Subject: [Tweeters] RE: Bird ID challenge
Date: Apr 30 17:10:58 2017
From: Bruce - blabar at harbornet.com


I also thought BTPI because of flock. However, the feet and flanks got me.
Glad for all the replies .
Bruce

> On Apr 30, 2017, at 3:10 PM, Stewart Wechsler <ecostewart at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> My first thought was Band-tailed Pigeon, and that the brown spot was the feet. I then read others' replies, and see all of the other educated guesses were the same. I almost thought I could make out the band on the tail. At least the tail, going from the vent to the tip, got darker at about the place where the band would be. They also often form flocks of about that size.
>
> Speaking of Band-tailed Pigeons, I did a double-take yesterday, when I saw a Band-tailed Pigeon, sitting with some urban Rock Pigeons on a telephone wire, in a built up part of West Seattle.
>
> -Stewart
> www.stewardshipadventures.com
> 206 932-7225 (currently only land)
>
>> Message: 9
>> Date: Sat, 29 Apr 2017 20:07:15 -0700
>> From: John Riegsecker <jriegsecker at pobox.com>
>> Subject: [Tweeters] Bird ID Challenge
>> To: tweeters at u.washington.edu
>> Message-ID: <bb4130b2-0243-acab-3ab6-abfb3e68187a at pobox.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
>>
>> All,
>>
>> Friday forenoon I photographed the southern ends of birds flying north
>> at Steilacoom Park. There were at least 17 in all, flying in a loose
>> flock. I would say they were somewhere between the size of a pigeon and
>> a crow. The photos are butt shots taken at extreme range. However, you
>> can see they have a white breast, which narrows to a strip and then
>> becomes wider near the tail, with a distinct brown spot. Perhaps
>> someone who knows their birds backwards and forwards can identify them.
>>
>> Photos here:
>>
>> http://skygardener.zenfolio.com/p996964534
>>
>> Thanks in advance for any help.
>>
>> John Riegsecker
>> Gig Harbor, WA
>> jriegsecker at pobox dot com
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