Lower Rio Grande Valley ABC Trip

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.

Ed

A BIRDY HALLOWEEN HAUNTING

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!

The Head Crow


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.

Crows had to share the limited number of branches

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 venue at the parking terrace at UW-Bothell

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.

Diane under a mantle of crows (photo by Adam)
It’s dark now, but Adam is still besieged by rain drops and crow drops


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

Avian Anatomy, Physiology and Other Adaptations

BIRD-SPECIFIC ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY, presented to ABC by Ed Pullen on October 16, 2019

Ed Pullen regales the ABC’ers about Bird Anatomy on October 16, 2019

Ed, already an expert in anatomy and physiology has changed his focus from Homo sapiens to the classification Aves, which share only a backbone and warm blood with humans and other mammals.  The differences were summed up as, “It’s all about flying,” with a deep dive into feathers, how they evolved and possibly why, and the physics of flying. 

Ed uses a feather as a pointer to show the how-to of flight

A major difference between birds and other creatures is their lung action, a topic that includes inspiration, expiration, avian hemoglobin, air sacs including in hollow bones, and the myoglobin in the muscles that’s placed handy to the hemoglobin.  A video shown at the end, helped illustrate this interesting one-way respiration (see link below).  Ed gave the extreme example of Bar-headed Geese which migrate OVER the Himalayas, something that would kill anything else without their super-adaptation of basic bird oxygen usage. 

Ed started out his presentation talking about feathers, here holding up a Steller’s Jay feather with the structural coloration

Ed had bird factoids to illustrate every point, including the amazing story of how Penguins don’t get the bends. 

Eating got a lot of attention, including pregastric adaptations such as the crop, the gizzard, the extremely short small intestine, etc., which all assist with letting the bird eat fast, then digest elsewhere, for safety.

Other amazing aspects of birds’ anatomy included the amazing eyes, their large size, ability to see UV and perhaps magnetic fields.  Also covered were the amazing reproductive systems, allowing some species to actually raise chicks of the gender that are the most likely to survive under prevailing conditions.  Size of the yolk directly matches with altricial (small yolk) vs. precocial (large).

Ed got his points across to the Willettes (Diane, Carol, Faye, & Laurel)

Ed ended his presentation with an amazing set of videos that illustrated many of his  points, as well as entertained us!

ED’S LINKS FOR MORE INFORMATION AND ENTERTAINMENT:

birds amazing respiratory system video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWMmyVu1ueY 

Club Winged Manakin making it’s mating song with its wings https://youtu.be/NQRzOqP9iNc 

Bower Bird display   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XkPeN3AWIE   Skeletal Adaptations for Flight  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMba0KByEPY

Bar-headed Geese Fly High  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3y9C2Sj-RbQ

Birds of the Mississippi River Delta https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjD_ElZDW3A

King-of-Saxony Bird-of-Paradise https://youtu.be/MdNyeasi0GI  King-of-Saxony Bird-of-Paradise

Brad Waggoner is the Guest on The Newest episode of The Bird Banter Podcast

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.

Good Birding.

Ed

ABC’s MOVIE NIGHT, September 18, 2019

ABC’s MOVIE NIGHT, September 18, 2019

“From Billions to None,” documenting the demise of the Passenger Pigeon was shown to ABC. The film had some excellent re-creations of the birds darkening the sky, simulating many eyewitness accounts. The concept of extinction and the extent of our culpability were explored, with one scientist postulating that the loss of Passenger Pigeons may have allowed the spread of Lyme disease that is happening now. The railroad enhanced the speed at which the birds were dispatched, along with the concurrent extirpation of the bison.

The film briefly looked at the artists who are bringing back extinct species to our senses, as well as actual researchers seeking to de-extinct Passenger Pigeons using DNA from museum specimens and Band-tailed Pigeon hybridization. So far, this has produced no birds, but the concept is expanding to other species now (Woolly mammoths, for example).

Joe Tieger remarked after the meeting ended that the take-away for him was when one of the scientists interviewed remarked that we (humans) are the equivalent of the comet that wiped out the dinosaurs.

After the film, we relaxed with two short subjects, the oft-watched Goshawk flying through incredibly narrow spaces easily, followed by our “cartoon” feature on flying penguins, which everyone enjoyed. Ed played the stooge at the end by asking, “Is that true?”

East Side Shorebird and Vagrant Trip Sept 4-8, 2019

The group at the scopes early Saturday AM at the Mesa STP.

A contingent of ABCers in 3 vehicles met as usual for Eastern WA trips at the Snoqualmie Pass rest area on Wednesday Sept 4th and headed west.  Our first stop was at the boat launch near Ginkgo Petrified Forest State Park, where we started looking for vagrant passerines, one of the primary goals of the trip.  As was the case all day, sorting through Yellow-rumped Warblers in every variant of plumage for the Audubon’s race was the biggest challenge, but singing and calling Canyon Wrens were the highlight of the stop, with Say’s Phoebe and Yellow Warblers among the 15 species there.  Up top, at the Ginkgo State Park it was slow so we made it a quick stop and headed for Getty’s Cove.

Our group on Day 4 after the Willette’s car arrived

At Getty’s Cove we enjoyed good looks at two of the three vireo species seen there. Fortunately Red-eyed and Cassin’s were the two seen well by most, and the more common Warbling Vireo was the only tough one to get focus on.  Wild Turkeys were seen, and molted feathers collected by many, empids were confusing as can be with silent fall birds, and we all started to get our warbler neck ache going.

Next at the Wanapum Recreation Area we saw a daytime Great Horned Owl, at least 2 Townsend’s Solitaires, Red-necked Grebe and a Herring Gull among 25 species and sat for lunch.

North Potholes Reserve took up most of our afternoon, and we had 28 species there highlighted by a large flock of American Pipits, several Lark Sparrows, a bright male Townsend’s Warbler, another Townsend’s Solitaire, a fly-by Black-crowned Night Heron, but very few shorebirds.

We spent the first night in Moses Lake at the Inn at Moses Lake, and ate at Michaels on the lake.

Thursday Sept 5th we started with a look at the Winchester Rest Area Sewer Ponds, where there were only Killdeer as shorebirds. 

Birder’s Corner off Dodson Road was better, with looks at a Sora,  our only Solitary Sandpiper of the trip, plus good looks at Wilson’s Snipe, Long-billed Dowicher, Yellow-headed Blackbird, and lots of dabbling ducks.

We spent the morning at Potholes State Park where again the challenge was to sort anything else out of the seemingly everywhere Audubon’s Yellow-rumped Warblers.  We conservatively estimated 350 of these for our eBird list, but there may have been >1000.  We all got nice looks at a Nashville Warbler, several Orange-crowned Warblers, a Lincoln’s Sparrow, Pine Siskin, a Sharp-shinned Hawk and a Peregrine Falcon.  There was a nice flock of Western Sandpipers, at least two Semi-palmaged Sandpipers but a low diversity of shorebirds.

A highlight of the trip was a Sabine’s Gull sighted from the O’Sullivan Dam Road stop flying with small terns.  Ken and Ed got long in-flight looks in scopes, and at least a few others managed to get onto the gull with binos.  We tried for a while for better looks, going back to the boat launch area for a while, but could not relocate the bird.

Lind Coulee after lunch on Thursday was the shorebird highlight of the trip, but immediately on arrival at the upper overlook 4 Sandhill Cranes were the first thing that caught the attention of everyone. We quickly forgot about them though as at least 60 Lesser Yellowlegs, 13 Wilson’s Snipe 1 Baird’s Sandpiper, 3 Semipalmated Sandpiper, 7 Pectoral Sandpiper, and both Least and Western Sandpipers along with over 60 Killdeer seemed everywhere.  This was one of the highest recent counts for LEYE that any of us could remember.

We were exhausted after a long day of searching for birds, and were happy to find rest at a hotel in Othello, with Mexican food for dinner.

Friday we started with a fly-by Merlin in the parking lot of the hotel as we loaded up for the day.  A quick stop at Hatton Coulee Rest Stop sewer pond gave much better looks at Baird’s Sandpiper, a good look at a Semipalmated Sandpiper, and got the day off to a good start. This was a day for looking for rare eastern vagrants, and as that sort of day can go we didn’t really find any, but were pretty happy to find other good stuff, though not much at Washtucna, our next stop. Diane, Fay, Laurel and Melissa joined us in Washtucna for the rest of the trip. Lyon’s Ferry was much birdier though, after we left the waterfront to get out of the wind.  Along the road into the old camping area we saw a White-breasted Nuthatch, a House Wren, a Barn Owl, and at least 7 very unusual Evening Grosbeak, and again tons of YRWAs.  The grosbeaks were fun, as Faye saw them at the same time and in nearly the same place that many of us were looking at a flock of Cedar Waxwings.  As the birds took flight we all heard the loud flight call of the grosbeaks. Ken was startled, saying I could hear that, thinking it was the waxwings, and several of us knew immediately it was not the waxwings, and Melissa added that she thought it sounded like Evening Grosbeaks.  Consensus agreed, and then Faye told us she had seen them perched.  Ken gave her grief for not pointing them out to us, and I suggested we sit, do our eBird list and see if they would return.  We soon heard them again, and 7 of them flew right overhead for good looks and photos.

I convinced Ken to cross the river, to try for some Columbia County birds as we seemed ahead of time, and I added 4 new county birds, Osprey, Yellow-rumped Warbler, Brewer’s Blackbird and Barn Swallow, and Diane snagged a needed diet cola to fend off her withdrawal headache.

Our last stop of the day was going to be the Connell Sewer Ponds, but as there were few ducks and almost no shorebirds there we Ken aimed us to the Scooteney Reservoir where we scanned a flock of gulls, managed to pick Bank Swallows out of the more numerous Barn Swallows, and squinted to ID very distant ducks.

Friday night we stayed in Connell, and ate at the next-door family restaurant for dinner and breakfast Saturday AM. 

Saturday we met Jason Fidorra at the Mesa (in WA pronounced Me-Sah not Meah-sah like in AZ)  STP, an area usually inaccessible, and a good spot especially in the AM with great light for shorebird observation and photography.  We had great looks at Lesser Yellowlegs, along with peeps, Spotted Sancpiper and a few ducks.  Jason is encouraging the city to make the area open to birders to promote birding tourism in the area. Great stuff Jason!

Jason Fidorra with trip leaders Ed Pullen and Ken Brown (L to R)

We finished the trip with stops at Lind Coulee, the O’Sullivan Dam Road again hoping for looks at the Sabine’s Gull and had to settle there for early Snow Geese found by Ken on a distant rock in the lake, had lunch at the state park again, tried for a Northern Waterthrush seen earlier in the day without success, and ended at Perch Point, where shorebirds were largely lacking.

Overall a fine trip, good company, good birds, and 134 species on 27 eBird Checklists. See the eBird summary below.

I didn’t have my camera working, so have few photos to add, maybe Pat and Kirsten can add links to some photos in the comments below.

Species Name Sep 4 Sep 5 Sep 6 Sep 7 Sep 8 Sep 9 Sep 10
Snow Goose 2
(1)
Canada Goose 40
(2)
195
(1)
65
(1)
20
(1)
Wood Duck 2
(1)
2
(1)
Blue-winged Teal 2
(2)
3
(1)
Cinnamon Teal 3
(1)
4
(1)
3
(2)
Blue-winged/Cinnamon Teal 10
(1)
Northern Shoveler 6
(1)
2
(2)
4
(1)
Gadwall 8
(1)
3
(1)
Mallard 10
(2)
120
(3)
11
(1)
25
(3)
Green-winged Teal 6
(1)
8
(3)
dabbling duck sp. 200
(2)
80
(1)
Redhead 2
(1)
Lesser Scaup 1
(1)
Common Merganser 1
(1)
1
(1)
Ruddy Duck 74
(2)
20
(2)
1
(1)
California Quail 1
(1)
12
(1)
10
(1)
Ring-necked Pheasant 1
(2)
Wild Turkey 6
(1)
11
(3)
Pied-billed Grebe 15
(1)
3
(2)
3
(2)
2
(2)
Red-necked Grebe 2
(1)
Horned/Eared Grebe 20
(1)
Western Grebe 40
(1)
60
(4)
20
(2)
Clark’s Grebe 2
(2)
Western/Clark’s Grebe 80
(1)
Rock Pigeon 31
(4)
80
(1)
Eurasian Collared-Dove 2
(1)
30
(5)
2
(3)
Mourning Dove 2
(1)
6
(4)
12
(4)
Black-chinned Hummingbird 1
(1)
Sora 1
(1)
American Coot 300
(1)
40
(1)
2
(1)
50
(2)
Sandhill Crane 4
(1)
Semipalmated Plover 3
(1)
2
(1)
Killdeer 8
(2)
60
(5)
8
(2)
18
(4)
Sanderling 2
(1)
Baird’s Sandpiper 1
(1)
5
(1)
2
(1)
Least Sandpiper 12
(2)
7
(3)
Pectoral Sandpiper 7
(1)
4
(1)
Semipalmated Sandpiper 2
(1)
1
(1)
Western Sandpiper 125
(2)
1
(1)
30
(3)
peep sp. 20
(2)
Long-billed Dowitcher 20
(2)
35
(2)
Short-billed/Long-billed Dowitcher 1
(1)
Wilson’s Snipe 1
(1)
13
(2)
1
(1)
3
(2)
Red-necked Phalarope 8
(1)
1
(2)
2
(1)
Spotted Sandpiper 1
(1)
3
(4)
2
(2)
4
(1)
Solitary Sandpiper 1
(1)
Greater Yellowlegs 12
(3)
4
(1)
Lesser Yellowlegs 60
(1)
25
(3)
Sabine’s Gull 1
(1)
Ring-billed Gull 40
(3)
45
(6)
55
(2)
85
(3)
California Gull 15
(3)
10
(4)
9
(2)
13
(2)
Herring Gull 1
(1)
Larus sp. 15
(1)
gull sp. 50
(1)
60
(1)
Caspian Tern 4
(1)
4
(3)
6
(3)
Common Tern 2
(1)
Forster’s Tern 10
(1)
Common/Forster’s Tern 15
(2)
30
(2)
Common Loon 1
(1)
Double-crested Cormorant 15
(3)
25
(1)
8
(1)
2
(1)
American White Pelican 30
(1)
40
(3)
7
(1)
10
(2)
Great Blue Heron 6
(3)
3
(4)
1
(1)
5
(3)
Great Egret 25
(2)
9
(5)
22
(3)
Black-crowned Night-Heron 1
(1)
9
(1)
Osprey 1
(1)
1
(1)
1
(2)
Northern Harrier 1
(3)
1
(1)
1
(1)
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
(1)
Cooper’s Hawk 2
(1)
1
(1)
Red-tailed Hawk 1
(2)
4
(3)
1
(1)
Buteo sp. 1
(1)
1
(1)
Barn Owl 2
(2)
Great Horned Owl 1
(1)
Belted Kingfisher 1
(1)
1
(2)
Downy Woodpecker 1
(1)
2
(1)
2
(2)
Northern Flicker 1
(1)
2
(1)
2
(3)
American Kestrel 1
(1)
2
(3)
1
(1)
Merlin 1
(1)
Peregrine Falcon 1
(1)
Western Wood-Pewee 1
(1)
1
(1)
2
(3)
Hammond’s Flycatcher 2
(3)
Pacific-slope Flycatcher 1
(1)
1
(1)
2
(2)
Empidonax sp. 2
(1)
2
(1)
Say’s Phoebe 1
(1)
1
(2)
1
(1)
Eastern Kingbird 1
(1)
Cassin’s Vireo 1
(1)
1
(1)
Warbling Vireo 2
(1)
2
(1)
1
(1)
Red-eyed Vireo 1
(1)
Black-billed Magpie 2
(1)
2
(2)
35
(1)
6
(1)
American Crow 1
(1)
Common Raven 2
(2)
4
(2)
8
(4)
4
(2)
Violet-green Swallow 2
(1)
Bank Swallow 5
(2)
Barn Swallow 7
(1)
20
(6)
80
(7)
30
(5)
swallow sp. 2
(1)
4
(1)
10
(1)
10
(2)
Golden-crowned Kinglet 4
(2)
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 3
(2)
Red-breasted Nuthatch 3
(1)
4
(3)
White-breasted Nuthatch 1
(1)
Rock Wren 1
(1)
Canyon Wren 3
(1)
1
(1)
House Wren 1
(1)
1
(1)
Bewick’s Wren 1
(1)
1
(1)
European Starling 3
(1)
15
(3)
15
(1)
Townsend’s Solitaire 2
(2)
American Robin 6
(1)
2
(1)
2
(3)
2
(1)
Cedar Waxwing 14
(1)
House Sparrow 8
(2)
20
(3)
American Pipit 80
(1)
Evening Grosbeak 7
(1)
House Finch 1
(1)
6
(2)
15
(3)
Pine Siskin 4
(1)
Lesser Goldfinch 1
(2)
American Goldfinch 15
(1)
4
(1)
20
(5)
2
(1)
Lark Sparrow 8
(1)
Dark-eyed Junco 6
(1)
White-crowned Sparrow 12
(6)
16
(3)
40
(4)
4
(3)
Savannah Sparrow 20
(4)
Song Sparrow 1
(2)
1
(2)
2
(1)
Lincoln’s Sparrow 1
(1)
2
(1)
Spotted Towhee 1
(1)
1
(1)
sparrow sp. 1
(1)
Yellow-headed Blackbird 2
(1)
2
(1)
Western Meadowlark 10
(1)
1
(2)
Red-winged Blackbird 10
(1)
10
(2)
Brewer’s Blackbird 1
(1)
1
(1)
8
(2)
2
(1)
blackbird sp. 20
(2)
1
(1)
Orange-crowned Warbler 1
(1)
7
(1)
Nashville Warbler 1
(1)
Yellow Warbler 2
(2)
8
(1)
2
(2)
Yellow-rumped Warbler 12
(6)
200
(2)
80
(4)
1
(1)
Townsend’s Warbler 1
(1)
Wilson’s Warbler 2
(1)
warbler sp. (Parulidae sp.) 1
(1)
Western Tanager 1
(2)
2
(1)

Pelagic Today with Notable Participants

ABC was well represented on todays Westport Seabirds pelagic trip. Ken and I went down yesterday, birded a bit in the afternoon and headed for the Monte Carlo this AM. On arrival we joined Joe and Maggie Tieger and Terry and Karen Gillis along with Bruce LaBar and Cara Borre as a spotters.

Lirk Zufelt, co-author of a new seabirds book and participant on the pelagic trip.

On arrival Bruce told me about Amar Ayysh, a well known Chicago area birder, who is a renouned gull expert. I had a chance to sit and talk with Amar on the ride back in today. He is in the research part of writing a book on North American gulls, with visits to both the UPS Slater Museum and the U.W. Burke Museum, both places well known for their outstretched wing collections.

As a part of the welcome today, Bruce talked about what he feels are the best resources for birders to use in study before or reference during or after a pelagic trip, and he mentioneKirk Zufelt. After the welcome, Bruce was perusing the book, and one of the birders on board asked him what the thought of the book. Bruce raved about how he loved the book, and asked the guest if he had looked at the book. He replied, Ï wrote it.” Kirk Zufelt is an avid pelagic birder from what he tongue-in-cheek calls the pelagic headquarters of the world, Sault Ste Marie, Ongtario, Canada, who is on a quest to see every seabird in the world. You can read about it at his website: Pelagic Odyssey. His book is Oceanic Birds of the World: A Photo Guide.

I had a chance to talk with Kirk also, and he is a practicing pediatrician who is going on both of this weekends Westport Seabirds trips as a handy adjunct to visiting his daughter who lives near or in Vancouver, BC.

Top birds on the trip today were Flesh-footed Shearwater, both small terns, both phalaropes, Long-tailed Jaeger as a part of the Skua Slam (in Europe) or Jaeger Slam (in the U.S. just does not sound as cool) with all three jaegers plus South Polar Skua.

All this plus nice weather after a minor squall on the ride out, moderate seas, and fairly warm temperatures.

Good birding.

Ed Pullen

.

Birding Outings Sept 2019

If any ABCers are planning to go birding, and are interested or willing to have others join you, leave info in the comments below. Please leave instructions as to how you want interested persons to respond. You can just have them leave a reply to your comment, contact you off-line, or use your imagination. This is something new so let’s see how it works out. Leave feedback in the comments also.

Eastern WA ABC Trip for Migrants and Vagrants

Ken Brown and Ed Pullen will be leading a 4-day 3-night Eastern Washington trip looking for migrating shorebirds, vagrant passerines, and whatever else we can find leaving Wednesday Sept 4 and returning Saturday Sept 7th. We will visit the usual places along the Columbia River, Potholes, Washtucna, Lyons Ferry, and other spots.

We will stay in motels, eat dinners out and breakfast either out or at hotel spreads. Bring lunches, water, etc. Meet at the Travelers Rest Stop at Snoqualmie Pass at 7:30. Contact Ken by email for resevations. Limit 4 vehicles. Ken will keep a waiting list.

There is no telling what we will find, but a good variety of shorebirds is likely, and an uncommon eastern passerine or two would not be unexpected.

Let’s go birding!

BIRD BOOK DISCUSSION – JULY 17, 2019

Ed Pullen opened the meeting, introducing Eric Dudley, currently the WOS president, to lead the book discussion. Some short announcements were made. Diane let the group know about the recent deaths of Melody Mayer and Bill Scheidt, which were quite a shock about this power couple.

Book cover

The discussion was very well attended and lively, to say the least, with no holds barred. Eric opened by talking about Kenn Kaufman and his previous books, especially his wild and wildly successful description of his first Big Year (and one of the first publicized Big Years ever), “Kingbird Highway.” Since much of Kenn Kaufman’s new book revolved around spring warbler migration at McGee Marsh in northwest Ohio and the fairly new “Biggest Week in Birding” festival there, which has just exploded, we were lucky to have many people in attendance who had birded there or nearby. In fact, Shep Thorp, who works nights and is unable to attend our meetings, takes a group every year, and we heard all about that. Accommodations near McGee Marsh are sparse, so info was exchanged among our group on where to stay and where to eat. Surrounding hotspots such as Point Pelee were also discussed.

Art and Laurel show off McGee shirts. Laurel’s has her birds check off!

A funny aside is that a large percentage of birders in attendance were wearing McGee Marsh or eastern warbler t-shirts, not just the Willettes! Laurel even had the warblers that she had seen in 2 consecutive years checked off on her shirt!

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