Subject: [Tweeters] A Tale of Two Sparrows, or what the Dickens!
Date: Fri Nov 5 20:24:35 PDT 2021
From: Hal Opperman - hal at catharus.net

Bob and Dennis,

The Mailman software the UW listserver uses is an antique version. They tell us they will be updating to a new version Very Soon. I'm replying to just you two (FYI) because I don't know when this will actually happen or if it will include ability to transmit attachments (photographs and other documents), although I assume so. Elaine will make the appropriate announcement to the list when the time is right. Good news for sure, and very long overdue.

We had White-throated Sparrow in our yard in Medina two or three tiumes, including one year when one was present for weeks at the same time as a Harris's Sparrow.

Cheers!

Hal Opperman


> On Nov 5, 2021, at 8:00 PM, Robert O'Brien <baro at pdx.edu> wrote:

>

> I agree completely with Dennis about posting photos to tweeters. Is there some real reason for this other than simply custom? Oregon's obol has allowed photos for many years. Normally you're supposed to only submit a single photo with an email, but people occasionally submit more and I haven't heard any complaints. I'm pretty sure OBOL's no photos dated back to the time when people used dial-up to get on the internet and downloading photos with extremely slow. Bob O'Brien Portland

>

> On Friday, November 5, 2021, Dennis Paulson <dennispaulson at comcast.net> wrote:

> Hello, tweets.

>

> I was pleased to see and photograph an immature White-throated Sparrow in our Seattle yard on 4 November. Yesterday, 5 November, I got a glimpse of it again. But wait-;was that the same bird? It really looked brighter to me, but as I grabbed the camera, it disappeared into the bushes and never came out during a lengthy vigilance. I figured I must have not seen it well enough, as surely it was the same bird, but I held out hope that I would see it again.

>

> And sure enough, this afternoon Netta called out "here it is again," and again it left the yard just as I got to the dining room. But this time I stood there with the camera, willing it to come back, and finally it did, a brightly marked adult bird with a few lost tail feathers growing in (cats all over the neighborhood), easily distinguishing it from the previous bird. So two different White-throated Sparrows in the yard over a three-day period, pretty cool. In 30 years of living here, we have seen seven of them in the yard, one in spring (6 May) and six in fall (22 Sep-5 Nov).

>

> As always, I'm sorry there is no way to attach photos of these neat birds! This is surely one of the reasons so many people have migrated from listservs to Facebook groups.

>

> Dennis Paulson

> Seattle

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