Subject: FW: [Tweeters] Re: strange bird sighting in Seattle
Date: May 3 23:10:38 2006
From: Eric Kowalczyk - aceros at mindspring.com


FYI: the bird Dennis mentions was caught at Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle.........have not seen any in that condition since.

Eric Kowalczyk
Seattle
aceros at mindspring..com
----- Original Message -----
From: Dennis Paulson
To: schillingera at hotmail.com
Cc: Tweeters
Sent: 5/3/2006 8:06:57 PM
Subject: [Tweeters] Re: strange bird sighting in Seattle


Amy,


When I first started working at the Slater Museum in Tacoma, I was given a dead starling that had a bill exactly as you described, much longer than a normal starling bill and downcurved. It is a specimen in the museum now.


Dennis

-----
Dennis Paulson
1724 NE 98 St.
Seattle, WA 98115
206-528-1382


Date: Tue, 02 May 2006 14:56:49 -0700
From: "amy schillinger" <schillingera at hotmail.com>
Subject: [Tweeters] strange bird sighting in Seattle
To: tweeters at u.washington.edu
Message-ID: <BAY109-F287D83C3A1DAEBFA8270FDC8B60 at phx.gbl>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed


Tweeters,
I was at the Centennial Apartments at 4th and Wall streets in Belltown early
Tuesday morning and caught a glimpse of what I thought at first to be a
starling. It was in a maple tree next to the patio. It was a bit larger than
a starling but the strangest thing about it was the size and shape of its
bill. It was very long (about 2-3 inches) and curved downward. I did not see
the width or length of the tail and only got a quick look before it flew
off. Very dark bird from what I could tell. Very dark brown or black even.
Has anyone else seen this strange bird? Do starlings suffer from beak
deformities? The bill was not crooked but seemed deeply curved like a
thrasher but even more so. Interesting indeed.
~Amy Schillinger
Rainier Audubon