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to cobirds
The Sedge Wren is being seen in a place that is walking distance from my home, so I went to try my luck. The wren was seen around 1:45 by a group of five birders including me. I got a nice five seconds or so before he dove for cover.
I know the only reason I got to see the bird was because of the behavior of the other folks that were there when I got there-but I found the behavior itself appalling. While the initial flush of the bird was happenstance, there was a concerted effort to purposefully flush him once he/she was spotted. I tried to stay back aways from the spot but kept having folks step in front of me. A couple folks with cameras were very intent on getting a shot. A gentleman that arrived moments after I saw the bird got to see it and take a picture or two-but left abruptly after one of the other birders played the call on their phone.
Like I said-I’m delighted I got to see this life bird for a few moments, but can’t help wonder how stressful it is for him with people stomping around his cover, poking sticks and such. I probably wouldn’t have seen him otherwise-but I really was surprised to see folks actively working to flush the bird.
Lauren
Lauren Burke
It's a bird thing, it just is!
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Lauren Burke
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Oct 19, 2020, 4:43:01 PM10/19/20
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to Lauren Burke, cobirds
I should also say that I did not speak up. Left that out!
Lauren
Lauren Burke
It's a bird thing, it just is!
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 19, 2020, at 2:37 PM, Lauren Burke <thebu...@msn.com> wrote:
>
> The Sedge Wren is being seen in a place that is walking distance from my home, so I went to try my luck. The wren was seen around 1:45 by a group of five birders including me. I got a nice five seconds or so before he dove for cover.
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to thebu...@msn.com, cobirds
Thank you, Lauren; it probably bears repeating regularly, since one, people don’t “get” it the first time, and two, new people are (hopefully, it’s a good thing) regularly joining the birding world, that our ethics as birders require us to put the birds’ safety and health first. NO exceptions. Someone can state it better than I can, but please, do not EVER disturb birds, especially migrants, especially rare ones who are out of their usual habitat and likely struggling to survive.
Colorado Association of Professional Interpreters (CAPI)
American Translators Association
Colorado Translators Association
I acknowledge that I live in the territory of Hinóno'éí (Arapaho) and Cheyenne nations, according to the 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie, and that Colorado's Front Range is home to the Ute and many other Native peoples. Reconozco que vivo en el territorio de las naciones Hinóno’éí (Arapaho) y Cheyenne, según el 1851 Tratado de Fort Laramie, y que el estado de Colorado al este de las Montañas Rocosas es territorio de los Utes y muchos otros pueblos indígenas.