The year 2011 is the 112th CBC, the first official Christmas Bird Count was in the year 1900. There's a pretty long run of citizen science for you.
As we have for over a decade, Tom, Lynn and I each participated in our own regional counts on Saturday, which meant West Campus was not counted that day. Instead we counted here today, and by the official rules we cannot add numbers, only species to the official tally - and only if it's a species that was not found in the New Haven circle on Saturday.
Two years ago our Barred Owl was added as one of these "count week" species. Today we weren't able to add any new species, but put in a good birding effort anyway.
Here are the results:
number in party: 3 (Lynn, me, Tom)
party hours: 7 (6:45 to 2:15 with a lunch break)
weather conditions: cold 20-28F, clear and calm in the early morning, partly cloudy and breezy through the mid-day.
no snow, moving water was open, still water with thin ice
number of species: 34
number of individual birds: 454
31 Canada Goose
1 Mute Swan
5 Wild Turkey
1 Turkey Vulture
4 Red-tailed Hawk
75 Ring-billed Gull
20 Herring Gull
30 Rock Pigeon
10 Mourning Dove
3 Red-bellied Woodpecker
6 Downy Woodpecker
1 Northern Flicker
7 Blue Jay
40 American Crow
1 Fish Crow
8 Black-capped Chickadee
1 Tufted Titmouse
2 White-breasted Nuthatch
2 Carolina Wren
3 Ruby-crowned Kinglet
1 Hermit Thrush
50 American Robin
1 Gray Catbird
2 Northern Mockingbird
43 European Starling
9 Song Sparrow
1 Swamp Sparrow
14 White-throated Sparrow
1 White-crowned Sparrow
2 Dark-eyed Junco
14 Northern Cardinal
45 House Finch
10 American Goldfinch
20 House Sparrow
An excellent birding effort - beats our 2009 number by one, and the 2010 number by several - but last year's search was hampered by two feet of snow on the ground!
2010 results here
2009 results here
Monday, December 19, 2011
Friday, December 16, 2011
Mid-December update
Immature Cooper's Hawk, Accipiter cooperi, perched just a few meters above our feeders one morning last week. photo: Lynn Jones
December is just not a normal month. There's the transition from late fall to winter, when those warmish days are just fewer and farther between, and we resign ourselves to the fact of cold weather.
We have ways to deal with this.
If you're connected to students and the academic world in any way, there are end-of-semester issues. Grades and evaluations are due, plans are sketched out for second semester, last-minute challenges are par for the course.
We have ways to deal with this too.
And then there's the craziness of the "holiday season". THIS is self-inflicted, I mean the craziness part. The holidays, well they've all been around longer than we have, but what have we done to make them so crazy?
We have ways to deal with this too - GO BIRDING!!!!
It's time for the annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count, so tomorrow instead of joining the shopping craziness we birders will be out driving and walking our "territories" in search of every last chickadee, gull and wandering warbler we can find.
New squirrel baffle for one of our feeders - provided by Tony - the other two feeders are there in the background - one for sunflower seeds and the other for thistle seeds, which the finches are supposed to prefer.
West Campus bird list for the past two weeks, December 5-9 and 12-16, 2011:
Wild Turkey
Herring Gull
Ring-billed Gull
Red-tailed Hawk
Cooper's Hawk
Mourning Dove
Rock Pigeon
Downy Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker
10. Blue Jay
American Crow
Fish Crow
American Robin
European Starling
Northern Mockingbird
Black-capped Chickadee
Northern Cardinal
Song Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
20. Dark-eyed Junco
House Finch
American Goldfinch
Twenty two species for the middle of December - probably just about what you'd expect.
Next week, Lynn and I will report on our West Campus Christmas Bird Count.
Friday, December 9, 2011
How Three Companies Tweet Without Fear
I liked the piece in today’s Wall Street Journal by Elizabeth Holmes and on how three different companies deal with Twitter. My old personal favorite was Sea World, where they had Shamu tweeting. It took a while for me to “get” Twitter, but I love the service and along with HootSuite, I find it one of the indispensible tools to keep me up-to-date on the world of business…and other things as well. For example, during football Sunday’s, I keep my iPad next to me as I watch games as I follow the former head of NFL officiating Mike Pereira (@MikePereira) as he tweets about officiating issues regarding the games and gives his followers the correct information on why calls were or were not made.
From today’s article:
This week AMR Corp.'s American Airlines found itself caught in a public spat after actor Alec Baldwin vented on Twitter after being removed from an American flight. "Flight attendant on American reamed me out 4 playing WORDS W FRIENDS," Mr. Baldwin tweeted, referring to a Scrabble-like online game.
American replied via Twitter asking for his contact information. A day later, American tweeted, "UPDATE: Facts about yesterday's removed passenger" along with a link to a statement giving a less-flattering account of the passenger's behavior without mentioning Mr. Baldwin's name. Mr. Baldwin deactivated his Twitter account after the incident and apologized to his fellow passengers.
Companies are adopting a variety of strategies for navigating Twitter's pitfalls. One of the biggest issues is how many people to trust with a company's account, known as its handle. Spread the authority too thin, and the burden can be overwhelming. Authorize too many people, and the risk of mishaps multiplies. Here's how three very different companies—Southwest Airlines Co., Whole Foods Market Inc. and Best Buy Co.—are approaching the task.
From today’s article:
This week AMR Corp.'s American Airlines found itself caught in a public spat after actor Alec Baldwin vented on Twitter after being removed from an American flight. "Flight attendant on American reamed me out 4 playing WORDS W FRIENDS," Mr. Baldwin tweeted, referring to a Scrabble-like online game.
American replied via Twitter asking for his contact information. A day later, American tweeted, "UPDATE: Facts about yesterday's removed passenger" along with a link to a statement giving a less-flattering account of the passenger's behavior without mentioning Mr. Baldwin's name. Mr. Baldwin deactivated his Twitter account after the incident and apologized to his fellow passengers.
Companies are adopting a variety of strategies for navigating Twitter's pitfalls. One of the biggest issues is how many people to trust with a company's account, known as its handle. Spread the authority too thin, and the burden can be overwhelming. Authorize too many people, and the risk of mishaps multiplies. Here's how three very different companies—Southwest Airlines Co., Whole Foods Market Inc. and Best Buy Co.—are approaching the task.
Monday, December 5, 2011
RECENTLY...
Here are a few items that may be of interest....
Segue @ U of M
Roy Olende is starting an expression of Central Community Church right on the campus of Brock University. While it will be a plant of CCC,it will also have its own flavor and some of its own DNA. Roy has been gathering a core of students to begin worship in January, and he is already wondering what to do with everyone who is showing up. The national director of Red Frogs Canada: Everybody loves Roy. It could be its own sit com. Anyway, we sure do.
Worship @ 1280 |
The previous Sunday night, I was at LIFT Church at McMaster University (The whole campus is basking in the glow of winning the “Best, Most exciting,Unbelievable Vanier Cup Final… in the history of ever) ..... in the 1280 Pub, right in the heart of the Student Centre ( where Pop sensation LIGHTS had just done a concert the night before). How is that for a run on sentence..?
Anway, its newly married former student president Robin Waller held forth on sharing our faith in an age of diversity. His core point was: “ It is not about having to always know the answer or prove that you are right. It is about learning to have an honest, genuine conversation. “
Lift is close to my heart, where my son Dave would spend his Sunday evenings when he was in town.
The band was almost a reunion with the very people who led the worship at Dave's celebration service nearly two years ago when he left us for eternity.
Lead Team Meeting |
Segue @ U of M
Tammy Junghans ran a dynamic campaign, this fall, featuring Joy Clark MP who has passionately taken up the issue of human slavery . Also featured a former classmate of mine, Mark Wallenburg, who is now a regional director for I.J.M ( International Justice Mission). Our student group Segue has simply taken the issue by the horns and is putting its weight behind it. There has been tremendous publicity , favour and momentum around an issue that puts Segue on the front edge of one of the most urgent social issues of our day.
You can read more about it all at their website www.segueuofm.com Lakehead U, in Thunder Bay- where Gary Wilson and Jed Armstrong are launching a student ministry on campus, supported by Evangel Church on the edge of campus. As a church they sponsored a Thanksgiving initiative where people in their congregation hosted dozens of international students for a Canadian Thanksgiving!
They just obtained student club status and they are up and running. This is exciting news and their student executive are busy planning for the coming term.
They just obtained student club status and they are up and running. This is exciting news and their student executive are busy planning for the coming term.
Lakehead U Student Centre |
Pub/Cafe where they will be "doing church" |
Behold Roy! |
Other happy things to report. Jamie Nelson from Calvary Church in Cambridge, ON is starting a campus expression of Calvary in the residence of the Conestoga College Cambridge campus. It is a fresh new initiative and it is building a bridge from the existing church to the campus community. It is also experimental as they work at condensing the messages of lead Pastor David Couric into a video format and wrap it with worship and discussion.
The Nelsons! |
I had the privilege of trekking out to Masters College and Seminary in Peterborough for their ministry class. With Professor Graham Gibson I took a class of about 70 first year students on a tour of nearby Trent University. Dr Bill Morrow, the President of Masters College set the stage beautifully in chapel before we left. He preached on “Being the good neighbor” as he unpacked the parable of the Good Samaritan.
We extended the metaphor to the University Campus as we looked at it through missional eyes.
Masters students responding in chapel to the call to Be That Neighbor.. |
We extended the metaphor to the University Campus as we looked at it through missional eyes.
Bridge to the East side of campus |
Note the fusion of Christian and native spirituality |
In search for a transcendent Cause... |
Native feminist spirituality |
I had the students answer some basic questions. What's going on here? What do you see? What do you feel? What is God saying to you about it all?. As we debriefed the experience in class afterwards, we discovered several basic themes.
People looking for community. People looking for wholeness. People looking for fulfillment. People looking for a transcendent cause.
In my theology, those are creational desires that are easilty misdirected towards false ends. It is in Christ that our foundational needs are fulfilled. Our calling, indeed our challenge is to find the way to do it.
Professor Graham, who is doing this PhD thesis on pentecostal native spirituality was particularly aware of the evidence of native spirituality throughout the campus. It has struck me that the academy is well aware of the importance of spirituality in native culture, while deriding or negating the importance of spirituality in our own. No small irony...
While I have heard that there is some Christian activity on campus, it seems to be somewhat underground. It is my conviction that there is a whole lot more that God would do on this campus through individuals that yielded to His call.
We also asked students to consider what God might be saying to them about the Campus. One never knows.....
People looking for community. People looking for wholeness. People looking for fulfillment. People looking for a transcendent cause.
In my theology, those are creational desires that are easilty misdirected towards false ends. It is in Christ that our foundational needs are fulfilled. Our calling, indeed our challenge is to find the way to do it.
Professor Graham, who is doing this PhD thesis on pentecostal native spirituality was particularly aware of the evidence of native spirituality throughout the campus. It has struck me that the academy is well aware of the importance of spirituality in native culture, while deriding or negating the importance of spirituality in our own. No small irony...
While I have heard that there is some Christian activity on campus, it seems to be somewhat underground. It is my conviction that there is a whole lot more that God would do on this campus through individuals that yielded to His call.
We also asked students to consider what God might be saying to them about the Campus. One never knows.....
Friday, December 2, 2011
Sue and Lynn - West Campus birders - with camera trap.
The segue from November to December this week brought a few cold nights, but warm daytime temperatures linger still. Our sparrow population is down, but a good variety of thicket-haunting birds was around this week.
Ruby-crowned and
Golden-crowned Kinglets
Carolina and
House Wrens
Northern Mockingbirds and
Gray Catbirds
Dark-eyed Juncos and a
White-throated Sparrow
Blue Jays and
American Crows
House Finches and
American Goldfinches
Mourning Doves and
Rock Pigeons
Downy Woodpeckers and
Red-bellied Woodpeckers
Lynn keeps the courtyard feeders full.
Black-capped Chickadees and a
Northern Cardinal
American Robins and
European Starlings
Ring-billed and
Herring Gulls
Wild Turkey flock browsing? grazing? one morning this week.
Wild Turkey flocks
Canada Goose flocks, and a
Red-tailed Hawk
and always a few
House Sparrows
Twenty six species for the week - again, a week in which we didn't get outside much during the workday, but saw our good skulkers before work in the mornings.
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