I saw this sitting on a tree branch on my way to school.
Mammals:
4. Fox Squirrel
I saw the vulture this afternoon while at school, and two rabbits this evening while taking my dog outside.
Mammals:
5. Eastern Cottontail
Birds:
18. Turkey Vulture
I saw this sitting on a tree branch on my way to school.
Mammals:
4. Fox Squirrel
The vultures are migrating north, I saw a wake of vultures this evening as wellI saw the vulture this afternoon while at school, and two rabbits this evening while taking my dog outside.
Mammals:
5. Eastern Cottontail
Birds:
18. Turkey Vulture
Finally a new update!
76. Mourning Dove (Zenaida macroura)
4-76-4-2-0-8
It's been a fairly slow month since my last post, but I did twitch two vagrants (hooded crow and baikal teal) and two regional rarities (red-necked grebe and penduline tit). Especially the Baikal teal was exciting - the one I saw last year ended up staying for a few months but nobody ever photographed the legs and wings well enough so it's doubtful that that one will get accepted. This one's looking really good though - very shy (a lot shier than surrounding ducks), good photographs of the wings (intact, some moult but symmetrically which is good), and no bands or signs of cage damage on the naked parts... And a female, which is nice because I can't even recall seeing females in captivity, so it felt even more like a lifer.The Belgian wintering wallcreeper really really dislikes me. Fifth trip for it this winter (luckily not all involving the long drive from home to there), still nothing!
BIRDS:
150) Black redstart, Phoenicurus ochruros
151) White wagtail, Motacilla alba
152) Black woodpecker, Dryocopus martius
(+8 heard only)
Would be a lot simpler if we could just count heard-onlies, like most birders do...![]()
You say cheating, I say birding efficiently.Then again, just because everyone cheats doesn't mean we should too, right?
Would be good for my list though! I lost track of how many water rails I've heard so far this year without seeing any and I suspect the same will happen for common quail.
Migration is really ramping up around here:Birds
76. Sandhill Crane Antigone canadensis
77. White-winged Scoter Melanitta deglandi
BirdsMigration is really ramping up around here:
Birds
78. Turkey Vulture Cathartes aura
79. Canvasback Aythya valisineria
80. Killdeer Charadrius vociferus
Would be a lot simpler if we could just count heard-onlies, like most birders do...![]()
Does there have to be a challenge? There's a lot of species that are much easier to see than rails are to hear, should we discount all of those? The other way around, there's also plenty of birds that are easy to see but very hard to hear...If I could count heard-only species then there would be no fun or challenge in adding rails to your list.
perhaps most importantly it teaches people to bird by ear, which is an invaluable lesson and step in everyone's birding career
Fair, but birding by ear can also make things more inclusive as well... You already mention blind people, but also consider people that can't afford binoculars and/or cameras - I'd have no clue how to ever visually identify reed warblers or pipits if not for optics (because they're never really close enough), but hearing them and identifying them that way is technically possible for everyone with an internet connection and the willingness to learn...But, on the other hand, only including actual sightings means people who can't bird by ear don't feel excluded from the thread
Oh that was a trick question, I was already crazy well before that.Yes.
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~Thylo
I was one off on my numbers because I accidentally counted ringneck parrot twiceHaha wet season mate - hard to get around and birds are dispersed far and wide. Had a couple fleeting glimpses of possible juv Gouldians flying past but not enough to be happy with it. They apparently start to show up here in good numbers around the start of April. You'll notice also no Torresian Crows yet...
BIRDS
279 - Red-backed Kingfisher (Todiramphus pyrrhopygius)
280 - White-winged Triller (Lalage tricolor)
REPTILES
16 - Children's Python (Antaresia childrensi)
17 - Long-nosed Water Dragon (Gowidon longirostris)
18 - Merten's Water Monitor (Varanus mertensi)
AMPHIBIANS
9 - Roth's Tree Frog (Litoria rothii)