An unquestionable harbinger! I remember, when I was the 'dorky kid with the binoculars' (I would stick 'em under my jacket after climbing back up The Bluffs -- then-deserted, honestly, but we're going way back in time here), one of the many things
most folks thought that a robin sighting was the Real Thing ... I should look up stuff on when they started overwintering (and surviving) ... where was I?
Oh. Well I figured that that was how it was in my early years, but a chance friendship with a bird-person lead to exchanges about bird things. After he got less violent, we started coming up with questions not addressed in Peterson?
One topic -- turned into a contest -- was, "What's the first real returning non-quacking/honking migrant?" Being a parulid fancier (still am), I, at first went with Myrtle Warbler (bad choice); he went with another passerine. After a time, I went with Killdeer ... I don't know of any who stay, unless frozen, with one leg tucked away, to a mudflat, but am I right?
I saw a photograph years ago of about nine tree swallows just stuffed into a bluebird house, because of a nasty cold snap. A lot of them die if it lasts too long. They survived, and switched to a fruit diet until the insects were up and flying about.
So, I'm interested to know peoples' different "It's Spring!" birds, and how their species change as time goes by. Then there's the species you really want to see, usually mid- to late May ... a blue-headed vireo would go down nice, maybe in a couple of weeks ...
I wonder if we'll have a few "Big Waves," exclusively on weekends, this year?
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by norman »
"If John Denver wasn\'t already dead, I guess I\'d have to kill him."