Then there was the time Laura and I participated on the Upper Nestucca count
and thought nothing of seeing a pair of Mallards in a high country pond, only
to learn later they were the only ones seen on the count!
Darrel
From: "Lars Per Norgren" <larspernorgren@xxxxxxxxx>
To: obol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Friday, October 16, 2015 10:26:21 AM
Subject: [obol] Re: CBC question
Yes, another salient aspect almost unique to CBCs--trashbirds become treasure.
Imagine Tim Rodenkirk acting euphoric because he saw a Brown-headed Cowbird!
Lars
On Oct 16, 2015, at 8:17 AM, DJ Lauten and KACastelein wrote:
We've participated on a few of those Northern Minnesota counts. They are quite
the experience. In our section, we worked really really hard to add European
Starling and House Sparrow to our list. If I recall correctly they were about
species number 12 and 13 for the day. Bet there aren't too many birders who had
to work hard to find a starling!!
Cheers
Dave Lauten
On 10/16/2015 4:44 AM, Paul Sullivan wrote:
BQ_BEGIN
Each year I see the results of all the Minnesota CBC’s. The highest count
reaches ~60 species – not something an Oregon birder would consider great.
I remember one count that got something like 12 species – total. But they
included Hawk Owl, Great Gray Owl, Common Redpoll, Hoary Redpoll, Pine
Grosbeak, Bohemian Waxwing, Snow Bunting, … and Raven. Sounds like fun. ;-)
Paul Sullivan
BQ_END