Archive for June, 2008
YouTubirding
Posted by: | CommentsShorebirders will love a new series of short films by Joel Jorgensen. Buff-breasted Sandpipers stage each May in Nebraska’s Rainwater Basin, and those of us who can’t get out there to enjoy the show can still, well, enjoy the show, thanks to Joel and the much-maligned YouTube.
The new Condor also has an article by Joel and colleagues about buffies in the spring.
Must read, must watch: the motto of every birder!
How Not to Document a Sighting
Posted by: | CommentsHere’s a good one:
“On our return trip from ABC Sunday June 1 we found a DEF. The bird was on GHI state highway JKL while stopped by construction traffic control. The traffic control funnel is a mile from the summit of MNO driving southeast coming from PQR. While awaiting access to proceed, I noticed a bird on the ground maybe 25 feet from my window on an up slope.I have a high-clearance vehicle so my eye level was directly on the bird. I use Swarovski 10X24 SLCs. Growing up in STU I’m familiar with the DEF. Actually earlier this year in April, I had a single DEF in VWX, so it was my second for the year.”
I actually know, like, respect, and believe the reporter, but with no information at all about the bird, this is one for Bill Oddie for sure.
A New Jersey Dawn Chorus
Posted by: | CommentsDavid has posted a couple of hours of dawn chorus, just enough to make even the most contented New Westerner homesick for the Old East!
An Answer: What on Earth?
Posted by: | CommentsI’d thought it was a tire weight from some great mining truck, but it turns out that the weird stone object below is an arrow-shaft straightener. A thousand thanks, especially to Chuck, Pinau, and Liz, for their identifications.
An assurance for those who reminded me of the law: the only part of the object I have in my possession is the photograph.
Kenn Kaufman: Flights Against the Sunset
Posted by: | CommentsThere are people who are famous, and people who deserve to be famous; Kenn Kaufman fits into both categories, and like most birders in North America, I look forward to reading everything from his pen, from serious identification articles to light-hearted anecdote. Admirably and enviably, he succeeds as a writer at both extremes; who but Kenn Kaufman, after all, could have written both Kingbird Highway and Advanced Birding–and made them both work so unbelievably well? Kingbird Highway is (with, what else, Wild America) one of the two finest pieces of birding adventure produced in the twentieth century, and Advanced Birding will long remain an essential and much-consulted stalwart on every birder’s bookshelf.

Kaufman’s new Flights Against the Sunset is in the Kingbird Highway mode, a collection of anecdotes and fantasies, most of them originally published over the years in the pages of Bird Watcher’s Digest. Every one of them is as readable as it is enjoyable, for the most part as fresh as the day it first appeared in print.
The challenge of the anthologist, of course, is to generate a context within which the collected pieces make sense. Kaufman’s solution here is to present his stories as if told over the course of a single wrenching day in his mother’s hospital room. His goal is to make her–to make the non-birding reader–understand what happens when “the world of birds intersects with the world of the humans who pursue them.”
Unfortunately, Kaufman’s prose is somewhat flat in the framing scenes set in the hospital. But the embedded stories themselves are vibrantly and entertainingly told, honest-to-goodness page turners capturing perfectly the excitement of vagrant-chasing and the delight of watching common birds in mundane surroundings. The non-birding reader may still find this book, in Kaufman’s words, “psychologically foreign territory, more distant and unfamiliar than the wilds of Venezuela.” But that’s just what we birders are looking for, and that’s just what Kenn Kaufman delivers in Flights Against the Sunset.





