[Tweeters] Edison eagle extravaganza
Kevin Lucas via Tweeters
tweeters at u.washington.edu
Wed Jan 22 08:12:07 PST 2025
I think that generalization and polarization are natural and not shameful.
Working to get over generalization and polarization, as well as speaking
out about and trying to fix what we see as wrongdoing are appropriate
responses by me.
I don't have to get back to enjoying birds and nature; I keep enjoying
birds and nature even while I pick up trash and call out bad behavior and
seek solutions to problems. I enjoy working while I whistle.
Bird seed bags are great for collecting trash at places where I bird watch.
They're quite tough -- don't shred with broken glass and sharp pieces of
metal.
Good Birding,
Kevin Lucas
Yakima County, WA
https://www.aba.org/aba-code-of-birding-ethics/
*Qui tacet consentire videtur*
On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 7:36 AM Dennis Paulson via Tweeters <
tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:
> Ann, I couldn’t agree more. Shame on us for every generalization that
> leads to polarization. We do it all too well. Let’s go back to enjoying
> birds and nature, which we all have in common, no matter how we approach it.
>
> Dennis
>
> On Jan 21, 2025, at 8:35 PM, Ann Kramer <lens4birds at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I think it was ducks, Dennis. I'd heard it last year, I think.
>
> As I read this thread, I read negative comments about hunters and bird
> listers, and I'm surprised bird photographers aren't in the mix. We are
> often high on the list of people's disdain. Including my own, at times,
> when I observe how photographers pursue and flush birds and disregard signs
> of their discomfort. As a bird photographer who spends a lot of time with
> birders, the ones I know are respectful and ethical.
>
> It just seems like it's all too easy for all of us to get into the place
> where we generalize any bad experiences we've had with one or two
> representatives of any of these groups to the whole group, which is
> obviously a mistake and prevents us from seeing people individually and not
> lumping them all together. It's something I also have to remind myself of
> regularly.
>
>
> *Ann*
>
> Ann Pultz Kramer
> Stanwood, WA
>
> "*Use what talents you possess; the wood would be very silent if no birds
> sang there except those that sang best**."*
> *Henry Van Dyke*
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 21, 2025 at 1:12 PM Dennis Paulson <dennispaulson at comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
>> Thanks, Ann. There may have been fish parts but we saw several fly up
>> with ducks. I suppose “baiting” would be hard to prove, as maybe some
>> hunters just toss the ducks they don’t want out in a field. Although these
>> were well away from the road, so it seems that they were placed their
>> intentionally. We can just hope that none of the ducks had avian flu, as
>> eating sick waterfowl is one way it is known to spread to raptors.
>>
>> Dennis Paulson
>> Seattle
>>
>> On Jan 21, 2025, at 12:57 PM, Ann Kramer via Tweeters <
>> tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:
>>
>> Someone has left large amounts of bait in the past in that area in years
>> past. I think it was fish parts. I heard about it so I wouldn't be
>> surprised if that is what's happening again.
>>
>>
>>
>> *Ann*
>>
>> Ann Pultz Kramer
>> Stanwood, WA
>>
>> "*Use what talents you possess; the wood would be very silent if no
>> birds sang there except those that sang best**."*
>> *Henry Van Dyke*
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Jan 21, 2025 at 12:51 PM Tom Benedict via Tweeters <
>> tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:
>>
>>> If this is intentional baiting, would that be a violation of the Bad and
>>> Golden Eagle Protection Act?
>>>
>>> Tom Benedict
>>> Seahurst, WA
>>>
>>> > On Jan 21, 2025, at 12:40, Dennis Paulson via Tweeters <
>>> tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:
>>> >
>>> > Hello tweets,
>>> >
>>> > A few days ago we drove through the Samish Flats and again saw a huge
>>> concentration of Bald Eagles, north of the Bayview-Edison Road and not far
>>> west from the East 90. Many were on the ground, but they were interacting
>>> constantly in the air, chasing one another for what looked like carcasses
>>> or pieces therefrom, and one we got a good look at was a duck. They
>>> certainly didn’t catch all those ducks and carry them to a common feeding
>>> area, so we wondered what was going on.
>>> >
>>> > It was absolutely spectacular for photography, eclipsing the
>>> Short-eared Owls that were also flying in the bright sun at 11 am. The
>>> usual number of cars and photogaphers were there.
>>> >
>>> > Are people putting out carcasses in those fields to attact eagles?
>>> Does anyone know?
>>> >
>>> > Dennis Paulson
>>> > Seattle
>>>
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