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General : FOR THE BIRDS
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 Message 1 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameUncleJimbo1  (Original Message)Sent: 11/15/2006 3:30 PM
George, your new thread came out with the wrong heading so I hope you don't mind that I started this one.  Tick, is there a way to move the other messages to this board?  I sure don't know how.  But, anyhoo, the most spectacular thing that I see every Spring is the migration of white pelicans from the Salton Sea to the coast.  Thousands of white and brown pelicans nest at the Salton Sea during the winter on Pelican Island.  The brown pelicans are inland birds and stay at the sea year round but the white ones fly to the coast around late April or May.  The Pelicans need to pick up thermals to gain altitude and the best thermals are above the oasis where we do our tours.  They fly in low, about 50 feet above our heads in numbers of 50 to 100 birds.  Then they start circling, you can actually hear the wind rushing thru their wing feathers.  Once they rise far above us they form V formations and head west.  If folks miss the photo op I tell them to wait because within 10 minutes another flock comes in.  This goes on from sunrise til sunset for nearly 2 weeks.  The pelicans are basically white on one side and black on the other so as they circle high in the sky they appear to flash on and off, black, then white, etc.  Birders tell me that I'm one lucky guy to be able to see this every year, I agree.
 
George, we get the Canada Geese and sometimes the shore of the Salton Sea looks like it has banks of snow because of the numbers of Snow Geese, Egrets and Cranes.  In the evening the Cottonwood trees in the canyons look like they'll fall over for the numbers of Great Egrets roosting in them.  Salton Sea is a birder's paradise with over 400 species identified, even Blue Footed Boobies!  HEHE I said Boobie.
 
Jimbo


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 Message 1060 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSaraMaeWest322Sent: 10/4/2008 2:03 AM

Disappearance of birds after Hurricane Ike means silent autumn for renowned bird area

 

GILCHRIST, Texas (AP) _ One of North America's renowned bird migration and bird watching areas is strangely silent.

Blame Hurricane Ike.

"We had red-winged blackbirds, sparrows, a bunch of migrating birds," recalled Ernest Stone, 75, leaning on his cane and surveying debris on the cratered moonscape that used to be the family beach house on Bolivar Peninsula.

"I haven't seen a pigeon in a while," he said. "Seagulls. You could always go out and throw a piece of bread and the seagulls would come."

Not now.

"Nothing," his wife, Jimmie, said. "Zero."

The same could be said for their home and beachfront community of Gilchrist, where little is standing three weeks after Ike roared ashore with 110 mph winds, a 12-foot storm surge and waves up to 26 feet. The few palm trees or patches of grass, nearly unrecognizable amid the shells and dried mud, have turned a lifeless yellow brown, killed by sea water.

For people surrounded by devastation with months of rebuilding ahead of them, the birds represent yet another piece of normalcy lost.

"Pelicans and seagulls," Veronica Felty, 46, said, looking out over the gulf waters that wiped out her place. "Birds �?40 to 50 in a row �?flying. They were endless. They were beautiful. Pelicans so thick...

"You wonder if they knew to leave."

Bolivar Peninsula is part of what's known as the Great Texas Coastal Birding Trail, with nearby High Island a prime bird watching spot and traditional rest stop for migrating birds heading north in the spring and south in the fall.

High Island, at 32 feet over sea level, is the highest spot on the gulf coastline for 700 miles between Mobile Bay, Ala., and the Rio Grande, and attracts thousands of bird-watchers a year.

"Now is when birds would normally be stopping at High Island to top off with bugs before heading south," said Ian Tizard, director of the Schubot Exotic Bird Health Center at Texas A&M University. "High Island has been stripped of leaves, and a lot of the trees are dying."

While the loss is tough for bird watchers, Tizard said it might not be so bad for many of the birds: "From a migrating bird's point of view, it's probably not a big deal to fly a few miles on until they find a batch of trees that looks better."

Tizard said he believes things will get better in the spring.

Just like humans, the birds need three basics that Ike took away: cover, food and water.

"There's no fresh water," said Texas Parks & Wildlife biologist Cliff Shackleford, who said a good rain would ease the peninsula's woes. "That surge killed everything and dumped salt water into everything, probably for miles.

"It doesn't mean they all died, but we don't really know. The birds ... need to drink, they need to bathe and salt water just doesn't do it."

Any protection the birds would seek was wiped out when the trees and most structures were obliterated.

"Look at the vegetation," Brent Ortega, one of Shackleford's colleagues, said. "Either there isn't any, or it's covered with salt. Plant material is dying, insects and seeds are not there any more. The habitat's changed and the birds have got to live. They probably moved somewhere else because it's not very suitable."

Jimmie Stone, 67, looked at a pile of palm trees that used to border their driveway.

"We had three on each side," she said. "We had a huge tree in the yard. We had a bird feeder..."

Instead, chunks of broken concrete �?their former driveway, the home foundation, the patio �?tip at angles where waves lifted them and cast them aside. A dead pigeon sat on the side of Texas Highway 87. A few lonesome pelicans roosted on the remains of a pier jutting into the Gulf of Mexico.

Otherwise, there weren't many places for a bird to roost.

"I've got plenty of structure, but it's not mine," Ernest Stone said matter-of-factly, looking at the rubble of his neighbors' homes littering his property.

His mobile home ended up across the highway. The only recognizable parts of it are the wheels, upside down and twisted amid other debris.


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 Message 1061 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 10/5/2008 7:10 PM
I say on the front porch this morning
in a patch of sunlight..sipping tea
and watched three black-capped chickadees
they were so cute

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 Message 1062 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 10/9/2008 11:17 PM
We still have alot of chick-a-dees hitting the feeders
Isnt you zombies looking at the birds in your yard anymore?

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 Message 1063 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: LadySueSent: 10/10/2008 12:55 AM
Not so many birds right now, they are mostly packed and gone south for the winter, the girs are busy collecting walnuts and acorns and hiding them allover over the yard!!
 
I saw the prettiest kitty on the way home, a charcoal grey longhairShe sat down on the corner and watched me drive by and as soon as I passed she got up and pranced across the street, proud as a queen!

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 Message 1064 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 10/10/2008 4:21 AM
I bet you miss having a kitty at your house

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 Message 1065 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: LadySueSent: 10/10/2008 5:26 AM
Yes, we sure did love our kitty, but we were both allergic to cats, so now we just get kitty love elesewhere, and only minor allergic reactions

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 Message 1066 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 10/11/2008 3:23 AM
what about some little birdies to keep you company?

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 Message 1067 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 10/22/2008 8:32 PM
 
Some hardy little chickadees showed up this morning
the wind was trying to knock them off the feeder

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 Message 1068 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSaraMaeWest322Sent: 10/22/2008 10:44 PM
awww! I haven't seen too many birds around.

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 Message 1069 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: LadySueSent: 10/23/2008 3:09 PM
Such cute little chickadees! Most of the birds I see lately are all lined up like that... the whole length of wires from pole to pole!! All packed and heading south on a package tour to Florida or Texas!

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 Message 1070 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 11/15/2008 1:41 AM
This morning we put all the niblets of corn that fell of the ears of corn when we was picking it
 
there were sixty-eleven birds in the side yard all screaming YAY FREE CORN!!

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 Message 1071 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: LadySueSent: 11/15/2008 5:31 AM
Soon all the birds who can afford it will be living in the south!! Most of what I see lately are flocks flying south!!

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 Message 1072 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 11/17/2008 2:40 AM
We are still getting alot of doves etc
sadly the beautiful ringneck never came back

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The number of members that recommended this message. 0 recommendations  Message 1073 of 1074 in Discussion 
Sent: 12/17/2008 11:29 PM
This message has been deleted by the manager or assistant manager.

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 Message 1074 of 1074 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameADarkZombieSent: 12/17/2008 11:30 PM
AHHHHHH
I dont know what that was!!
Let me see if I can find it elsewhere

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