Tag: birding podcast

The Bird Banter Podcast #78 with Nick Lund Supplemental Information


I had a blast talking with fellow Mainer Nick Lund on The Bird Banter Podcast #78. Nick, “The Birdist”, has carved out a niche in the ABA birding community as one of the top writers, speakers and birders especially in tune with birding in the broader context of life in America. He writes the blog, “The Birdist”, and is a regular guest on the ABA Podcast with Nate Swick, especially on the “this month in birding” segment.
Nick works for Maine Audubon, an independent Maine conservation organization, and his birding story is fun and inspirational. I especially enjoyed hearing how he got started in birding after stumbling across a used Peterson Field Guide with hand-written field notes in the side columns. This reminded me how my late wife Kay taught me to keep my notes as she had been taught by writing the date and county of every first sighting.

Kay’s original Golden Guide field guide book, copyright 1966. It is her life list, and essentially a travel diary. It has been to the bottom of McGrath Pond in Oakland, Maine.

Here are Kay’s field notes/life list notation of her “spark bird” a Cedar Waxwing seen on the Middle Fork of the Weiser River in Adams County, ID 9/4/1976 where she first started birding while living with three young CA birders and working on a Boise Cascade brush crew,
This is the Peterson Field Guide that I bought at the Ranger Station in the Everglades on my first day of birding there. It is the first Peterson Guide to the Birds East of the Rockies that has the plates in color and next to the descriptions rather than in black and white and in a separate section.
Here is the page showing some of the waders I saw on my first day of birding in the Everglades with Kay. 4-17-1986.

Here are links to some of the things we talked about:
Maine Audubon
The ABA Podcast episode on birding Newfoundland

Good Birding. Good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast #74 with Tom Bancroft Additional Information


I first met Tom Bancroft at the first Washington Ornithology Society (WOS) meeting after I was elected as a trustee last year. Tom is the secretary of WOS, and impressed me with his quiet, thoughtful, knowledgeable and impactful input on most of the issues we discussed. I knew from reading the WOS newsletter that he is a good writer, and came to realize that is he also a very good birder and has had an interesting and broad set of experiences I was excited to explore on the podcast. I was not disappointed, and hope you enjoy the episode.

You can find Tom’s birding class with the Mountaineers here once it is listed.

Here is a link to the Seattle Audubon Society website classes page.
This is Tom’s web site. You can find his class by the Eastside Audubon Society here.
This is the WOS website. Here is a link to the online version of the Birder’s Guide to Washington

The everglades were where Tom worked for many years. Here is a link to an old blog post I wrote about a visit there.

Here is an article in the Florida Audubon Society website on the Everglades “River of Grass” land acquisition program.
The Merlin app from Cornell is a phone and online free app to help identify birds. Here is a link to the Cornell web site with a how-to-use-Merlin lesson and links to the app stores to download the app.

Tom talks about the Important Bird Area initiative. Here is an article on the Cornell site talking about this program.

Please leave a comment with any suggestions you have for future guests, other feedback, or contact me at the contact page on this site.
Until next time. Good birding. Good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast #75 with Matt Yawney


I have met Matt Yawney in the field a few times. Each time left me with new respect for Matt as a birder and as a really nice guy. One of the first times I met Matt was on a visit to Bassett Park in Washtucna, WA. This is a quite small town in eastern WA, and Matt had found an uncommon eastern wood warbler there the day prior. I don’t recall which warbler, but I do remember Matt spending some time looking around the park with me, and seeing and hearing lots of other migrants in the trees.
Later in 2018 Matt was doing a Grant County big year, and we communicated when Ken Brown and I were birding fall migration in the area. Ken and I located a Short-billed Dowicher at Potholes Park and a Pacific Golden Plover at Perch Point, and helped get Matt onto these two species he needed for his year list.
At the last WOS Conference in Moses Lake Matt led a field trip to Northrop Canyon that included many other stops. He was a really fine trip leader, and again we were all impressed and pleased at his low-key but high energy birding leadership on his home turf.
Grant County is a fairly rural county, with less than 90,000 people in the 2010 census, but has a nice list of birds. There are 339 species on the Grant County Checklist on WABirds.com and Matt has seen 286 species on his eBird list. I don’t know of anyone with a list that approaches Matt in the county. The closest on eBird is Gina Sheridan with 245, and on the WA Birder site Randy Hill has 264 posted. `
I especially enjoyed Matt talking about really working the expected migrant spots in the key times of the year. This sounded a lot like when I talked with Kimball Garrett on episode 71 and he talked about knowing the geography, the vagrancy patterns, and the expected local birds as keys to finding uncommon vagrants.
Here are some links that relate to topics discussed on the episode:
Matt’s eBird Profile page
The WABirder Page.
The episode of The Bird Banter Podcast with Ryan Rodriguez
The Bird Banter Podcast with Kimball Garrett
Here is a cool article with more info on Arctic Tern migration.
Until next time. Good birding. Good day!

Supplemental Notes on The Bird Banter Podcast #71 Ed on Birding Resources

On The Bird Banter Podcast #71 I talk in detail about resources birders, both experienced and beginners, can use to get more enjoyment out of their birding, to learn to better find and identify birds they see, and about my own progression from beginner to a more experienced and proficient birder today. Here are links to help find some of the resources mentioned in the episode. Enjoy.

Episodes with great individual birding stories:
The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #2 with Ken Brown
The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #3 with Bruce LaBar
The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #68 with Dennis Paulson
The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #45 with Annie Meyer

The North American Field Guide Recommendations

Sibley Guide to the Birds second edition
The National Geographic Guide to the Birds of North America 7th edition (note I inadvertently stated that there is an 8th edition on the podcast, my mistake there.
The Birds of North America by Kenn Kauffman
Kaufman Field Guide to Advanced Birding.
The ABA’s Guide to the Birds of Oregon by David Irons

Supplemental Bird ID guides mentioned in the podcast episode:
Pete Dunne’s Field Guide Companion Kindle Edition here. Tough to find in hardcover edition.
Hawks in Flight by Dunne, Sibley and Sutton
Shorebirds of the Pacific Northwest by Dennis Paulson out of print, this link to an expensive used book on Amazon.
Oceanic Birds of the World by Howell and Zufelt
Molt in North American Birds by Howell is out of print and quite expensive used.

The Phone Bird ID apps mentioned are:
Sibley V2
iBird PRO after further research I don’t recommend buying this app as it sounds like future support could be in question.

The eBird app is described here.
The Merlin App for bird ID is described here.
This is a link to the ABA page to find any state or regional listserv for bird sightings.
I talk about Jerry Cooper’s book: Birdfinder: A Birder’s Guide to Planning North American Trips. Used copies are available inexpensively.

Please leave comments with other suggestions or advice to birders about resources you like. Thanks.

Good birding. Good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #68 with Dennis Paulson Additional Info.


I have knows about Dennis Paulson since first moving to  the Puget Sound area in 1987, and after getting his Shorebirds of the Pacific Northwest book have enjoyed reading that and reviewing it every spring and fall as migration approaches.  Dennis is an iconic figure in the Washington birding community.  He has taught the Seattle Audubon Master Birding Class for many years, curated the Slater Museum at the University of Puget Sound and taught there, has talked at just about every local and regional birding related event for decades, and is such a nice guy that he is truly beloved by WA birders.

We talk about lots of topics on the podcast. Here are links to some of them.

Shorebirds of the Pacific Northwest is out of print, and expensive on Amazon. If you want a copy, search and maybe you can find one.

Shorebirds of North America a Photographic Guide is still available.

Hawks in Flight by Pete Dunne and others is here on Buteo Books.

Pete Dunnes Field Guide Companion is the third book I mentioned that is one of my favorites.   It is best found as a Kindle Book on Amazon now, as the hard cover ones are expensive.  It is not a book with photographs or color plates, so a digital version should be great. ‘

Here is a link to the online Slater Museum Collection  of wings and tails.  You’ll need to search by scientific name, so be prepared.

Both of the dragonfly books we discussed,  the Dragonflies of the East and Dragonflies of the West are still available on Amazon.

We talk about the Washington Ornithological Society convention. Here is a link to the WOS web site.

The Audubon Guide to the Birds of Oregon we talked about is by David Irons, my guest on The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #58. with a link here.

You can find the Seattle Audubon Society website page on the here to check on the next Master Birding Class with Dennis.

Thanks for visiting. Please subscribe to the Bird Banter Podcast wherever you get your podcast feeds.

Good Birding. Good day!

 

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #64 with Heather Ballash and Marcus Roening Additional Info.


37×1024.jpg” alt=”” width=”937″ height=”1024″ class=”size-large wp-image-1117″ /> Heather and Marcus on the Pacific Crest Trail part of our hike to Government Meadow yesterday. [/caption]
I have known Marcus and Heather Roening for a long time. Marcus has been a prominent Pierce County birder and conservationist for most if not all of the time I’ve lived here, since 1987. More recently I got to know them much better on a birding trip to Morocco. You can hear more about that on several episodes I produced in April 2019. Michael Carmody, the tour leader was my guest on episode #12. We don’t talk much about the trip on this episode, so check there to see more about that trip. I bring this up because it was the time when I feel like I really got to see how fun it was to be around both Heather and Marcus. They are both excellent birders and I enjoyed their company and birding expertise on that trip.

Heather and Marcus with Michael Carmody (left) in Morocco in 2019.

Yesterday we went to Government Meadows, a large meadow near Mt. Rainier, in hopes of finding a few FOY (first-of-year) species for Pierce County. This was Heather’s idea, as we were trying to work out a place to record an episode and she thought it would be fun to do it outdoors, and if we could also manage to find a couple FOY Pierce County birds she might pass Bruce LaBar and go into first place for the most species seen in Pierce so far this year on eBird. We talk on the episode about this ongoing friendly competition. Rain, sleet, snow, and fatigue kept the recording from happening there, and rain pushed us indoors to their garage, a place big and open enough to properly social distance and accomplish the recording.
We saw some great scenery and got a good hike in yesterday, but alas no FOY species for any of us.
I hope you all enjoyed the episode. Feel free to leave comments here with ideas for guests, suggestions for improving the podcast, or just to reach out or give feedback.

Until next time. Good birding. Good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #63 with Mike Denny: More Info


Mike Denny

Mike Denny is my guest on The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #63, and what fun we had doing the recording. I called Mike a week or so ahead of a hoped for trip to the Walla Walla area in hopes of seeing my first Washington State Great Gray Owl. I had seen this species in Oregon, on a trip coordinated by Ken Brown for our ABC Birding Club, when a local biologist took us to a known nest box. That was very exciting, as an lifer and we got to see both adults and young birds. Mike offered to take Ken and me to a known nesting area in WA, and though the birds had fledged a week or so earlier, he expected that we would be able to find them in the area.
Gray Catbird

After a nice early morning of birding the lower elevations of Walla Walla County, and adding Veery to our WA year list, we headed up Jasper Mountain. Along the way Mike held told stories
Adult Ferruginous Hawk in a tree right beside the road. Photo taken through open drivers window from passenger seat.
of the Jasper Mountain Land Trust and how important they, and land trusts in general are to habitat preservation, as well as lots of cool info on the birds, butterflies, salamanders, snakes etc of the area.
After getting to the area of the nesting spot, Mike showed us the unusual nest site, a large escavated Pileated Woodpecker working, and we started to look for branching owlets. Mike pointed out scree by the road. He showed us how adult scree is all urea, like most birds, but that the scree of young owls can contain undigested hair and other material. We also saw wolf dung, like large dog poop but containing lots of hair from the deer or elk that they take as prey.
Wolf Dung. Note the hair from prey .

Shortly Ken spotted two owlets on a branch of a tree maybe 75 meters away. We looked at them, and then moved to a place with a clearer view. Mike suggested that we sit and watch, and wait for the parents to come feed them. I thought this was a perfect time to talk, and record the podcast, so Mike, Ken and I sat on a roadside bank, watched the owlets, and recorded this episode. I used an omnidirectional speaker, so listen carefully and hear both the owlets begging, the adult GGOW answering, and lots of other birds in the area.
Two of the 3 Great Gray Owl branching young birds that we watched for an hour or so.

Here is a link to The Secret Life of the Forest: The Northern Blue Mountains.
Here is the web site of the Blue Mountain Land Trust, the group that has helped preserve the land around a top birding area we visited, Coppei Creek https://bmlt.org/
Here is the snake that Mike spotted in the road on the way down from Bethyl Ridge Road.

A species of snake, a “Racer” of some variety, that Mike managed to get to move from the middle of the road to directly underneath his vehicle.

And here is Mike looking for the snake in his engine compartment, after he tried to shoo it away to safety, and instead it hid under his car, then disappeared.
Mike searching for the snake in his engine compartment.

Overall a great day of birding, ending with this fabulous sunset.
Sunset over Rattlesnake Mountain.

Until next time, good birding and good day!

The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #62 with Jean Pullen Additional Information


Jean at her Caribean Food Forest

On The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #62 with Jean Pullen we talk primarily about her passion for restorative agriculture. Other names for this type of food production are Permaculture, Food Forestry, and Agriforestry. Jean and her partner Alan are in the process of restoring a hectacre of previous pastureland into a self-sustaining agricultural forest, with multiple layers of habitat for birds and other animals, along with an abundance of food for themselves and to market.
Jean is also involved with other organizations that are working to improve farming in the tropics and elsewhere, to restore the land, improve the farmers lives, and provide uber-healthy food for their own consumption and as a revenue producing crop. See lots of additional information at Kiss the Ground, where you’ll find podcast, video and blog posts.
You can follow Jean at her Facebook page.

We talk about the relatively tiny 500 M2 property on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica that Alan and Jean have converted from a small lawn into an incredibly abundant food-producing multi-layered forest in just a couple of years.

Jean resting from her agriforestry work.

I cannot wait to have the chance to spend time in Costa Rica with Jean, learning the birds there, of course visiting my daughter, and enjoying the insanely delicious fruit.
I also talk about the Scarlet-rumped Tanager seen in Jean’s garden. Here are some photos of the tanager and a few of the other birds I saw in her garden.

Social Flycatcher

The Clay-colored Thrush, the National Bird of Costa Rica I discuss in the introduction.

You can find my podcast episode with my son Brett at The Bird Banter Podcast Episode #42

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!