. His photos were actually clicked by his companion, Darshell, but they were definitely his sightings. He was #10 in the state for 2019. He still gets around with a little help from his friends, but can no longer hold a camera. We wish him many more birds!
As usual, we were treated to Heather Voboril’s great PowerPoint with some of her exciting travels to the other side of the world. Carol Breedlove described her worst ever guide in Guiana, and she’s had dozens, if not hundreds, of guides in her world travels. Willettes Faye, Carol, Laurel, and I also showed our stuff.
Wayne Sladek introduced a scary story about his travels in the far east where he found more birds kept in cages and being sold in markets, than in the wild. Jon Anderson came up from Olympia to give his report, one that many of us had been following on his blog, and enjoyed his droll humor as well.
Will Brooks continues to astound us with his knowledge and talent, including several firsts for Pierce County and glimpses of his travels with his girlfriend. We just hope he sticks around now that he’s a senior at UPS.
More photos were shown by Jerry and Clarice, including that really funny steam-punk portrait of Clarice with the loupe attached to her eye. Eric Dudley and Mary Kay Elfman, as well as Joe and Maggie Tieger showed their usual professional quality photos. John Riegsecker spared us his usual scary prey-and-poop pics and showed us some birds with charm for a change. Vicki Biltz continued an underlying Spain theme with her very sophisticated bird portraits. Kathleen Miller and Pat Damron showed their professional photography skills, as usual.
All the Spanish birds have made me want to go to Spain. Stay tuned!
What a great evening! Thanks to all and good luck in 2020!
On November 20th, Ken Brown was back to the group he helped form, the ABC Club, which was formed originally for the “graduates” of his Advanced Birding Class, but now has expanded to become the birding branch of Tahoma Audubon, for all birders.
Ken Brown faces his jury of peers on bird ID
It was with some anticipation and dread that we gathered, knowing Ken was going to try to stump us. Showing off his newfound prowess with photography, he had us “help” identify the birds in the slides, after having cropped off all distinguishing features! Turns out, he trained us well, and many of them were identifiable, at least to some of the group.
Laurel and Rachel give Ken something to think about
That Ash-throated Flycatcher was shown in a foreshortened view, and it could only be identified by knowing where and when the photo was taken. The Hutton’s Vireo was shown with the toes cropped off so we couldn’t use their color as a hint. Both of these were readily identified in the followup shots, though. And what about that invisible gull, hidden in plain sight in the flock of Bony’s? What was expected to be a toughie, an immature Common Yellowthroat was immediately identified by Faye, followed by others chiming in.
Willettes congratulate Ken (Melissa, Faye, Laurel, Diane)
But then there was The Sparrow. Even Ken was unsure what it was and had just a frontal shot. Speculation included young Chipping or Clay-colored in transition plumage. But maybe something else entirely. So we found out the real reason Ken showed the slide, to get us to do his ID work!
Kay and Teri, who came all the way from Seattle, chat with Faye
A highlight of the evening was refreshments! Much popcorn and other snacky foods, as well as water, were catered by Rachel Brown, Ken’s wife, and were complemented by great big cookies brought by Chazz.
After the official part of the evening was over, many stayed to exchange stories of recent birds as well as ideas for future presentations. Eric is going to astound us next year sometime with a recap of hawkwatch sites he’s visited, and Laurel might show some Harpy and Crested Eagles in Panama, seen with Sergio Seipke’s Raptours, inspired by Sergio’s appearance at one of our meetings last year.
Looks like we’ll have an exciting year ahead with ABC. Our New Year’s Day “Cruise”, our Big Year and Best Photo party in January, then an ABC trip to the Lower Rio Grande in February, and much more!
Ed Pullen here. I’ll be in McAllen, TX from Jan 14 thru Feb 13th, 2020. I will be staying in a 3 BR AirBNB with 3 queen sized beds. I’d love to have up to 11 ABCers join me from Feb 5-12, 2020 to bird the valley area. I’m hoping to have become pretty familiar with the area by then, and feel like I can lead day trips based out of McAllen.
I’m open to sharing the 2 extra bedrooms I have, 2 beds available. I’m thinking that if we have more interest than the beds I have, one of the other participants can get an Air BNB in the area, or some people can stay in a local hotel. I’ll have a vehicle for 4 (including me) and if we have 12 people altogether two you you can rent a car and we can be a 3-vehicle group. I’m going to be rigid about holding it to 12 people.
I expect to get out each day to bird the area, chase any good rarities, and we should see a representative species list of the Lower RGV in winter. Aplomado Falcon, Clay-colored Thrush, and Mottled Duck should be easy, and many more goodies possible. Think of things like Hook-billed Kite, Groove-billed Ani, and various others.
I’d expect if we all stay in AirBNBs we can breakfast in our place, bring lunches each day, and each make our own plans for dinner, or eat as a group, whatever works.
I will try to arrange great birding, but will need participants to work together, and with me, to arrange rental cars, lodging, and eating.
Reply to me by email edwardpullen-at- gmail-dot-com to reserve a place. Once the makeup of the group is in place, we can figure out housing and cars.
A great way to catch some winter sunshine (hopefully) and add to your ABA list for many of you.
On October 20th, Adam and I went north to the known crow roost at UW-Bothell (see last year’s report: http://abcbirding.com/harrowing-halloween-happening/). This is absolutely the best way get your haunted house fix, because this is REAL!
It was every bit as frightening and exciting as last year, with the addition of rain this time! Didn’t stop the crows! And they didn’t come any earlier than expected, either. Since we got there early (an hour before sundown time of 6:11 PM), it seemed like nothing was happening, but as we despaired, they started flowing toward us. Just before sunset, the flow was huge, coming from the northwest, and we were surrounded. Upon arrival, they circled us, looking for a personal spot. The surrounding trees and pavement of the parking terrace were already covered. The noise was deafening and sinister and would make a good soundtrack for a horror film. Crows are technically songbirds, but this music was strictly from the percussion section of the band.
They somehow reminded me of Vaux’s Swifts coming in to roost, a little less organized, but arriving in a steady one-directional stream headed straight for us! Then groups of about a hundred each would swirl a bit, parting before us in clockwise and counterclockwise tribututaries before finding a tree or building to claim. Like the swifts, they didn’t seem to have a particular leader, but instead chased those they wanted to harass, which were many!
The top of the parking garage where this was happening is surrounded on 2 sides by a wetland park, and the campus itself has many trees. But at that moment, the center of universe was right where we were standing. Rather than feeling like gods, though, we felt more like we were in the witch’s boiling cauldron. About 20 minutes after sundown when we were really starting to wonder what their plans were for us, everything abruptly stopped! Frozen in place, the crows just halted where they were and became silent and still. Darkness descended, but the crows who were on the parking pavement with us just stood there in the rain like statues. The surrounding trees all had crow-like ornaments on their branches, now faint black outlines in the drizzling night. This was at 6:35 PM, about 25 minutes past sunset. We realized there were at least 3 other carloads of onlookers as we left, so we’re not the only ones who appreciated the free show.
We had to travel to Bothell to find this fantastic roost, but really we were glad we didn’t live in a roost. It’s just for Halloween for us. Check out more of our photos and videos at: https://tinyurl.com/y2abyq6t
We talk a lot about the Neah Bay Phenomenon, county birding and Brad’s birding family on the episode. Brad is funny, a really good guest on the show, and such a fund of information and knowledge about birding I wanted to spread the word here. Enjoy.
Find the episode on the Bird Banter Webside or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or Stitcher.