Subject: here's Tyler
Date: Jan 30 16:11:56 2001
From: Ruth Sullivan - godwit at worldnet.att.net


Hello Tweeters,
I must also say" CONGRATULATION TYLER"
I met you in the fall in Ocean Shores when you was with you Dad on an outing
also going to Westport.I been reading you messages on Tweeters,and it always
impressed me that you talked about you parents.When i met you i did not
expect such a tall Lad(and also so good looking)
You are well groomed and smart and verry verry friendly and open to speak
to.If you remember the most highest tide i ever been seeing on Ocean Shores
and the weather was so terrible and there was flood all over Ocean
Shores.The Shorebirds was standing on the path on Damon Point no where to
land.This award can not be giving to a nicer birder than you Tyler.I mention
you name many times to others and what impact you making in our birding
community.
Congratulation and good luck for the future.

Ruth Sullivan
Tacoma
godwit at worldnet.att.net
----- Original Message -----
From: Hal Opperman <halop at accessone.com>
To: tweeters <tweeters at u.washington.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2001 12:12 PM
Subject: here's Tyler


> The February issue of Birding, just arrived, profiles the winners of
> the ABA/Leica Young Birder of the Year Contest 1999-2000. And there,
> with a fine photo, is Tyler Davis of Mercer Island (and Tweeters).
> Congratulations Tyler!
>
> Also in this issue is "An Introduction to the NABCI Bird Conservation
> Regions" by David Pashley, who will edit a new department in Birding
> devoted to profiles of each of these 37 regions. More and more birds
> conservationists are accepting this regional construct as a model for
> bird conservation efforts in the future. Three of these areas can be
> found in the loosely defined Cascadia region served by Tweeters:
> Northern Pacific Rainforest, Great Basin, and Northern Rockies (if
> you go waaaaay north in British Columbia, add two more --
> Northwestern Interior Forest and Boreal Taiga Plains).
>
> This department is a nice addition to the magazine's usual fine
> articles on identification (e.g., "Wing covert pattern as an aid to
> identifying female and immature Bullock's and Baltimore
> Orioles--another look," by Jaramillo, Lee, and Birch) and birding
> sites (e.g., article on birding for vagrants in my old home state of
> Illinois -- who woulda thunk a Red-cockaded Woodpecker would show up
> there?).
>
> Hal Opperman
> Medina, Washington
> mailto:halop at accessone.com