Subject: [Tweeters] backyard/neighborhood birding
Date: Wed Apr 1 13:23:21 PDT 2020
From: Bill Anderson - billandersonbic at yahoo.com

Check out the bird photos on this photography website for virtual backyard/neighborhood birding.  Any thread with the word "Edmonds" in it contains  my  photos.

Bird Photography


|

|

| |

Bird Photography

Photos of birds in the Pacific Northwest
|

|

|


Bill Anderson; Edmonds, WA. USA

On Wednesday, April 1, 2020, 10:27:20 AM PDT, jstewart at olympus.net <jstewart at olympus.net> wrote:


Please share the beauty and wings in your backyard/neighborhood.

 

Our Rufus have returned; and, a Coopers flashed through this morning.

 

 

Wings,

Jan

 

Jan Stewart

922 E. Spruce Street

Sequim, WA  98382-3518

(360) 681-2827

jstewart at olympus.net

 

From: Tweeters <tweeters-bounces at mailman11.u.washington.edu> On Behalf Of B B
Sent: Wednesday, April 01, 2020 8:27 AM
To: birdmarymoor at gmail.com; Tweeters <tweeters at uw.edu>
Subject: Re: [Tweeters] eBird to hide rarities

 

I had advocated a total pause on publication of all ebird reports to them last week.  This is at least a step in the right direction.  Tweeters should be doing the same.  We can all live without this for awhile.

 

On Wednesday, April 1, 2020, 08:24:06 AM PDT, <birdmarymoor at gmail.com> wrote:

 

 

Tweets -; I've just heard that eBird is going to be hiding reports of rarities, in order to dissuade birders from traveling, and from crowding together trying to relocate them.  They say that low-level county rarities will continue to be public, but County Firsts, state rarities, and certainly any ABA rare birds in the lower-48 states will be quietly hidden from eBird output for the near term.

 

"People are still birding, hopefully all locally.  There will be rare birds found.  But we feel it is in the best interests of everyone to make this appear to be the most boring Spring Migration ever.  Of course, there will be an awful day of reckoning later when we later make these reports publicly visible, and you find out there was a Bristle-thighed Curlew at a reservoir near you, but we all must sacrifice in these difficult times."

 

= Michael Hobbs
= www.marymoor.org/birding.htm
= BirdMarymoor at gmail.com

_______________________________________________
Tweeters mailing list
Tweeters at u.washington.edu
http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters
_______________________________________________
Tweeters mailing list
Tweeters at u.washington.edu
http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/pipermail/tweeters/attachments/20200401/091689a5/attachment.html>