<div dir="auto">Hey Jim,<div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">I've wondered the same thing. I live in Enumclaw and seeing them around the farms and fields is very common for most of the year. I reported the FOY ones yesterday because since joining tweeters I've noticed a lot of interest in them, although I haven't quite understood why.</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">- Scott Leavens</div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Sun, Apr 9, 2023, 11:07 AM <<a href="mailto:jimbetz@jimbetz.com">jimbetz@jimbetz.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">Tweet - Tweet - Tweety Tweet,<br>
<br>
Hi all. It is quite common to see posts about TUVUs - and, it <br>
seems to me at<br>
least - they are often reported as though they are "rare" or "notable" (for<br>
example a FOY/FOS).<br>
We live about 300 feet up on a hill that faces East looking up the <br>
Skagit Valley.<br>
We see TUVU ... often. So much so that my tendency is to "just take <br>
long enough<br>
to establish if it is a TUVU or a Bald Eagle" ... and consider the ID of it<br>
being a TUVU as "disappointing" and at least half the time don't even <br>
report it<br>
on eBird. If it is a bald or some other raptor (usually an RTH) I almost<br>
always report it ... but the TUVUs are so "common" that they get dismissed as<br>
being unworthy of the time it takes to post a checklist (which is -not- a<br>
lot of time).<br>
<br>
And I will say that I -think- we see them pretty much all year round. I<br>
should just check my reports and see if this is true - my suspicion is<br>
that we see them in every month of the year.<br>
I did that - checked my reports to eBird - and in the 3 years I've<br>
been using eBird I see that I've seen TUVUs in every month except<br>
Jan and Feb. But I suspect that "I've just not reported them in those<br>
months rather than that I didn't see any ... ??? In fact, eBird shows<br>
TUVU reported in Skagit County for every week of the year except on in<br>
Jan and one it Dec ... so that seems to support that they are here<br>
year round.<br>
I do know that some TUVU migrate South - we saw many of them just last<br>
October in Veracruz, Mx. and they -seemed- to be migrating rather than<br>
residents. But the reports of TUVU in Skagit appear to support the<br>
statement that some of them, at least, do not migrate ... ???<br>
<br>
It would seem correct for me to conclude that the TUVUs are 'common' here in<br>
Skagit County ... or at least not rare.<br>
I am NOT discounting other people's reports. I'm wondering if the reason<br>
they are so common here is because we live in a much more rural area where<br>
agriculture and logging are still major industries? Or maybe it is due to<br>
the fact that we sit where we have a very large field of view?<br>
<br>
Anyone have any ideas about this?<br>
- Jim<br>
<br>
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</blockquote></div>