Category: Blog

Additional Notes on Episode #61 with Stefan Schlick

In this episode of The Bird Banter Podcast with Stefan Schlick we talk about Stefan’s evolution from a relatively causal birdwatcher in Germany to an avid and keen birder after moving to the U.S. He is now a full time trip leader based near Portland, OR and leads trips for the Portland Audubon Society, as well as for other organizations and on his own.

I know Stefan from many winter trips to the Okanogan area of eastern WA, where Ken Brown (see episodes #2 and #46) and I would compare notes with Stefan at the Omak Inn after our first day of leading our groups around the area. Stefan was usually leading trips for WOS, and Ken and I leading trips for Ken’s birding class or more recently for the ABC Birding Club.
Stefan is an avid county birder, has spent time living in Florida, California and lots of time birding in Arizona, so has lots of field time in many of the top ABA birding spots. He is also becoming interested in finding and identifying dragonflies and butterflies, and we talk a bit about these as offshoots of birding.
Here are links to some of the things we talk about on the episode:
Portland Audubon Society Field Trips
“Butterflies of the Pacific Northwest” by Robert Michael Pyle and Caitlin LaBar https://www.amazon.com/Butterflies-Pacific-Northwest-Timber-Press/dp/1604696931/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=butterflies+of+the+pacific+northwest&qid=1590101437&sr=8-1

“Dragonflies and Damselflies of Oregon” by Cary Kerst and Steve Gordon https://www.amazon.com/Dragonflies-Damselflies-Oregon-Field-Guide/dp/0870715895
Here is a link to Stefan’s blog. http://birdmeister.wordpress.com
You can contact Stefan by email at: greenfant – at – hotmail- dot- com.

Episode #60 with Nate Swick additional info.


Nate Swick is my first ABA guest on The Bird Banter Podcast. Nate joined the American Birding Association team about 10 years ago when as an ABA member he contacted them and pitched himself as the person to bring them online and into the information age. I enjoyed talking with Nate, hearing his birding story and his story of work at the ABA.
In the intro to this episode I mention an odd sandpiper that perplexed Bruce LaBar (see episode #3), Shep Thorpe (See episode #9)
Here is a photo of that odd Tringa

Odd Tringa, likey a Solitary Sandpiper

Here is a link to the Join the ABA and Donate to the ABA site pages.

Nate talks about two birding competitions, and two festivals. Here are links to:
The World Series of Birding
The Superbowl of Birding
The Biggest Week in American Birding
The Rio Grande Valley Birding Festival
I hope you enjoyed the episode.
Good birding. Good day!

Episode #59 with Gary Bletsch Additional Info


What fun to talk with Gary Bletsch on The Bird Banter Episode #59. Gary is a county birder supreme, having 328 species in Skagit County, WA on eBird, a number that is among the highest individual county life lists for any county in WA. I had a really great talk with Gary. I hope you enjoy it.

Gary is an eBird lister almost beyond compare. He has submitted, as of 5-9-2020 24,648 eBird checklists from Skagit County alone, and 27,194 in Washington, and 30,128 in the world. This ranks him at #1 in both Skagit and WA (second in WA is at 11,373) and #15 in the world. His total in Skagit County alone would rank at #24 in the world!

Gary talks about Washington Birder and this is a link to that fabulously useful website for WA state and county birders.

I also talk about my Pierce County Big Day. Here is a link to the trip report for that day.

I’ll make this post short, as the trip report on the Birdathon/Big Day took up my writing energy this week.

Until next time. Good birding. Good Day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #58 with David Irons Additional Info.


On The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #58 I talk birding with Dave Irons. Dave is an Oregon birder, husband of Shawneen Finnegan, my guest on Episode #17, author, eBird reviewer and past regional editor of North American Birds. I first met Dave at the last WOS annual conference at a dinner meeting when Bruce LaBar (episode #3), Ken Brown (episode #2) , Shawneen and Dave, and several other birders shared a table. He is a funny, smart and engaging guy who I thought at the time would be a great guest on the podcast. After a doing the episode I’m glad I met him and glad he agreed to do the episode.
I have a lot of respect for eBird reviewers. It is a thankless volunteer job, looking at and confirming or inquiring about the many records of unusual species of birds submitted as sightings to eBird. eBird, the Cornell University citizen science project where birders all over the world can submit our sightings for inclusion in a massive database, has fundamentally changed how birders keep records, find places to go birding, and learn.
Every time, or nearly every time, I go birding I take my smart phone. When I get to a birding location I start an eBird checklist. The phone uses its GPS function to “drop a pin” of my exact location, and then I choose from options to name the list location, usually an eBird “hotspot” at or very near where I’m birding. As I go along, or often when I’m done at a location I enter the number of each species of bird I see, and submit the list to my personal eBird account. If I identify birds that are unusual for the location and time of year I am asked to write supporting evidence to help the reviewer decide if I am likely correct in the ID. The reviewer either confirms the sighting, or sends me an e-mail asking for more information, i.e. details of what I saw, a photo, an audio recording, etc to support my sighting. After that the reviewer makes a decision on whether to “confirm” the sighting as valid, or not. If not the record remains on my personal list of sightings, but is not included in the sight database of sightings. We talk about this on the episode, and Dave gives his approach to this process, one I find fairly common but not universal. An occasional reviewer is less gracious than he might be.
We also talk about his new book titled, American Birding Association Field Guide to the Birds of Oregon. CLick for a link to buy it on Buteo Books. It is a new type of book by the ABA aimed at beginner and intermediate birders to help them find and identify birds in a state. It sounds interesting.
We also talk about the Rio Grande Birding Festival, and his experience as a guide there. It is a really well done festival. I went only once, but met lots of top birders, went on terific field trips, and generally had a great time. I recommend the festival. Mary Gustafson from the recent Episode #48 is a field trip coordinator, and I first med Dorian Anderson of Biking Big Year fame who did Episdoe #5 on the podcast.
I mention Larkwire, a cool web-based game-style tool for learning bird songs. I recommend it highly.
Here is a link to an article about the horse shoe crab and Red Knot issue we talk about on the episode.
Dave also mentions the change in timing of plant flowering at Walden Pond since Thoreau kept his notes in the early 1920’s Here is a link to info about that issue.
We talk about the Oregon and Washington birding listservs and here is a link to Tweeters in WA and OBOL in Oregon.
The Western Field Ornithology meeting that Dave talks about has a website link here.
In my intro I talk about Blair Bernson’s 50-50-50 project and blog. Here is a link to the blog. You can follow on Facebook or subscribe to blog updates on his website. Blair was my guest on Episode #18.
I talk briefly about the Cornell University online Bird Biology course I’m working through, and here is a link to that course.
I mention the difference in golden plover molt strategy, and Dave gives some info. This prompted me to review the issue. American Golden Plovers are an extreme long distance migrant. The first year birds get their juvenile feathers after hatching and migrate huge distances to southern South America. They then need to fly all the way back to the arctic to breed the next summer, and have the unusual molt strategy to have a complete molt of all their flight feathers as a “pre-formative” molt in the fall-winter the year that they are born. So essentially all spring returning American Golden Plovers have fresh flight feathers, i.e. not the worn juvenile feathers. The shorter distance migrant, Pacific Golden Plovers, have the more common molt strategy of retaining their juvenile flight feathers through their first winter, flying back to the breeding grounds, and not molting their juvenile flight feathers until after their return flight (their third long trip on their first set of flight feathers). So a birder in the know about golden plover molt strategies knows that any golden plover seen with very worn primary wing feathers seen in migration has to be a Pacific Golden Plover, because all the American Golden Plovers grew fresh feathers after their first trip south the year they were born. This is just one example of how knowing about a species molt strategy can help with tough species ID issues. Thanks Ken Brown for your teaching in your many years of birding classes for me knowing this bit of molt trivia.
I hope you enjoyed the episode and this post.
Until next time. Good birding and good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #57 with “Puffin” Pete Salmansohn additional Info.


Pete Salmansohn, knows as Puffin Pete, is my guest on The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #57. Pete has worked as an educator for National Audubon Society and other organizations, and has been especially involved in education about seabirds off the Maine Coast. We talk about the highly successful and ongoing reintroduction of Atlantic Puffins and other seabirds to breeding islands off the Maine Coast. Enjoy.
Seabirds are one of the true wonders of the world. These birds in many cases spend their lives at sea, coming to shore only to breed. The family called Alcids, or Alcidae, are the northern hemisphere equivalent of the southern hemisphere penguins. They may be less well known to non-birders, but are incredible creatures none-the-less. Atlantic Puffins are maybe the most colorful of the puffin family. We have Tufted Puffins and Horned Puffins in the Pacific, and in the Atlantic are the Atlantic Puffins. Our commonly seen Rhinoceros Auklet is relatively closely related to the puffins also.

Rhinoceros Auklet at Westport this Feb.

These days it is relatively easy to see Atlantic Puffins on a short boat ride from New Harbor, ME. This is the boat that Pete Salmansohn led trips for decades, and we talk about these on the episode. Here is a link to the company that offers these trips.

We talk about Hog Island Audubon Camp and here is a link to their site.
Here is the Project Puffin website link
Here is a link to a 2010 Smithsonian Magazine article on the Puffin Reintroduction.
Here is another article about the work of their project. I like this one a lot.
You can find both of Pete’s children’s books on Amazon on or other book sellers. Here is a link on Amazon to the Project Puffin book
Here is Saving Birds- Heros Around the World link.
You can find out about the Hudson Highlands Land Trust here.
We also mention the artist island Monhegan Island on the episode. Here is information about that fabulous place to visit.
Here are links to other Bird Banter Podcast Episodes we talked about:
The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #26 with Tim Larson
The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #44 with Clarice and Jerry Broadus
Enjoy Spring Migration.

Solitary Sandpiper from the muddy field in Fife mentioned in the intro of this episode.

Good birding. Good Day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #56 with Mike Bergin Additional Notes


On The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #56 I talk with Mike Bergin, the creator and force behind 10,000 Birds, the largest and likely longest running birding blog anywhere. Mike is an avid birding traveler, and has birded at many of the top world birding hotspots. He has also developed a top team of “beat writers” who contribute regularly to 10,000 Birds.
My favorite column on 10,000 Birds is Mikes every Monday “Best Bird of the Weekend” column. It is fun to read, see what others in the comments section report as their “best bird” of the weekend, and then force me to think back about my weekend.
Mike has also contributed to the birding community with the no-longer-functioning Nature Blog Network, where he helped collect the top bloggers on nature subjects into one place to read. With the evolution of social media this has stopped being as useful, but it was a key resource for years.
Mike also wrote I and the Bird that in addition to being a component of 10,000 BIrds was was featured on the ABA website for years.
I hope you find my talk with Mike as enjoyable as it was for me to produce.
Good birding. Good day!

Supplemental Info: The Bird Banter Episode #55 with Suzie Gilbert.


On Episode #55 I talk with bird rehabilitator and author Suzie Gilbert. Here is a photo of Suzie with a Red-tailed Hawk.

I have had little to no experience with bird rehabilitation centers or the people who work at or operate these facilities prior to talking with Suzie Gilbert. On this episode Suzie tells us about how she came to be a bird rehab volunteer and over time came to own and operate her own rehab center out of her home. After I talked with Suzie and we agreed to do this episode I downloaded and read her latest novel, Unflappable, in the Kindle version. I read it over the weekend, a fun read and pretty much a page-turner as I raced to follow the fate of the heroine as she avoids police, National Wildlife personnel and a jealous abusive billionaire husband on a crazy quest type journey. After reading the novel I was even more excited to talk Suzie.
Here is a photo of the cover of her novel.

She did not disappoint me as a fun, informative and IMHO very interesting guest. I hope you enjoy. 

You can buy Unflappable at Amazon or Barnes and Noble online.

Her website is SuzieGilbert.com

We talk about her time as a writer for 10,000 Birds, a top birding blog.  

Here is a link to the National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association website Suzie mentioned where you can learn lots about bird and other wildlife rehab. 

Be sure to check out my blog post with more details about the episode at Birdbanter.com.

 

Until next time. 

Good birding. Good day!

Episode #54 with Nate Chappell Additional Info

On the Bird Banter Podcast Episode #54 I talk with Nate Chappell. Nate grew up in Tacoma, where I live, and he and his brother Chris were top young birders around the time I moved to Washington 30+ years ago. We talk about his experiences birding around Washington, Christmas Bird Counts, and especially about his experiences as a bird photographer. His tour company, Trogon Photo Tours leads tours all over the world, specializing in bird and other nature photography.
You can follow Nate on Facebook and Instagram

I find Nate’s photos on his Facebook page a reason to smile, and get wonderlust regularly. In this time of being home more, and social distancing, enjoy looking back at his posts.
Nate talks about using a high shutter speed to improve action photos on your camera as a simple trick to improve results.
Please leave a comment here, or better yet leave a review of the episode you listen to on your preferred podcast app.
Thanks.
Until next time.
Good birding and good day!

Notes Supplemental to The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #53 with Ryan Merrill


Ryan Merrill and I talk about his birding story,  birding in Washington State, and about his local patch birding.  He also talks about his work on the Washington Bird Records Committee, and life as the husband/father in a family with a young child as a birder.  Enjoy. 

You can reach Ryan by e-mail: rjm284-at-gmail-dot-com

Here is a link to the Washington Bird Records Committee site:  

This is info about the Seattle Audubon Society Young Birders activities:  

The Swallow-tailed Gull Ryan found in WA made the local media in many places. Here is an example:  

Ryan talks about Carkeek Park near his home in Seattle. Here is info about that local park:  https://www.seattle.gov/parks/find/parks/carkeek-park

I hope you all stay well, get birding often, and until next time. Good birding. Good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #52 with Stephanie Seymour Supporting Information



On this episode I am joined by Stephanie Seymour, the artist of the recently released album There Are Birds. She is an avid birder, has her own private official hawkwatch station at her home in New Jersey, and is a longtime professional musician. This album has 12 songs, each with the title of a listable North American bird except the final track, Migration is Over. Three of the songs are included in this podcast. Enjoy.
You can buy Stephanie’s album at her website: www.ThereAreBirds.com It is available as either a digital download or as a CD you can order.

We mention birding in Central Park with Starr Saphir who led walks in spring there for about 40 years before her death. The movie, The Central Park Effect is very cool, and features Starr in part. I really enjoyed this movie.
You can find her on Facebook and on Instagram @There_Are_Birds
On the ABA website Frank Izaguirre wrote a glowing review of this album you can access on the ABA site by clicking here.

Until next time. Good birding. Good day.