Subject: [Tweeters] Big Barn Theory
Date: Jan 23 09:36:11 2015
From: Beth Thompson - calliopehb at comcast.net


Had anyone considered our mild winter and a possible abundance of food? That would be my guess.
Regards..
Beth Thompson
Arlington WA

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jan 22, 2015, at 8:31 PM, "Jeff Kozma" <jcr_5105 at charter.net> wrote:
>
> We had one last year on the Yakima CBC right about the time they were being reported on the west side.
>
> Jeff Kozma
>
> Yakima
>
> J c r underscore 5105 at charter dot net
>
> From: tweeters-bounces at mailman1.u.washington.edu [mailto:tweeters-bounces at mailman1.u.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Jeff Gibson
> Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2015 7:17 PM
> To: tweeters
> Subject: [Tweeters] Big Barn Theory
>
> Like others on tweeters, I find the sporadic appearance of Barn Swallows in our area in winter really interesting. I have noted in the past few winters, that when one tweeter sees Barn Swallows this time of year, many other tweeters also do, in many other sites in our region. Last year I saw a Barn Swallow in Port Townsend - December, I think - and at the same time other tweeters were also seeing them in various spots around our region. Just like what's happening now.
>
> My theory is that there is a really Big Barn out there somewhere, and somebody (God? Mother Nature?) occasionally forgets to close the Barn doors, and the swallows get out when they're not supposed to. Thats my theory, and I'm sticking to it, until some more intelligent tweeter comes forth with some real facts!
>
> Jeff Gibson
> Whatever Wa
> _______________________________________________
> Tweeters mailing list
> Tweeters at u.washington.edu
> http://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman1.u.washington.edu/pipermail/tweeters/attachments/20150123/522191ce/attachment.htm