You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to cob...@googlegroups.com, dsud...@gmail.com
Running a BBS route requires a person with good sound & sight ID abilities, one who commits to a 3-year stint, and who manages to get up an hour or two past midnight to drive to a starting point. (Some camp nearby.) A route takes merely one calendar day out of your year -- although it may also take a day or two before & after to plan, to scout, and to recover.
Thanks to all of your, from all over Colorado, who do routes. You get satisfaction but not much credit -- e.g. nothing like eBird's daily top-lister tallies.
This note recognizes those observers
currently most active. The 16 observers listed below will run 40 routes in 2018 (the weather be willing) --
30% of all the Colorado routes.
David
Suddjian
6
Brad Andres
5
Chip Clouse
4
Randy Siebert
4
Paul Slingsby
4
Lisa Belmonte
3
Bob Carper
3
John Drummond
3
Tom Hall
3
Stephanie Jones
3
Hugh Kingery
3
Dave Leatherman
3
Larry Modesitt
3
Kim Potter
3
Sue Riffe
3
Randy Siebert
3
Unfortunately I don't have a way to assess the
observers
who have run their routes for the longest time. Though they include
some of
route-number high achievers, many more dependable route-runners just go
out each year and
run their routes. Thirty-nine (39) observers have run BBS routes for at
least 10 years.
Lowell McEwen of Fort Collins ran the Last Chance route
for almost 50 years. Ron Harden of Loveland has run the Harmony route since 1978s and still does it. With Bob Spencer's help, I took on
the Cheesman Lake route after Don Thatcher, DFOs premier birder for
many years, relinquished it.