Nikon Monarch 7

Social Media

04/13/2013

The Eyrie is looking for a Few Good Student Editors

by ABA

Cross posted from the Eyrie. Originally written by Jennie Duberstein

Eyrie kids

Are you interested in the challenge of bringing together the skills and talents of young birders across the world and working to create a truly unique and outstanding young birder blog? If so, now is your chance! We're looking to add a few exceptional young birders to our volunteer Student Blog Editor Team.

What being a student editor entails is pretty straightforward:

  • You write a minimum of one post per month for the blog.
  • You try to recruit one post per month from other young birders, give these posts a first round of edits, and pass them on to the Blog Manager for final editing and publication.
  • You take a turn compiling the monthly "Young Birder Blog Birding" post.
  • You help promote the blog to other young birders and those with an interest--on Facebook, your own blog, by word of mouth, etc.
  • You help guide the future direction of the blog, including content, design, etc.

Being a student blog editor for The Eyrie gives you the unique opportunity to gain experience, improve your writing and editing skills, work with experts in the fields or ornithology, birding, and conservation, and help shape the future of the youth birding world. As blog editor, you will seek out contributors, ensure the timely submission of blog posts, artwork, and photographs to yourself and the Blog Manager, follow American Birding Association guidelines for editing of submissions, stay in close contact with the Blog Manager, and keep abreast of the goings on in the world of youth birding. You will also regularly contribute your own posts, photos, and/or artwork to The Eyrie.

Qualifications: Editors must...

  • be pre-college, age 18 or under.
  • have a good connection with other young birders.
  • be willing to make a one-year commitment to the blog.

To apply, send a letter of interest with information about your experience and qualifications, a writing sample, and two letters of recommendation to: Jennie Duberstein, ABA Young Birder Liaison/The Eyrie Blog Manager, at jduberstein at aba dot org or PO Box 40253, Tucson AZ 85717. Emailed applications are strongly are preferred.

Your letter of interest and letters of support should include information about your skills and experience as a birder, writer, artist, photographer, trip leader, etc., your involvement with and connections to the world of young birders, and anything else that explains what you would bring to the editorial team of The Eyrie.

APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY MAY 24, 2013. Direct all questions to jduberstein at aba.org.

Bookmark and Share

12/05/2012

Join the ABA Rare Bird Alert Facebook Group

by Nate Swick

If you're a Facebooking birder (and not everyone is) with an interest in how this new social media world applies to rarity finding, the American Birding Association has created a new Facebook group dedicated to the sharing and discussion of rarities from the ABA Area and Hawaii.  

Birders from all over the continent, and indeed the world, are welcome to join and contribute.  In fact, the more members we have from across North America, the better the group will be at monitoring vagrant occurance across the continent.  The group is called ABA Rare Bird Alert.  

ABARBA masthead

 

So come join 900+ fellow North American birders as we revel in rarities and live vicariously through vagrants across the continent at ABA Rare Bird Alert!

Bookmark and Share

12/02/2012

Location, location, location… what's in a name?

by Jeff Bouton

Editor's Note: The ABA Blog welcomes Jeff Bouton as a regular contributor.  Jeff is Marketing Manager for Leica Sports Optics and lives in Port Charlotte, Florida. 

--=====--

 

Palm Warbler, FL
Note the blurred tail in this early AM shot, caused by the Palm Warbler's incessant and characteristic tail-wagging behavior

I photographed the Palm Warbler above in a palm tree the other day and thought, "Ah, as it should be". 

If only birding were this simple though. For beginning birders this image may not seem odd at all, but those who've been around the block a bit longer realize Palm Warblers are rarely found in palms and, despite the name, one wouldn't really look for them here first. They are only in "palm country" in the winter months and even then, seem to prefer to feed on or near the ground in weedy patches and are much more likely on a low shrub or similar. 

Warblers who feed by gleaning are much more commonly found in palm trees, searching the nooks and crannies for spiders and other morsels. The Yellow-throated Warbler would have been a much more appropriate "Palm Warbler" as they occur year round here in Florida - and other subtropical to tropical locales - and love feeding in palms.

L1040880
Cape May Warbler... in Florida

Despite being digiscoped in a Coconut Palm, the bird above is NOT a Palm Warbler either. It's a Cape May Warbler and as you may have guessed from the habitat, this individual is a long way from Cape May, NJ. I digiscoped this one in the parking lot of The Florida Keys Hawkwatch in Marathon, FL in October '1).

As an early birder, I expected I'd see my first Cape May Warbler on my first trip to Cape May. Imagine my surprise when I checked the range map and realized this species neither breeds nor winters anywhere near Cape May and is only expected here during the migration months. Oh yeah, and Virginia's Warbler is named for a lady not the states sharing the same name!

Confused?!?... well if not it's only because you've birded long enough to come to the realization that bird names should always be taken with a grain of salt. However, when you stop and reconsider it you can see how these inaccuracies make birding a lot more challenging than it perhaps should be. 

28 RNDU pr 022507
Ring-necked Duck pair digiscoped in Port Aransas, TX, Feb 2007


While not related to geographic anomoly, the Ring-necked Duck has always topped my "poorly-named birds" list!

How about you, anyone want to rant about the WORST bird names in American birding? How about some of the best?

Bookmark and Share

11/24/2012

Help Monitor the Red Crossbill Invasion

by Nate Swick

Birders in the eastern part of the continent are calling this the best winter finch winter in decades, perhaps even more amazing in that it's not even officially winter yet! Beautiful and charismatic, Evening Grosbeaks are the centerpiece of this irruption, and we recently encouraged birders seeing "Evebeaks" to be sure to get those sightings reported to eBird so that we can watch the invasion happen in real-time.

Second only to the grosbeaks in inducing excitement with their arrival are the crossbills, both White-winged and Red, that have been sweeping across the east in incredible numbers.  Much has been made of the fact that within the enigmatic species known as Red Crossbill may lie up to 10 cryptic, but full in their own right, species differentiated from one another by bill size, food preferences, and, especially, flight calls.  Indeed, many of these "types" can be confidently identified by birders paying attention to those calls.   

This season has seen reports of multiple types of Red Crossbills wherever the species has been reported.  North American Birds editor Ned Brinkley, who is based on the eastern shore of Virginia, reports that both Type 3 and Type 10 crossbills have turned up in that state this fall, neither of which have ever been recorded in the past.  

Red-Crossbill CF
photo by Corey Finger - Long Island, NY, 11/2012

Now, asking birders to note the high-pitched mutterings of birds passing overhead may sound like a sure-fire way of deadening the joy in seeing these infrequent winter visitors, but an enormous amount of information can be acquired during these finch years from regular birders noting the sounds they hear from the bird they're seeing.  Even something as simple as obtaining a recording can be a big deal, and these days most cell phones are capable of picking one up one of sufficient quality to make the ID.      

Matt Young at Cornell Lab of Ornithology has been doing great work trying to suss out the differences in Red Crossbill populations.  Earlier this fall, Matt wrote a primer posted to the eBird website laying out the differences with several incredibly useful audio examples.  Matt also encourages birders who have recorded crossbills but need a hand identifying them to type to send those recordings to him at may6 AT cornell DOT edu. 

Additionally, the ABA's journal of ornithological record, North American Birds, has been on the forefront of the crossbill ID revolution with several articles, by none other than Matt Young, focusing on status, distribution, and identification of the various types. Those posts, now suddenly exceedingly relevant, are now hosted free on the ABA site.  

Status and distribution of Type 1 Red Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra): an Appalachian Call Type? - M Young, et al  

Type 5 Red Crossbills (Loxia curvirostra) in New York: first confirmation east of the Rocky Mountains - M Young

New evidence in support of a distinctive Red Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra) Type in Newfoundland - M Young, et al

And although it scarcely needs to be said anymore, be sure to get those sightings entered into eBird.  Our knowledge of irruptive boreal finches is woefully incompletely, but phenomena like these flights offer opportunities to make inroads into our gaps in knowledge.  

Thanks, and enjoy the finches this winter!

Bookmark and Share

11/17/2012

Petiton for Wildlife

by Nate Swick

 

The Federal Duck Stamp is, without doubt, one of the most effective conservation initiatives in the history of the United States, or any nation for that matter. We at the ABA have gone on record as being a strong supporter of birder purchased Duck Stamps to make a statement for habitat conservation.

But if the Duck Stamp has a drawback, it's in the fact that birder contributions are effectively masked as the US Fish and Wildlife Service doesn't track purchaser intent. Our money, then, is thrown in the pool with everyone else - including those who are legally required to purchase the stamp - and as such it's difficult, if not impossible, to really gauge our collective influence and mobilize for our own legitimate interests, which occasionally conflict with those of our sportsman friends.

There are those in the birding community who have longed for a stamp of our own, one which not only finally puts a number on birder engagement in conservation issues but which offers a separate and collaborative stream of funds for research and management of non-game wildlife. Corey Finger, ABA member and blogmeister of 10,000 Birds has drafted a petition currently raking in signatures at whitehouse.gov suggesting just that. If the birding community can attach 25,000 signatures to it, we'll get an official response from the Obama Administration.

 

Corey petition

 

It's important to note two things here.

First, this is in no way intended to be a replacement for, or competition with, the Duck Stamp program. The ABA fully supports the federal Duck Stamp and will continue to encourage birders to contribute to this incredible long-standing and productive initiative that has effectively built the National Wildlife Refuge system that so many of us enjoy. 

Second, this is admittedly a non-binding petition intended as a show of support for birder-initiated conservation programs.  Yes, a reponse from the Obama Administration would be nice if for no other reason than it shows that we birders can be a force for conservation and bird-welfare interests, but more than that, birders should sign this because we want to show that we are an interest group to which policy makers should be listening.  It can't hurt to have as many ways as possible to make that plain. 

So please consider signing the petition.  Many of us at the ABA have done so and we fully support the action taken here. 

 

Bookmark and Share

10/16/2012

Bird of the Year Multimedia Art Contest Reminder

by Robert Mortensen

 

 

Official Contest Page

Bookmark and Share

09/29/2012

Introducing Birding Online

by Ted Floyd

 

First things first: Yes, you’ve landed at The ABA Blog. For the next week, though, The ABA Blog will be hijacked by Birding magazine.

It’s not as bad as it sounds. We’re all friends. Not only that, we’re gradually morphing together. The distinction between print and online content is breaking down. The September 2012 Birding, arriving in ABA members’ mailboxes right now, is loaded with “WebExtras”—that is to say, Birding magazine content online. WebExtras are indicated in both the online and print versions by this symbol:

WebExtra-All

Where to put it all? Well, that’s a work in progress. We’re moving closer toward our goal of a centralized website for all online content—both a “landing page” for folks arriving via the print version of Birding and a “launch pad” to all the online content. We’ll have a prototype up and running in a few days, we’ll have a more advanced version in place with the November 2012 Birding, and we intend to have Birding Online fully functional in 2013.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. It’s still September. You’ve just received the September issue of Birding. Where are all those “WebExtras”?

They’re right here! We’ll be posting them to The ABA Blog during the course of the next week. Please check back daily to see all the new content. And please don’t be a passive consumer of all the information. The ABA Blog welcomes your comments, questions, and suggestions.

Something else. Starting with the September 2012 Birding, we are offering exclusive, password-protected, members-only content. Such content is indicated online and in the print magazine by this symbol:

WebExtra-Member

Stay tuned for further announcements regarding access to your members-only content.

 

Bookmark and Share

08/24/2012

Pledge to Fledge: The Best Thing You Can Do This Weekend

by Jeff Gordon

 

P2F SA Barnes
School children in Wilderness, Western Cape, South Africa earlier today participating in Pledge to Fledge. Photo courtesy Keith Barnes.

It's August 24, the first day of the first Pledge to Fledge event. If you've somehow missed the buzz surrounding this event, take a look at Richard Crossley's post here from last week. Also check the P2F website and Facebook page, where there is already quite a bit of material up from last night's kickoff event in Cape May, as well as some cool shots of Keith Barnes' efforts to fledge some new birders in South Africa. No doubt there will be much more to come.

I'm especially encoraged to see Pledge to Fledge emerge now, as I think it represents an important evolution in birding culture. Though I've often heard birders decry the lack of "new blood" coming into our community, I've rarely seen much in the way of focussed efforts to do something about it. Don't get me wrong—I know we've all stood at tables, gone to various events, and so on in hopes of minting some new birders. These are laudable efforts and they haven't been wholly unsuccessful.

But I think what is needed is an almost complete overhaul in how we recruit and I see Pledge to Fledge as an important step in that direction. Putting it in birding terms, we have to get as good at finding, identifying and sparking new birders as we have gotten at finding, identifying and spreading the word of vagrant birds.

Think how much time, effort, and ingneuity has been put into learing the habits, habitats, hotspots, weather patterns, and search techniques involved in ferreting out rare birds. Where these efforts have been most successful, they've involved shifting our frame of reference, dropping our old behavior patterns and learning to think like like the wayward birds we seek.

When I started birding the Mid-Atlantic in the mid-1970's, early November was considered a sort of lull between the peak of hawk migration and the peak of waterfowl migration. Not too much to see then, the thinking went. Now, thanks to the efforts of Paul Lehman and dozens of others like him, early November is recognized as perhaps the most exciting, productive time of the year, if finding Mid-Atlantic vagrants is your thing. And our expectations of what's possible then, in terms of numbers and diversity have been exceeded time and again.

What I'm really excited about in the coming years is helping the ABA get just that good at reaching and sparking new birders. There's much to be learned about where we can find them, how they behave, and what conditions set the stage for that magical conversion experience. I think we're not that far from a day when how good a day we've had in the field will be measured not only by how many species we found but also by the number of new birders we recruited.

As a community, we have so, so much to learn about how best to do this. And there's no substitue for getting out there and just giving it a whirl, refining what works and sidelining what doesn't. And the fact that so many others will be doing the same thing this weekend, gives us all a great opportunity to share our triumphs and our tribulations.

 

Liz GOG PRFA_3019
Liz shares her bins, and a view of a Prairie Falcon, with a birder-to-be at Garden of the Gods.

Liz and I have already got at least one spot picked out where we'll go birding for new birders this weekend: Garden of the Gods. It's a big tourist attraction, so there are plenty of people around, almost none of them there for birding. But there are nifty birds to look at, usually including Prairie Falcons. And a spotting scope set up in a place like that always draws a crowd, and the inevitable, "Whatcha lookin' at?," conversation openers. I think it's an ideal place to practice our recruitment skills.

How about you? Where might you spend an hour or two this weekend and snag a new birder or two? A local park with a duck pond? Maybe a zoo that has wild but relatively tame birds wandering the grounds? Remember, you don't need rare birds to do this. You want close birds, preferably lots of them. Don't worry if it's starlings or magpies. They'll work.

ABA board member Kenn Kaufman and Kim Kaufman, director of the Ohio's Black Swamp Bird Observatory, have a nice post on their blog with tips on taking new birders birding. It's worth a look as you're making your plans.

Mainly, remember to be friendly and enjoy yourself. Birding is a wonderful thing. Let's all get as good as we can at securing its future by growing our ranks.

So take the Pledge. Then get out there! Make sure your Bird of the Year stickers are in place and wear your ABA logo wear, if you have it. And be sure to tell us what you discover!

P2F logo

 

 

Bookmark and Share

08/15/2012

ABA Debuts Birding News!

by Jeff Gordon

Birding News banner

 

Since the early 1990’s at least, birders have been sharing news via e-mail subscription lists. These lists were a great way to keep up with the birding scene in a given region. But they weren’t always the most convenient things to work with, especially if you just wanted to check in on what’s going on in a region but didn't want to go through the process of subscribing, figuring out settings, managing e-mail flow, and so on.

Enter Jack Siler and Birdingonthe.net. Jack is a Philadelphia birder and ABA member who long ago saw a need for a single place where all these user-generated news feeds could be aggregated and easily accessed. Nothing like that existed, so Jack, who isn't officially a web programmer, went ahead and built it himself. His groundbreaking site, especially the BirdMail page, quickly became one of the most heavily trafficked and most beloved birding spots on the entire world wide web.

And for years, Jack has maintained the site with incredible dedication and attention to detail on which thousands have come to rely. But the time has come for Jack to move on to other things including, we hope, getting a well-deserved break from tending these particular fires.

We’re thrilled that Jack has honored us by passing the torch of his inspired marshalling of local, regional, national and international birding mail lists to the American Birding Association. The result is ABA's Birding News (birding.aba.org). We’ve worked hard and are working hard to preserve Jack’s vision while building an entirely new site that incorporates the expanded possibilites of rapidly evolving web technology. We hope you're as excited by the initial results and the possibilites for the future as we are.

We have updated the inner workings of the site, allowing us to archive more messages on each list (30 day’s worth, instead of just a couple dozen), and to filter the messages so you can easily see reports of rarities based on the ABA checklist codes. Additionally, we’ve plugged in social media sites like Facebook and Twitter, so you can easily share messages that you find interesting, funny, provocative, or otherwise worthwhile with a huge audience that would have been highly unlikely to see them previously.

We at the ABA have always believed that the birding community is an immense storehouse of incredibly valuable and hard-won knowledge. And that birders know an awful lot about how to have a good time, plus some great stories of having some not-so-good times. We've always tried to shape and curate that knowledge and experience into useful things like the ABA/Lane Birdfinding Guides. Birding News is an attempt to do the same thing for the millions of bytes of birding information that go winging around the web every day. We want to make it all easier, more useful, and more fun.

The best part is, this is only the beginning. We can't wait to see what you, the birding community, make of Birding News. We promise to keep making it better, responding to your comments and suggestions, learning together as we all move forward. It's what birders do, after all.

We'll be talking a lot more, here and elsewhere, about Birding News. For now, go on over and have a look around. We think you're going to like what you see.

The address is easy. Say it with me: BIRDING dot ABA dot ORG! birding.aba.org Remember it. Visit it. Bookmark it, and the individual lists you visit often. And tell your friends.

Special congratulations are due to ABA's David Hartley and Greg Neise for their painstaking work setting this all up. They were aided by a succession of contract programmers, especially Greg Mahoney and Andy Sheppard. Thanks, too, to Carrie Hartley for a fresh but classic new look.

And finally, once again, thank you Jack Siler! For your hard work, your creativity, and your involvement in the birding community. We can't begin to express our gratitude that you've trusted the ABA with your baby. We aim to make you, and all birders, proud.

Bookmark and Share

07/19/2012

Announcing the ABA Mid-Atlantic Young Birder Conference September 22, 2012

by Jeff Gordon

MAYBC_2012_landing_page

Hot on the heels of our just completed and very successful Camp Colorado, we’re very excited to announce the ABA’s next big opportunity for young birders: a regional conference designed to bring together young birders and their mentors from a wide area in order to facilitate the sharing of ideas and information, and to build and strengthen the young birder community.


While it’s true that the internet, social media, and cell phones have all given birders, especially younger ones, the opportunity to connect as never before, there’s still no substitute for actually meeting and birding together, face to face. And it can be surprisingly difficult for that to happen, something we’d like to help change.

For our kickoff event, we’ve chosen the populous Mid-Atlantic area, where there are a wealth of active and growing young birder groups.  But there’s never before been an occasion designed for them all to come together as one, until now.

So if you’re a young birder or a parent or mentor of a young birder or birders, mark your calendar for Saturday, September 22, 2012 and make plans to join us at the Ashland Nature Center in Hockessin, Delaware, for an amazing day of birding, learning, fun, and friendship. Ashland is very easily reached from Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New Jersey, and within an approximately 2 hour drive of Washington, DC, and New York City. Inexpensive overnight accommodations Friday night the 21st will be available on site.

 

MAYBC-ANC

 

The day will feature bird walks around the 242 acre preserve at Ashland, where floodplains, hillsides, and upland habitats attract a great variety of fall migrants. We’ll also spend part of the day on top of Hawk Watch Hill, where the Ashland Hawk Watch tallies thousands of raptors each autumn. Of course, migration is hugely weather dependent, but our timing puts us in position to intercept the peak of Broad-winged Hawk migration, as well some fantastic fall songbirds.

There will also be indoor activities, featuring young birder and adult presenters addressing a wide variety of cool and useful topics. Concurrent sessions for newer or more experienced young birders will allow everyone from elementary school through late teens to find things of interest. There will also be special sessions by and for parents, mentors, club coordinators.

 

 

BT3 cropped headshot
Bill Thompson III, all-around awesome birding dude



For our keynote presentations, we’re very excited to have ABA’s Young Birder of the Year 2012, the very talented Marie McGee, and Bill Thompson III, editor of Bird Watcher’s Digest and author of The Young Birder’s Guide to Birds of Eastern North America (all attendees will receive a free copy, thanks to Bill!) and The Young Birder’s Guide to Birds of North America and recipient of the ABA’s Robert Ridgway Award for publications in field ornithology. And that, of course, is only scratching the surface of Bill’s vast talents and achievements. Bill and Marie will deliver a one-two punch that will have everyone fired up about birding and its potential to enrich and connect us all, kid or adult.

 

 

Marie McGee Leica 1
ABA 2012 Young Birder of the Year Marie McGee



Once again, ABA’s Legacy Youth Program Sponsor, Leica Sport Optics, has come forward with generous support for this event. They’ll also be sending a number of their knowledgeable and personable birding representatives, and bringing a lot of fine optics for us to use as we scan the skies over Ashland.

Of course, there’ll be a big contingent of ABA folks there, too, including Liz and me, Bill Stewart, and George Armistead, for starters.*

And there will be an abundance of other cool stuff. Jean Woods of the Delaware Museum of Natural History will be bringing by some very cool and very rare bird study skins for us to learn from and marvel at. There will be representatives from many birding related local organizations and businesses. Most of all, there will be dozens of other young birders, local young birder hosts, The Delaware Dunlins, and numerous adult mentors. It’s going to be a great day and one we hope to repeat in other regions of North America going forward.

How much does all this cost? For young birders who are ABA members, just $15. Adult ABA members are just $25. Non-ABA members may register for $10 more. That price includes a catered lunch and admission to all bird walks and presentations.

For more info about the event, click here, or e-mail Bill Stewart bstewart@aba.org

To register, click here

To sign up for overnight accommodations for Friday the 21st at Ashland, call LeAnn Pilger at the ABA office 800-850-2473 or 719-578-9703 extension 224.

See you in September!


*A heads up to all ABA members: our annual membership meeting will be nearby the day following this event, on Sunday September 23 at the Delaware Environmental Center in Wilmington. So if you’re in the area, or can be, you should consider making an ABA weekend out of these two events. More details soon!

 

Bookmark and Share
Bookmark and Share

Welcome to the ABA Blog!
Birders know well that the healthiest, most dynamic choruses contain many different voices. The birding community encompasses a wide variety of interests, talents, and convictions. All are welcome. If you like birding, we want to hear from you.

See something here that you really like or find useful? Or something that you think is wrong or misguided? Leave a comment and let us all know. Just keep your comments respectful; that's the only requirement.

We welcome guest posts, too. Have an idea or tip or story you'd like to share? Contact blog manager Nate Swick at blog@aba.org.

The views and opinions expressed on this blog are those of each contributing writer or commenter and do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of the American Birding Association or its management. Official positions of the ABA will be clearly labelled as such.

Good birding! And thanks for stopping by.

Recent Posts

ABA Bloggers

George Armistead
Lynn Barber
Jeff Bouton
Ned Brinkley
Laura Erickson
Ted Floyd
Jeff Gordon
Paul Hess
Blake Mathys
Robert Mortensen
Greg Neise
Ann Nightingale
John Puschock
Michael Retter
Bill Schmoker
Noah Strycker
Brian Sullivan
Nate Swick
Drew Weber
Rick Wright

Other ABA Blogs

The Eyrie
ABA blog for young birders

Nature Blog Network