[Tweeters] Hawaii birding RFI

Carla Conway via Tweeters tweeters at u.washington.edu
Wed Feb 4 08:43:56 PST 2026


Hi Gary,

I'm so glad you and your wife will be visiting Hawai'i! If you can, visit
the Hakalau Forest Preserve. Lance Tanino is a great guide and I think he
was the top eBirder for the State and Island of Hawai'i last year. His
tours are limited to four persons, unlike others which can have as many as
10.

Hawai'i Audubon has many resources.
https://hiaudubon.org/birding-in-hawaii/

Enjoy!🙂


On Wed, Feb 4, 2026 at 8:22 AM Jerry Tangren via Tweeters <
tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:


> Not a complete answer…

>

> —Take your scope. Every island presents seawatch opportunities. If you

> don't have one, get a hard sided case for carry-on. Study up on what

> pelagics can be seen.

>

> —Sign up with one of the guides for the Hakalau Forest NWR. It's the best

> site for native landbirds, but requires a guide. Best money you will ever

> spend birding.

>

> --On Oahu, make sure you visit the Japanese cemetery on the northwest

> shore, think curlew; and the Aiea Loop Trail.

>

> --Of course, the Kilauea and Hanalei NWRs on Kauai; and the state parks at

> higher elevations.

>

> --Buy the photographic Hawaii's Birds book, full of tips and recent

> information.

>

> --Depend upon eBird. On Kauai we got most of the birds by virtually

> following the guided tours on eBird.

>

> --Jerry Tangren, East Wenatchee

>

>

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

> ------------------------------

> *From:* Tweeters <tweeters-bounces at mailman11.u.washington.edu> on behalf

> of Gary Bletsch via Tweeters <tweeters at u.washington.edu>

> *Sent:* Wednesday, February 4, 2026 7:53:24 AM

> *To:* Tweeters Tweeters <tweeters at u.washington.edu>

> *Subject:* [Tweeters] Hawaii birding RFI

>

> Dear Tweeters,

>

> In a few weeks, I will hang up my snow shovel and depart Western New York

> for Hawaii. I will ask the pilot to waggle the wings if we fly over Skagit

> County.

>

> It's silly that Mrs. Bletsch and I never made it to Hawaii when we lived

> in Washington, but oh, well. We are finally getting around to it. I went

> there with my parents in August of 1973, six months before I started

> birding, so it will all be *tabula rasa* for me, as far as the birds

> go--not counting the hordes of introduced species, I reckon.

>

> I have a few questions about birding in the Aloha State.

>

> I. On just about any trip, I usually take my scope and tripod, but

> sometimes I do enjoy a break from the burden, and go with just binoculars

> and zoom camera (the later being what I call "the poor man's scope"). Will

> I kick myself if I leave the scope home?

>

> II. On my bookshelf, the only field guide that covers Hawaiian birds is

> Peterson's *A Field Guide to Western Birds, * second edition, 1961. That

> book has a little section on Hawaiian birds at the back. It is, of course,

> wildly out of date. Lots of the native birds shown in this book have either

> gone extinct, or have been split into various species endemic to just one

> island.

>

> So, is there a Hawaiian bird book worth buying, or could I get away with

> just using RTP's old book, with the photos and text of Merlin as a backup?

>

> III. We are visting Kauai, Maui, Hawaii, and Oahu. What would be the most

> important sites to visit?

>

> IV. Any other suggestions?

>

> Thanks for any help on this.

>

> Yours truly,

>

> Gary Bletsch

>

>

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