End of Year Eye Candy
Here are a few of my favorite bird pix from the first half of 2008.
Wishing you and yours a happy, healthy, prosperous, peaceful new year.
Labels: best of 2008, bird photography, favorite birds
My name is Bill and I am a bird watcher...
Here are a few of my favorite bird pix from the first half of 2008.
Labels: best of 2008, bird photography, favorite birds

Labels: birding in Brazil, cow milk, Highlights of 2008
with a nod to Monty Python:Labels: barnacle goose, caption contest, Jim McCormac

Labels: bird identification quiz, Birding in Florida, mystery quiz
I hope you will forgive me for running another BOTB caption contest so soon after the last one, but here are my (rather feeble) reasons:

Labels: barnacle goose, birding in Ohio, caption contest, funny photos, Jim McCormac
Winning Caption #1: Why should bowlers be the only ones with cool shoes?Labels: Bird Watcher's Digest, birding fashion, caption contest

Labels: backyard birds, bird feeding, hawks at bird feeders, northern cardinal, sharp-shinned hawk

Labels: Bird Watcher's Digest, birding in Texas, caption contest


Labels: kids and birding, nature deficit disorder, The Young Birder's Guide, This Birding Life podcast

Labels: backyard birds, bird feeding, peanuts, today at the feeder, woodpeckers
Labels: bat falcon, birding in Guatemala, Jeff Bouton, Leica Birding Blog, life birds
Perhaps this is a sign that birding or bird watching has finally come of age. We're starting to see films being made about our hobby. And, the good news is, these films do not star Miss Jane Hathaway, Professor Pith-Helmet, or that crotchety old lady ornithologist from The Birds.

Labels: birding films, Opposable Chums, World Series of Birding
Labels: birding festivals, birding in North Dakota, Highlights of 2008, Potholes and Prairie Birding Festival



Labels: bird feeding, Dark-eyed junco, Leucistic birds, marker birds, Snowflake

Labels: Dark-eyed junco, spark bird stories
Labels: game camera, nature at night
Shotgun season for deer hunting started at dawn yesterday. Here in the boonies of southeastern Ohio that means woodlands dotted with blaze orange and a regular tattoo of gunshots throughout the day. Our part of the state swells in population with the addition of thousands of hunters coming down to Ohio's most deer-rich corner. We have huge chunks of Wayne National Forest here as well as big parcels of state game land, recovered strip mine acreage, and private hunting areas.
Labels: deer hunting, white-tailed deer
Labels: bird feeding, suet dough, Wingscapes BirdCam