You're viewing the comments posted on the entries, photos, and maps for this journal. Want to add a comment of your own? Click anywhere you see the icon within a journal entry. Go to the most recent entry in this journal.
Those are the three, but I think it’s a cypress rather than a yew.
1 year agoHey Scott. I was just hypothesizing today about whether they dropped down from higher elevations with Sue today. Thanks for clarifying. Can't mistake that high whistley trill!
1 year agoLocust? Yew? Oak? What did I miss?
1 year agoSo, that's what I saw the other day! And, not my made up 'black tipped' gull!
1 year agoNot yet, but I’ve had my eye and ear out for them. This is the season, when they drop down from the higher elevations. We’re a bit far south for them here but maybe I’ll get lucky.
1 year agoNice one. Did you see any varied thrushes? Strangely, I'm seeing them very frequently lately.....
1 year agoI see it NOW!
1 year agoI actually WAS asked one time if Feeshko was an American Indian name.
1 year agoIf you look closely at Jen's eyes, you can see murder in them.
1 year agoI thought he accumulated the teeth from his time as a "collector of debts".
1 year agoWe bought the gong on the Gong Highway in Thailand on our first bike trip in 2014-15. It weighs something!
1 year agoWell, I thought it was quite a remarkable coincidence that by a Wednesday, when we were to meet, we had all already been to a dentist for something or other, all except Ron. And then, Ron told me that he was behind in getting a cleaning! Well, that was the week to do it, Ron, to make for 100% HAC member dental participation.
1 year agoWe look great!
1 year agoThank you for this explanation because most of the HAC members have always wondered if your wife was foreign or alien or what.
1 year ago
Could be, but up there it could easily also have been a Western or Herring gull. Here’s a nice cheat sheet for the gulls up your way:
1 year agohttps://www.birdscanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Adult_Gulls.pdf