[Tweeters] What did Robins do before ...

Jeff Gilligan jeffgilligan10 at gmail.com
Tue Jul 18 14:58:23 PDT 2023


I have a vague recollection from some source that American Robins before white settlement were probably fairly restricted to sub-alpine and recently burned habitats.

Jeff Gilligan
Willapa Bay




> On Jul 18, 2023, at 2:45 PM, J Christian Kessler <1northraven at gmail.com> wrote:

>

> I remember a robin at the top of a Ponderosa Pine at about 11,000 feet on a steep slope in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains just singing its lungs out - nothing even close to level ground or or any grass within miles. I lived in Virginia then and was kind of stunned, I had to climb about 500 feet up-slope from where I first was to get a level look at the bird to make sure it was a Robin and not some western bird I didn't know at the time.

>

> in my experience these days in northwest WA, the "American Lawn Thrush" loves mountain slopes, especially gravel roads, in the summer months.

>

> Chris Kessler

> Seattle

>

> On Tue, Jul 18, 2023 at 2:17 PM Jerry Tangren <kloshewoods at outlook.com <mailto:kloshewoods at outlook.com>> wrote:

> I believe they were a mountain meadow species. When we began putting meadows (aka lawns) in our yard, they moved right in.

>

> Lorna and I were in Nome, Alaska the third week of June. One of the common species of the willow scrub on the Seward Peninsula is the Robin.

>

> —Lorna & Jerry Tangren

>

> Get Outlook for iOS <https://aka.ms/o0ukef>

> From: Tweeters <tweeters-bounces at mailman11.u.washington.edu <mailto:tweeters-bounces at mailman11.u.washington.edu>> on behalf of jimbetz at jimbetz.com <mailto:jimbetz at jimbetz.com> <jimbetz at jimbetz.com <mailto:jimbetz at jimbetz.com>>

> Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2023 2:08:58 PM

> To: tweeters at u.washington.edu <mailto:tweeters at u.washington.edu> <tweeters at u.washington.edu <mailto:tweeters at u.washington.edu>>

> Subject: [Tweeters] What did Robins do before ...

>

> Hi,

>

> So when I think of a robin - it is in the yard working the lawn for

> worms and insects. This has been true for my entire life (more than 70).

> True enough that I've started to consider seeing a robin where there

> wasn't some form of lawn near as 'exceptional'. A "lawn" would be any

> area where it is mowed several times a year - not necessarily the

> manicured lawns so many of us have.

> We used to see a lot of robins in our yard. We converted our lawn to

> all native plants (no grass). Now we still have the occasional robin

> but no where near as many as when we had a lawn.

>

> So my question for this group is "where did the robins feed - before

> humans started planting lawns?".

> - Jim in Burlington

>

>

>

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