PF Goose update, Weld

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Todd Deininger

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Dec 12, 2018, 9:14:00 AM12/12/18
to co-birds
There are quite a few observers out here this morning nothing seen yet also please do not block the gates this is a working property

Mike Hensley

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Dec 12, 2018, 9:57:58 AM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
Can you update if it reappears? I’m at home with my toddler, but I can be there in 20 minutes if someone sends out a timely heads up. Thanks!!

Carl Bendorf

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Dec 12, 2018, 9:59:36 AM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
Per an update at 7:48 a.m. on the Colorado Rare Bird Alert Facebook page, bird "Just spotted from 1 mile south of 119 on CR 7!"

Carl Bendorf
Longmont

Ira Sanders

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Dec 12, 2018, 10:09:36 AM12/12/18
to carlb...@gmail.com, cobirds
And that is where I see the problem between Facebook and Cobirds. the goose was posted to Facebook and not Cobirds and someone else had to post it to Cobirds.  Just because Facebook is newer doesn't make it better.
Ira Sanders
Golden

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Allison Hilf

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Dec 12, 2018, 10:52:53 AM12/12/18
to zroadr...@gmail.com, carlb...@gmail.com, cobirds
Ira, thank you for pointing this out.  Yesterday the  bird was posted to Cobirds and then someone shared it to Facebook.  Steve Mlodinow and the majority of Birders who seek out rare birds are very good about communicating through Cobirds.   Cobirds is the traditional method of communication and has served this community very effectively.

This FB idea was begun under the misinformation that Cobirds was ending.  That was never an issue; the issue was whether the RBA would be able to continue without Joyce. Even if the RBA was discontinued (which is not the case, as for now we have a group volunteers) all rare bird sightings would still have been posted on Cobirds as usual.

FB has its role and is perfectly fine if people don’t want to participate in Cobirds or if they prefer to use both groups; but FB is not used by many Birders.   If people want to post rare birds to both groups that should be encouraged; however I think Cobirds should be the first line of communication for a rare bird.   Cobirds seems to still be where things are accurately reported firsthand, but for by a handful of people who prefer FB.

I hope people who use both FB and Cobirds will share a post with both groups simultaneously.  If you can post to one group, you can copy and paste a rare bird sighting to the other group.

Allison Hilf



Sent from my iPhone

Carl Bendorf

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Dec 12, 2018, 11:48:25 AM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
Thanks, Allison.  Well said.  I would respectfully add a bit to your comment that Facebook is not used by many Birders.   For example, the Colorado Field Ornithologists, offers both COBIRDS and a Facebook page: the COBIRDS Google Group has 1,686 members while the CFO Facebook page has 2,947 members. I suspect there are many birders who follow both of these valuable (but different) sources of information.  My impression is that this same pattern is true in many states/provinces as well as national birding organizations. 

Lest anyone think I'm saying this is evidence of one medium being somehow better than another, I don't believe that at all.  I do think that more total people are reached by having multiple avenues for communication  and this is overall a good thing for the birding community.  I also think that every communication medium offers different advantages (e.g. print journal vs. electronic, Google Groups vs. the old phone trees, texting vs. email, texting vs. phone calls, Facebook vs. Twitter vs. Instagram, and so on.  This is why multiple communication methods can and will continue to successfully co-exist.

Here are some additional Colorado-related Facebook pages and their memberships (in Facebook, it's not really a membership but these are the numbers of those who have formally "like" or elected to "follow" a particular page):

Birding Colorado - 2,007
Colorado Bird Photography - 4,205
Adventures in Colorado birding for Amateurs - 91
Birds of Colorado - 373
Big Year Birding in Colorado - 110
Denver Field Ornithologists - 773
Audubon Society of Greater Denver - 2,077
Colorado Rare Bird Alert - 255

Each of these pages has a somewhat different purpose and, again, I suspect there is a lot of overlap in these numbers.

Carl Bendorf
Longmont

Ben S

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Dec 12, 2018, 12:03:50 PM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
Pink-footed Goose was present along ice edge w/ Cackling Geese on lake closest to CR 7. The bird was resting w/ its head tucked in most of the time, but it swam and walked around, revealing its namesake legs, before flying off. Torso colored like Cackling, but browner, with white stripe on edge of wing. Black bill with pink on it, bright pink legs. Apparently the closest other records are in Washington and Pennsylvania. At least a couple dozen birders were there. The bird was present from 7:40 when I arrived until about 8:30 when it flew south with many Cacklers. Yes, make sure not to block the road, gates, driveways,etc, when parking. But also, CR 7 is a fast road; and in order to see the Pink-footed Goose birders must watch from right next to the road, I don't want anyone getting hit. Everyone be careful of cars for their own safety. 

Ben Sampson
Cenntennial, CO

Chris Goulart

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Dec 12, 2018, 12:12:07 PM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
Wondering if there is any information about the Pink Footed Goose? From the most recent posting it appears it hasn’t been seen yet today.

Carl Bendorf

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Dec 12, 2018, 12:16:14 PM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
Chris, Ben Sampson's post was from just a few minutes ago that the bird is being seen.

Rosanne J.

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Dec 12, 2018, 12:23:19 PM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds

I do follow the CFO and DFO Facebook pages and now the Rare Bird FB page. However, the guidelines on the first two only ask for the county that the bird was seen in. I think that almost because of the larger numbers of folks who follow FB, the folks who post keep the exact locations close to the vest, whether it's to protect the bird or the location. CoBirds feels like a more intimate community with detailed, up to the minute information that is not shared widely as on FB. (New FB page guidelines state that links and photos should be flagged as public). There is more accountability to the group to act ethically when scouting the bird in question.

trying to "Be Best" (haha)
Rosanne Juergens
Centennial

Linda Schmidt

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Dec 12, 2018, 12:23:19 PM12/12/18
to zroadr...@gmail.com, carlb...@gmail.com, cob...@googlegroups.com
Ira,  I don't think anyone disagrees with you.  It's just another place to look for information.  

Ben S

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Dec 12, 2018, 12:24:55 PM12/12/18
to Colorado Birds
The bird was seen this morning, but it flew off around 8:30 AM. It may still be worth trying for, though. 

Ben Sampson
Centennial , CO

Ira Sanders

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Dec 12, 2018, 3:39:49 PM12/12/18
to Ben S, cobirds, Ira Sanders
Birders
Tammy and I have been combing through many thousands of cackling geese for several hours without any luck in finding the PF goose. Will post if we do find it.
Ira Sanders
Golden

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