July 2009

Three weeks and still kicking

Twitter club for birders. We need a logo! Anyone can come up with something?

Twitter club for birders. We need a logo! Anyone can come up with something?

Seems to be a day or two delay every week in presenting this tweet-club. Sorry for that. It has been a busy week and it took a long time to get the contributions and even longer to actually sit down and write this. So rather than being sleepless a couple of hours before our new baby daughter Anahi will be born, I thought I just speedily wrap this up.
The results so far for the tweet-club have been overwhelming, and I am noticing that the participants are getting the idea of what kind of blogpost are more retweet-worthy than others. The idea is really that our blogs shall be found outside our normal spheres. We need cute, we need funny, we need good pictures and we need great headlines. I could say that we need good writing skills….but no, no, no, NO!…..
That is probably the least important talent you need to get retweeted. OK, some people will get great readership because of fluent language and glittering writing skills, but most of us, especially if struggling in a language that is not even our native tounge, will have to focus on the small things that catch the eye. The content is the most important thing and we can well get our love of nature come across with less wordy pieces if we focus on the essentials. Why do we need more readers? Maybe, together we can incentivate someone to take up birding and whom will become yet another foot soldier in the war against the narrow minds that treat the planet like it was just a never ending resourse. The bird and habitat conservation need more foot soldiers.

.………..errrr..hallo!….Gunnar!!…..get to the point for Pete’s sake….. what was that you said about wordy?…

The results:

From14 particpants the first week, this week there were only 6. Last week we had 8 particpants recieving more than 100 clicks. This week 4 participants received over 100 clicks.  Did everyone retweet the way they were supposed to. I am not going to tell you, but you can check for yourself, just copy the bit.ly url below to your browser and add a +sign immediatly after to and you will come to the info page of that particular post. Scroll down to see who has retweeted! Quite revealing isn’t it. If you need to redeem yourself you can! If you were not able to do the retweeting for any reason there is no timelimit. You can catch up, no problem. If you find it diffucult to find the time to retweet download tweetlater to program your tweets.

@journowl 85 clicks https://bit.ly/xrepC
@phillipdews 86 clicks https://bit.ly/XXrzZ
@birdingdude 100 clicks https://bit.ly/16NdeF
@patbumstead 103 clicks https://bit.ly/tnCNe
@kolibrix 111 clicks https://bit.ly/Fdt7
@soaringfalcon1 188 clicks https://bit.ly/4GycD0

The winner is @soaringfalcon. Congratulations Larry Jordan of a Birders Report. His video of the cute Wood Ducklings first plunge into the water from a nesthole in a tree was just too cute. All that got over 100 clicks I will feature on Facebook the coming week.

Tweet club last week of July.

This weeks tweet club, again a small dedicated group consists of:

  • @birdingdude Tern Fest with 8 species of Terns on a Long Beach, NY outing. Wow! https://bit.ly/ZZBQk
  • @soaringfalcon1 Crows are among the most intelligent birds. https://bit.ly/vbih7 (had 67 clicks prior to Tweetclub launch)
  • RT @journowl Up close video shows owlets run for cover as predator soars above https://bit.ly/6Jni (had 33 clicks prior to Tweetclub launch)
  • RT @DawnFine How to make a digiscope attachment https://bit.ly/I2owT
  • RT @jeffgyr Some days, “bird tour leader” really IS the best job in the world: https://bit.ly/siD2 (had 1 hit prior Tweetclub launch)
  • RT@kolibrix Ted Parker finds Golden-backed Mountain-Tanager and Pardusco at Unchog, Peru. https://bit.ly/YMCUY

Those that supplied bit.ly links have in some cases already some clicks. I mention how many so that it can be subtracted in the final score.

Submit your posting for birdbloggers tweetclub #004 in comments below by Wednesday Aug 5, 2009.  The results from Tweetclub #003 will be published with Tweetclub #004

Keep tweetin’ ….

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What bird left this nest under the hood?

Bird nest under the hood. Photo: Onu Tareq

Bird nest under the hood. Photo: Onu Tareq

I just got an email from Onu Tareq – Bangla Deshian who lives in Finland.  Maybe someone can help Onu what to do with this nest.

Yesterday I took these photos from my friends car, actually in the car, just by the engine under the cover! And it is something that I have never seen before, a wonderful perfectly made bird nest with 6 eggs ! How can it be, that a pretty new car they are driving  everyday always with a closed cover gets a nest built inside? How can it be explained? Let us know if  you know the reason and what we can do to save the nest and eggs or the chics when they are hatched. What species is this? Eagerly waiting for your reply. Onu

Can you help Onu? Please leave your answers in the comments below.

Anyone knows what species put these eggs here and what to do with the nest?

Anyone knows what species put these eggs here and what to do with the nest?

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Whither StumbleUpon

Stumble UponTwo weeks ago Mike Bergin of NatureBlogNetwork (also of 10000birds) put out a question to the naturebloggers whether Stumble Upon and other Social Media bookmarking services actually bring any traffic to their sites. Check the post and the discussion here! The consensus was that while Stumble Upon can have immense effect on giving traffic, most naturebloggers don’t use it or the results are not giving permanent readers, only sudden peaks. Naturally, it is hard to measure who will become a new regular reader of the blog and from where he/she is recruited. Therefore, I think there is a value also in such a sudden peak of readers that have reached your blog from the less regular outlets,  than those you have among your friends and followers on Facebook and Twitter and your regular RSS feed reader. You may convert one or two to a regular reader. Furthermore, Stumble upon has a Birding index, why birding articles can be labeled (tagged) correctly (contrary to for example Digg!).

Yet another Social Media experiement for birdbloggers.

The tweetclub for birdbloggers I started two weeks ago has had some interesting effects on visits to the participating blogs. I want to do a new experiment. I have dusted off an old post about NatureBlogging previously submitted to SU, that probably most of you have read already.  I am reposting it again on Twitter and my Facebook and ask my followers/friends to hit “thumbs up”, if they like.  Instead of giving the direct link to my post, I give the Stumble Upon link in bit.ly fashion. This is the link you shall click to get to the submitted test post: https://bit.ly/ApiST.   This way it is really easy to show your SU feeling about the particular post. It seems OK to do it this way on Twitter, but it looks very ugly on Facebook. But remember that this is a test. Please try it and if you are already a member of Facebook, consider writing a short review.

The StumbleUpon club for birdbloggers.

If this works the way I think it may work, the idea would be to have around 30 birdbloggers submitting one of their best all time (timeless) birding posts and submit it to the Birdbloggers Stumble Upon club. I imagine a blog with a great jawdropping picture prominent in the blog will get more stumbles. One selected post will be stumbled once per day by all members. There should be one post stumbled per day for a month  We shall also try to twitter and facebook those posts that are in our liking.  That is the outline to the idea. Let’s see how the experiment goes first.

If you liked this post, check out these related posts regarding the Birdbloggers TweetClub.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/topgold/ / CC BY 2.0
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A non-birding post!

Social Media Bandwagon Matt HammBirders you can stop reading NOW! This will be boring for you. I am just trying to sort out what has happened to my business since I started using Social media actively some 7 months ago when starting blogging on the company web-page for Kolibri Expeditions.  If you are interested in what Social Media can do for your business keep on reading.

Google Page-rank 5 thanks to blogging.

Yesterday, I read a cool article about Google Page rank on Social Media Today. It explains a little bit about the google page rank logarithm and how to link within the webpage and about backlinks. When checking our own PR for www.kolibriexpeditions.com it had risen to 5 after being 4 for many years. I don’t know when this happened, but it is mainly due to my blogging since December last year. We have done some tweaking improving titles, description and keywords for the pages on the commercial site, but it was most likely the blog that achieved this sudden jump, since also the blog also has PR 5.  Seven months ago the blog had only PR3. Albeit being critical for lousy click-through numbers when participating in Blog Carnivals, blog carnivals are often hosted on high page rank blogs which helps. Increased traffic in general comments and blogrolls added on other web-pages may also have help.

What does a high page rank mean?

A higher pagerank will help to achieve better positioning in searches on google for all individual pages on our homepage. This should give more business as more people will be able to find you through searches. Furthermore, your friends and followers  in your social network not only become important in mouth to mouth reference, but also provide direct reference to you as a person. Social Media humanize the business and should be the perfect way for small business to grow. The increase in page rank is a measure that the Social Media effort has paid off.
In fact, it complicates a decision I need to take. Our company wants to start offering regular non-birding trips to Peru. The idea is that, if we are capable of something as complicated as arranging birding trips, regular tourism trips should be quite easy, as the traditional circuit Lima-Paracas-Nazca-Arequipa-Colca-Titicaca-Cusco-Machu Picchu is very straight forward to organize with all the necessary infrastructure already in place. Dealing with social media for only a year, but already having somewhat of a good position compared to other tour operators in Peru, social media could become our platform to get better known for also arranging regular tours to Peru.

I could use some advice!

The question is, should we get a new web-page with a smart search engine optimized title such as MachuPicchu-Cusco.com (taken, but there are similar available) or rely on the PR5 on out main-page which would almost immediately give PR4 to a Peru tour page on the second level?  I am tempted to do the second. If I could get  PR5 for my blog in 7 months, it may be possible to get high page rank for a tour page in relatively short time. What do you think?

How to sell something without trying to sell.

Social Media would not work if you constantly only send people offers to buy your stuff. You would soon see your followers and friends numbers drop. But if you think more of your friends and followers than the stuff you want to sell and try to provide value to them, you will soon find that you get kudos in many places for the cool things you do and for being a nice guy. The idea is that when someone is looking for a product you can provide, you may well get that business because you have been a nice.  Sounds simple doesn’t it? But hey, hold on…You cannot fake it. Either you like to provide value to others or you don’t. To do Social Media well, you have to be a social person.

Social media changed my business signature!

I’m not new to being social on the internet, even though I was slow to hook on Facebook and blogging . I have participated in list servers in my field birdwatching since beginning of their existence in the early 90s. I even created new lists on Yahoo for birding in Peru in English and in Spanish which are still running. I have been very active on many such birding lists and to a lesser extent on forums. On the birding lists it has usually been OK to use a business signature which includes a line with the name of the company and the web-page. In the forums such use of “commercial” signature is somewhat frowned upon.
Having done a lot of social media lately such as Facebook, Twitter and blogging in an environment in which most people would not dream of signing off with a commercial signature, I recently made some humble intents also to become more active in some forums. I soon realized that the commercial stuff should be in the user profile rather than in the signature. On the other hand the blog and twitter url could favorably appear under my name. About a month ago, I changed my signature on all my emails. How could I send a message referring to my blog if it was followed with a blunt commercial signature.

Which do you like best? Before or after?

Here is my signature half a year ago:

Gunnar Engblom-Lima, Peru.
Kolibri Expeditions
https://www.kolibriexpeditions.com
www.birding-peru.com – checklist and data-base. Record your sightings on-line, forum, pictures, identification, Expedition Birding, etc.
Tel: +51 1 273 72 46 (office). 273 71 98 (home) cel: 51-1-988 555 938 or 999007886
Follow me on www.twitter.com/kolibrix

My signature today:

Gunnar Engblom-Lima, Peru.
Gunnar’s Blog – updated frequently. https://www.kolibriexpeditions.com/birdingperu/blog/
Follow me on www.twitter.com/kolibrix
https://www.facebook.com/Gunnar.Engblom/

Seriously, which one do you like best? Is it a good idea not to flag the business details here? Do business details in a signature bother you?

Illustration credit: Matt Hamm per Creative Commons license,
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Round 2 of the Tweetclub is here.

Twitter club for birders. We need a logo! Anyone can come up with something?
Twitter club for birders. We need a logo! Anyone can come up with something?

The first birdbloggers Tweet Club was received well. In spite that, we got few people joining the second round, but many have promised to be back week 3. Surprise! Here is something that will bring more commitment and traffic to your blogs. I did tell you this last week, remember

Facebook Blog-sharing club.

If I share the most popular post (those that have gotten more than 100 clicks with the provided bit.ly link) on my Facebook wall, I hope that those of you belonging to the tweetclub and also are my facebook friends will click on the share button and also display the same link on your wall. We should not do all the Twitter club posts this way, but only those that have become most popular through Twitter. This could be a good reward for those participating in the Tweetclub, and carrot for all to try to submit posts that will become popular. (I repeat: the mixture of a smart title in the tweet and great pictures will lead to retweets – or something that is extremely useful to many people). If you are not Facebook friend with me already, please consider becoming one. Here is my Facebook link  https://www.facebook.com/gunnar.engblom I welcome all birders, naturebloggers, marathon runners, post-punkrockers and Eminem-fans to become Facebook friends with me. …..errr…OK, Mom – who just got internet connection, family and other “real-life” friends are also welcome of course.

And the winners are….

Numbers of tweets to the supplied bit.ly link since publication on July 13.

@jeffgyr 147 tweets https://bit.ly/ar1OJ
@patbumstead 135 tweets https://bit.ly/I7KOF
@soaringfalcon1 132 tweets https://bit.ly/3UTZ5k
@kolibrix 132 tweets https://bit.ly/UjqOx
@journowl  115 tweets https://bit.ly/kakapo
@wrenaissance 113 tweets https://bit.ly/Qj855
@VickieHart 111 tweets https://bit.ly/RfMpr
@DawnFine 106 tweets https://bit.ly/vIaxU

That is 8 out of 14 that managed to get over 100 hits for a single post.  And those that did not reach 100 had in any case at least 80 hits. Congratulations to all participants.

These winners will be “Facebooked” this week by myself. Everyone who reads this, please click on the “share” link for each blog I present to put it on your Facebook as well. I will let you know how many additional hits this experiment produced by next week. OK?

Birdbloggers Tweet Club #002.

That was a lot beating about the bush. At last, here are this weeks participants. It is easy because there are only five participants. Nobody should have any problems in retweeting all. Remember to use tweetlater to schedule your tweets for #birdsaturday and #ecomonday.  Only my late tweeting (around 11 PM) of five selected posts for the last #ecomonday gave between 10 and 20 additional hits for each.

  • RT @journowl The extremely cute Burrowing Owl stands small in Californian urban expansion. @journowl is fighting though  https://bit.ly/xrepC
  • RT @birdingdude Cool video: tiny Piping Plovers are pugnaciously chasing off the giant Oystercatcher. https://bit.ly/16NdeF
  • RT @patbumstead The most expensive lifer. One Life Bird: Cost $11,000 https://bit.ly/tnCNe (7 clicks prior to publication)
  • RT @soaringfalcon1 Did you ever see a Wood Duck duckling make its first flight? More like a PLUNGE! https://bit.ly/4GycD0 (94clicks prior to publication)
  • RT @phillipdews Sky lark numbers in the UK not sky high anymore. Replaced by crickets? Personal retro by @phillipdews https://bit.ly/XXrzZ (36 clicks prior publication)
  • RT @kolibrix How to remember South American bird songs with Monty Python. https://bit.ly/Fdt7

My humble contribution was first published on March 8. With this I want to highlight that if you have posts that you feel are worth a second look, there is absolutely nothing wrong with dusting some old treasures. Remember to post your contributions to Tweet club 3 at the comment section of this post. Other comments and thoughts are also well received.

Everybody tweet now!

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I repeat. Will the real bird blogger please stand up.

First! Have a look at the first two notes about the Birdbloggers tweetclub, so you know what this is all about.

The first post presented the idea and how it works. Read this one first.

The second post also provided the results from my retweeting campaign of I and the bird #104 and discussed the rules for the tweetclub. Also a very important post to read.

Both posts should be your first reference to learn more about the tweet club.

Results Birdbloggers tweetcub #001.

A very interesting experience this. Of the 14 participants in this weeks tweetclub 6 had more than 100 visitors, 1 had 99 visitors and 4 had over 80. The best result had Jeff Gordon with 123 hits to his post about flipping Horseshoe Crabs over to ensure more food for the Red Knots.
Not too bad considering this was the first trial tweet club.

A few things to clarify.

  1. All participants should commit to tweet at least 10 posts once over the week.
  2. Since it spans over several days it should not be difficult for most users to tweet each blogposts on more than one occasion.
  3. I have re-tweeted each post three times at different times on different days. Did this disturb any of you? I think 3 times should be the upper limit, but let me know your thoughts on this.
  4. By using Tweetlater you can schedule the tweets at what ever time you like. It makes it easy to post all the posts on several occasions.
  5. You may chose to just retweet the stuff I or someone else send out. That is fine. The effect is the same.
  6. Please, use the bit.ly link I provide when retweeting. Otherwise it is difficult to get the right statistics.
  7. You can check how many clicks any participating  blogpost gets by adding a + sign just after the bit.ly URL.

You will not be allowed to only be a passive user of the tweetclub. I have some tolerance this first week, but don’t count on it later. If you submit a post to the tweet club, you must reciprocate and tweet other people’s stuff to. Fair enough?

Submit to Birdbloggers tweet club #002

So if you want 100 visitors to your blog post next week, please submit it in the comment section below. State your Twitter ID, the title and the link.
I need your entry by  Sunday July 19 Monday July 20 night.  The tweet-club #002 will be published on Monday Wednesday night.  This way we shall also be able to use both the hashtags #birdsaturday and #ecomonday on each day.  Furthermore it may be an idea to also include the hashtag #birding once in a while.

Again I remind you.  Try to be catchy and smart, and use great photos that catch the eye.

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Brown-backed Solitaire – contestant to “1000 birds to see before you die”?

Brown-backed Solitarie. Photo copyright (reproduced w permission): Antonio Hidalgo.

Brown-backed Solitarie. Photo copyright (reproduced w permission): Antonio Hidalgo.

This is  potentially a new bird to the US list. It has been recorded before, but all other records have been rejected, since it is a common cagebird in Mexico, due to its pretty song. However, as Rick Wright puts it:

This individual, in a place and a habitat eminently suitable for a post-breeding wanderer, will be a first for the ABA Area if accepted.

Photos of the bird observed in at Miller Canyon, Arizona on July 16 that can be found here, indicate that the bird does not seem to have been handled (previous records have had some broken feathers) and therefore it may well be spontaneous.

I admit. I had never heard of the species before, but after finding Antonio Hidalgo’s  excellent photo on Flickr (thanks for the permission to use, Antonio. If anyone needs a high resolution of this pic, contact Antonio by clicking the link) and hearing it’s song from Xeno-canto, my impression was down to one word. WOW! This is a bird I need to see – and hear – one day.  Whether it will make the final list of 1000 birds worldwide I don’t know yet, but it sure tickled my nerve.

Yesterday, July 17  around 50 birders were out looking for it at Miller Canyon, but no luck. Today July 18, however, a fresh report from nearby (I presume) Ramsey Canyon Joe Woodley gives this report on the Arizona – New Mexico birding listserv:

Rick Romea just called to tell me that he had seen a (or presumably “the”) Brown-backed Solitaire in Ramsey Canyon at about 1:30PM today. It was between the wetlands and the staff cabin on the left hand (away from the creek) side as you walk up the trail. It was mid-level in the canopy and singing!! Rick had received a call from an individual who had heard the bird singing around 12:30PM today. Joe Woodley Hereford, AZ

Here is the info how to get to Ramsey Canyon and other useful info, kindly provided on the list by Mark Stevenson. Now go and get it, if you are close by.

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First Birdbloggers Tweet Club

Tweetclub-AdamHey, we’ve done it. This is a follow-up on my post on July 8 announcing the tweet club.

There are 14 birdbloggers tweetclub posts this 1st week. Starting with a late start. I won’t go into why this was not published Monday, as promised as that would fill on other blog post. Let me just summarize that we are dealing with high season birding tours in Peru and that my wife is almost due to have a baby any day now. My obligations are elsewhere, as you probably can appreciate. I did however, send off the first batch of tweets last night as some of you may have seen. So the ball is rolling. Be sure to read this long post to the end, because we shall take this idea to Facebook as well.

Birdbloggers Tweet Club rules

  1. Commit to retweet at least 10 of the tweets below.
  2. If you can, pls retweet up to 3 times over the week on different days and times.
  3. Read the blogs you retweet. Remember, that the blogs you retweet are your personal recommendations.
  4. Consider re-writing the tweets in a personal way, if my interpretation is not in your liking or if you want a personal touch in your re-tweet.
  5. You may just retweet a seed tweeted by someone else if you prefer.
  6. You may or may not include the @reply of the web-owner in the tweet. It is not technically a retweet of course just copying the below and you are not re-tweeting an original message to Twitter, so you may well take credit for your first seed yourself. This also gives more space for your followers to retweet and maintain your credit.
  7. I have decided not to include a hashtag for the tweetclub. You can use hashtags such as #ecomonday, #birdsaturday, #birding etc in the tweet to give it more exposure.

Concerns and tips

Dawn Fine raised an interesting point. How can we do this without becoming spammers on Twitter?  I think it is only an issue for those followers you may have that  follow less than 50 people and 14 of those followers are the same birdbloggers here.  In most cases many tweets will be lost in the Twitter stream. You reader may not see the tweet the first time it is sent. Many “retweets” make sure everyone that could be interested in reading the post will get exposed to it. What is more, your post will be seen by a lot of people that are not following you presently, and this is the main benefit when birding blogs go viral.  In any case, we should be aware of the potential risk of coming off as spammers and raise a flag if you notice it becoming a problem.

The main recommendation though is that you are honest to yourself. You shouldn’t retweet something that you have not read. Retweeting is like recommending, so therefore the posts you are re-tweeting are seen as your personal recommendations.

Don’t retweet the exact message here below if you are not in agreement with the article or if you don’t like it.

This could also teach us to write more interesting blogposts. If you want readers to your blog, you have to understand that you are not writing for your personal joy only, but for your reader. This will make a shift in what you write about. Soon you find yourself writing posts of stuff that you think will interest a lot of people. Those posts will have a natural place here on the tweet club. If you find after this exercise that your post gets less click than the others, this may well be a hint to you. Don’t take it personal, but let it be an inspiration to write more interesting posts to your readers.

Twitter is also about reciprocals. Retweeting somebody’s blogpost is a much better way of saying thank you for a Retweet, than just publicly say thanks.

How to read 14 blogposts in 15 minutes.

Another point Dawn raises is how on earth shall anyone have time to read all these posts. We are all very busy. Most browsers today allow you to open multiple tabs. Click on your browser program to get a totally new window and open this blog post there. Then click on one bit.ly link one after the other while holding the ctrl key pressed. It should be no problem open 10 to 15 tabs at one go. Then spend up to 1 minute on each post. This should be enough to see if you like the post or not.
What bloggers should try to remember to get retweeted is:

  • a good photo to start with that catches the eye. The old saying “a photo is worth a 1000 words” applies in blogging.
  • a very catchy title
  • good headlines for the sub-sections in the blog.

Does retweeting work?

These were the posts that had most clicks of those that I retweeted in the last I and the Bird #104, which appeared in two parts. The first part described the idea of using twitter as a means to spread the word about the blog carnival and the individual posts that were presented in a tweetable fashion similar to what we are doing here.  The second part also included a photo from each blog and some statistics from the first twitter session. I retweeted all posts twice.  The most popular posts got these many hits because they were retweeted by many others.  This is what we want to achieve also with the tweet club. Here are the results as of today from the I and the bird post.

  1. Have you ever seen 50000 Purple Martins falll from the sky? Check out the video on this site. https://bit.ly/GdMEN
    Tweeted first at 06.00 July 8: 102 clicks.
  2. I bet you never seen a Yellow-breasted Grosbeak. It’s not in the book, yet here is a photo. https://bit.ly/3MbcA4
    Tweeted first at 21.20 July 8: 94 clicks.
  3. Here is the punkiest of all chicks. I don’t know if this is cute or ugly. What do you think? https://bit.ly/U7QGJ
    Tweeted first at 09.00 July 8: 91 clicks.
  4. Barred Eagle-owl takes a monkey in Singapore. Impressive! https://bit.ly/hTzF4
    Tweeted first at 18.50 July 7: 82 clicks.
  5. The puffin is the Toucan of the Northern seas with that colorful beak. Check these smashing photos. https://bit.ly/wYwbq
    Tweeted first at 08.00 July 8: 70 clicks.

Two things to think about when studying the content of the above links. You may notice that I seldom use the titles of the original blog post. When tweeting it is useful to use tricks to catch the attention in the tweetstream. Use big words and superlatives when appropriate. I have no idea if they were 50000 Purple Martins but they were a hell of a lot, and the number sounds appropriate to what I could see, even though they may have been 20000 or perhaps 70000.  But it is obvious that the tweet title worked. Think about this when posting your next blogpost to twitter.
Secondly, what role do you think the photos played  to get visitors to the post?  Certainly post 3-5 ranked this high due to the photos provided.

Tweetclub tweets #001

Here are the 14 participants of this week.

  • RT @docforestal Many bird photos and a checklist of the birds seen at Moosehead Lake, Maine https://bit.ly/B0nvn
  • RT @gonolek This is  great literate memoir blogpost from Birdman partly about birding on Scilly  in late 70s.  https://bit.ly/11OL6p
  • RT @birdingdude Sheer madness or daring run? A twitch, as the Brits would say.  Mississippi Kite in NY https://bit.ly/ZT4Au
  • @DawnFine I can’t sleep at night. Flying squirrel and Whip-Poor-Will making too much noise. https://bit.ly/vIaxU
  • @journowl Endangered world’s heaviest parrot goes home https://bit.ly/kakapo (@journowl provided the link and it had 18 clicks prior to me posting the first tweet)
  • @soaringfalcon1: Great pics of Red-shouldered Hawk  and a video to learn its call.  https://bit.ly/3UTZ5k
  • @wrenaissance Slide show of  the cutest Barn Swallow chicks begging for food.  https://bit.ly/Qj855
  • @patbumstead It’s a new blog but will be a big one when it grows up! Canada’s National Bird.  https://bit.ly/I7KOF
  • @HastyBrook Bloggers and Tweeters meets Birds and Beers in Minnesota!! https://bit.ly/jZaTy
  • @babw Impressive digiscoping results from https://bit.ly/Dkp5E from Oregon
  • @jeffgyr: Want some good Karma? Join Jeff saving Red Knot by flipping Horseshoe Crabs. https://bit.ly/ar1OJ
  • @VickieHart Great photoblog about Hummingbird banding.  https://bit.ly/RfMpr
  • @Birdfreak Recommended books for birders – Birdfreak does a lot of birdbook reviews. Here is a summery. Check it out  https://bit.ly/1gRgem
  • @kolibrix The mightiest of all Eagles. The  Harpy Eagle.   https://bit.ly/UjqOx This link had 88 hits prior to participating here.

I have added the Twitter handle here. I suggest you follow each, but please note that you don’t have to include the handle in the tweet you do, as I explained above.  By following you can also check whether each fulfill the commitment! (Devilish, isn’t it?).

UPDATE: One great service to use for the re-tweets so it becomes less spammy. Spread them out in time with programmed tweets with Tweet Later. This is a great little app that is free of charge. You can schedule your tweets with this app. It is a great way to collect things you want to share for #ecomonday and #birdsaturday – and naturally a way to retweet birdbloggers tweet-club posts.

Why are all the links bit.ly?

Yes, I changed your links! Bit.ly gives a great tool to see how many clicks this exercise actually gives each and every blog. Just copy the bit.ly link and put it in your browser followed by a plus like this: https://bit.ly/1gRgem+  Cool, huh? This way we shall see which participants are getting most traffic.

Where to go from here? What about a Facebook blog-sharing club?

The other day, I came across Jeff Gordon’s blog about flipping horse shoe crabs, that he shared on his facebook wall. I had 12 people interacting directly on my wall, so that is immediately 12 people sent to Jeff’s blog  and there were probably more as not all those that clicked on the link may have put a comment or “like this” for the link.
Facebook is more effective in getting regular readers to your blog, because they are your friends, but they would be constantly the same people visiting. If you want to reach beyond that maybe we can use the same Twitter club strategy on Facebook. Well almost the same…

…Facebook is more closed than Twitter, so it is necessary to be more restricted in what you post. There are many of your best Facebook friends that will be reading every line you send so you don’t want to spam them with send every blog their way. Best to pick your favorites. On Sunday, I am going to pick the five most popular of the above posts and put them on my Facebook wall during the following week. You may do the same or you could just pick a few of those that you like.

There is an app on Facebook called NetworkedBlogs that many nature bloggers are signed up to, but very few actually use to share blogs of each other. The app is good for publishing your own blog to your wall so your friends see it and it does give a very easy share option. Be sure to use this share mechanism if anything interesting comes your way.  The app is a little bit flawed I think, because when you look at your own page in the app, it would be good to actually right here get the latest feed  from the blogs you follow, not only a list of the same blogs.

On Facebook are also the group of Birders who blog, tweet and chirp and the page Natureblognetwork. It is well worth to belong to both, but actual link sharing as of fetching links to put on your own wall is not part of the strategy.

In summery, it should work well to bring this experiment also to Facebook and it does not really compete with current blog promotion on Facebook, but rather would compliment well – as long as it is made in a moderate fashion.

Hosting the Tweet club in the future.

I like to host yet one or two more weeks to get the idea into form, but then turn over the hosting on a rotational manner such as I and the bird. Volunteers speak up! For

Twitter image by creative Commons lisence on Flickr.  Photo credit: Adam Gutierrez
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As you noticed the part 1, of the I and the bird was probably the wordiest ever without coming to the point – that is presenting the participants. That is why I decided to make a part 2.

Here are the posts participating in IATB #104.  Prior to publishing I decided to tweet each post at different hours of the day. The test is dual. First to see how many hits a tweet gets send a link of  the blog to Twitter. Secondly to test which time of day is best to tweet.

The results are presented at the end of this post.

Exquisite photos of the world’s most beautiful colorless warbler. 7 sec with a B&W Warbler.

Seven Seconds With a Black and White Warbler  by Lynne Schoenborn of Hasty Brook

Seven Seconds With a Black and White Warbler by Lynne Schoenborn of Hasty Brook

Forget about monopoly. Here is the ultimate board game for birders.

A birders Monopoly?  asks Patrick Belardo of Hawkowlsnest
A birder’s Monopoly? asks Patrick Belardo of Hawkowlsnest

Good Mourning Dove and other stunning bird photos at first light a summer morning.

Begin the day with birds. Mourning Dove at first light a summer morning. Photo: Dave Alcock of DaveA's Birding Blog

Baby Grebe on the back. Photo: Fiona Cohen of Nature Geek Northwest

Flying Jewels on the Texas Golf Coast.

Hummingbirds at Quintana Neotropical Bird Sanctuary. Photo: Kyle McCreary of As the mind Wanders
Hummingbirds at Quintana Neotropical Bird Sanctuary. Photo: Kyle McCreary of As the mind Wanders

How to paint the Bobolink and a video of its aerial display.

Bobolink by Jo of J.M. Odesluys
Bobolink by Jo of J.M. Odesluys

Did you know that pigeons give milk to their offspring?

The pigeon gives crop milk to the young. Photo: Susannah A. Lower Fraser of Wanderin Weeta
The pigeon gives crop milk to the young. Photo: Susannah A. Lower Fraser of Wanderin’ Weeta

Baby Grebes ride in the back… err.. ON the back!

Pied-billed Grebe, with baby Grebe on the back. Photo: Fiona Cohen of Nature Geek Northwest

Pied-billed Grebe, with baby Grebe on the back. Photo: Fiona Cohen of Nature Geek Northwest

Mama, Feed me now. I can Swallow anything. Wonderful Haiku!

Barn Swallow. Feed me mama. Photo: Wren of Wrenaissance reflections

Barn Swallow. Feed me mama. Photo: Wren of Wrenaissance reflections

Have you ever seen 50000 Purple Martins falll from the sky? Check out the video on this site.

Male Purple Martin. Photo: S. Halpin of PurpleMartins-R-Us.com. There are Martins everywhere on the Video. Check it out.

Male Purple Martin. Photo: S. Halpin of PurpleMartins-R-Us.com. There are Martins everywhere on the Video. Check it out.

Fantastic flight shots of New Zealand Falcon by National Geography photographer Rob Suisted

New Zealand Falcon. Photo: Rob Suisted of Natures Pic Images BlogNew Zealand Falcon. Photo: Rob Suisted of Nature’s Pic Images Blog

The Puffin is the Toucan of the Northern seas with that colorful beak. Check these smashing photos.

Atlantic Puffin. What a bill! Photo: Ian Coleman of Quantum Tiger
Atlantic Puffin. What a bill! Photo: Ian Coleman of Quantum Tiger

Here is the punkiest of all chicks. I don’t know if this is cute or ugly. What do you think?

Is this Cute or Ugly? Little Blue Heron Chick Photo: Kelly Ricceti of Red and the Peanut

Is this Cute or Ugly? Little Blue Heron Chick Photo: Kelly Ricceti of Red and the Peanut

A crow is never just a crow. Hand on heart – do you recognise the Fish Crow?

Fish Crow. Photo: John Beetham of  A DC Birding Blog

Fish Crow. Photo: John Beetham of A DC Birding Blog

Absolutely one of the prettiest North American Warblers. Hooded Warbler. Good photos.

Hooded Warbler was a lifer for Amber Coakley of Birder's Lounge on her recent trip to Ozark Mts in Arkansas.

Hooded Warbler was a lifer for Amber Coakley of Birder's Lounge on her recent trip to Ozark Mts in Arkansas.

Birding in British Columbia – vast views of fjords and forest.

View on the Selkirk loop. British Colombia. Photo: Bob of Tales of Nishiki

View on the Selkirk loop. British Colombia. Photo: Bob of Tales of Nishiki

Reading Larry Jordan’s report with lovely photos from Audubon Outing To Lassen Volcanic National Park

Lassen Volcanic National Park Audubon birding trip. Photo: Larry Jordan of the birder's report

Lassen Volcanic National Park Audubon birding trip. Photo: Larry Jordan of the birder's report

Birds out my office window may not sound very exciting, but believe me it is! David Ringer’s office is in Nairobi

Rüppell’s Robin-Chat (Cossypha semirufa). Photo: David Ringer of Search and Serendipity

Rüppell’s Robin-Chat (Cossypha semirufa). Photo: David Ringer of Search and Serendipity

I want to band birds, be a waitress, and teach says Reina 5y after a visit to a banding station

Reina - A future bird-bander. Photo: Mike Powers of The Feather and the Flower

Reina - A future bird-bander. Photo: Mike Powers of The Feather and the Flower

Who done it? Want to play detective? Who killed the White-winged Dove?

Loose feathers. Who done it? Photo: Jace Stansbury of Journals of an Amateur Naturalist.

Loose feathers. Who done it? Photo: Jace Stansbury of Journals of an Amateur Naturalist.

It may be common in North America, but nevertheless the vibrant red Northern Cardinal is eyegasm

Northern Cardinal and juvenile. Photo: Vickie Henderson of Vickie Henderson Art

Northern Cardinal and juvenile. Photo: Vickie Henderson of Vickie Henderson Art

I am Cerulean with envy in spite that Mike keeps on posting BAD PHOTOS OF GOOD BIRDS – I still need it.

Fuzzy Ceruleans by Mike Bergin of 10000birds.

Fuzzy Ceruleans by Mike Bergin of 10000birds.

Redwing Blackbird courting and posing.

White-headed woodpecker swoops Clings to corneous bark of stump Disappears before my eyes – Excellent photoblog

White-headed Woodpecker. The story behind the poem. Photo: Liza Lee Miller of Birding by HappenStance. Birding just Happens.

White-headed Woodpecker. The story behind the poem. Photo: Liza Lee Miller of Birding by HappenStance. Birding just Happens.

Barred Eagle-owl takes a monkey in Singapore. Impressive!

Barred Eagle Owl takes Monkey. Photo: Rane Wong - Bird Ecology Study Group

Barred Eagle Owl takes Monkey. Photo: Rane Wong - Bird Ecology Study Group

Delaware’s first record Roseate Spoonbill was Tweeted! What a great bird.

Roseate Spoonbill first record for Delaware. Photo: Laura Kammermeier of Birds, Words, & Websites

Roseate Spoonbill first record for Delaware. Photo: Laura Kammermeier of Birds, Words, & Websites

Great shot of Brown Thornbill – a tit-like bird with a pointed fine bill from Australia.

Brown Thornbill. Great shot of an often difficult bird to photograph.  Photo: Ben Cruachan of Ben Cruachan - natural history

Brown Thornbill. Great shot of an often difficult bird to photograph. Photo: Ben Cruachan of Ben Cruachan - natural history

Birding Gamboa and Pipeline road in Panama.

Juvenil Rufescent Tiger-Heron from Gamboa, Panama. Photo: Jan Axel of Jan Axel Blog

Juvenil Rufescent Tiger-Heron from Gamboa, Panama. Photo: Jan Axel of Jan Axel Blog

I bet you never seen a Yellow-breasted Grosbeak. It’s not in the book, yet here is a photo.

"Yellow-breasted" Grosbeak - a Rose-breasted Grosbeak with xanthochroism. Photo: Seabrooke Leckie

"Yellow-breasted" Grosbeak - a Rose-breasted Grosbeak with xanthochroism. Photo: Seabrooke Leckie of The Marvelous in Nature

Tweetable headlines

Here are the short tweetable summeries with links again. Please retweet often.  I also added after each one the number of hits recieved at my posting from July 7 to July 8. The second number gives the total numbers of hits from the bit.ly link before 12 noon on July 9. Some may have been seeded earlier by others on Twitter so therefor there will be some elevated total numbers in some case. Bit.ly is a great short link system that allows you to track any link. Just write the link and add a + sign after the link.  This way you can measure the success of this blog carnival and the retweet traffic since the posting of part 1.
Time expressed as local (GMT-05:00) Bogota, Lime, Quito time zone.

  • Exquisite photos of the world’s most beautiful colorless warbler. 7 sec with a B&W Warbler. https://bit.ly/imnvC
    Tweeted at 22.55 July 7: 24 clicks . Retweeted again at 19:40 on July 8: 15 clicks. Total clicks: 78 Additional retweets: 1
  • Forget about monopoly. Here is the ultimate board game for birders. https://bit.ly/mzQbt
    Tweeted at 23.58 July 7: 21 clicks. Retweeted again at 19:41 on July 8: 31 clicks. Total clicks: 52 Additional retweets: 2
  • Good Mourning Dove and other stunning bird photos at first light a summer morning. https://bit.ly/qCY0L
    Tweeted at 00.02 July 8: 14 clicks. Total clicks: 14
  • Flying Jewels from Texas Golf Coast. Hummingbirds at Quintana Neotropical Bird Sanctuary brings memories from childhood. https://bit.ly/F7cz1
    Tweeted at 01.00 July 8: 8 clicks . Total clicks: 8
  • How to paint the Bobolink and a video of its aerial display https://bit.ly/14feaC
    Tweeted at 02.00 July 8: 16 clicks. Total clicks: 16
  • Did you know that pigeons give milk to their offspring? https://bit.ly/6ZIL2
    Tweeted at 03.00 July 8: 28 clicks. Total clicks: 28. Additional retweets: 2
  • Baby Grebes ride in the back… err.. ON the back! https://bit.ly/18Q37S
    Tweeted at 04.00 July 8: 17 clicks. Total clicks: 17
  • Mama, Feed me now. I can Swallow anything. Wonderful Haiku! https://bit.ly/o3Z9k
    Tweeted at 05.00 July 8: 20 clicks.  Total clicks: 20
  • Have you ever seen 50000 Purple Martins falll from the sky? Check out the video on this site. https://bit.ly/GdMEN
    Tweeted at 06.00 July 8: 56 clicks. Total clicks: 56. Additional retweets: 3
  • Fantastic flight shots of New Zealand Falcon by National Geography photographer Rob Suisted https://bit.ly/tfdh4
    Tweeted at 07.00 July 8: 31 clicks. Total clicks: 114 Additional retweets: 4
  • The puffin is the Toucan of the Northern seas with that colorful beak. Check these smashing photos. https://bit.ly/wYwbq
    Tweeted at 08.00 July 8: 28 clicks. Total clicks: 28 Additional retweets: 2
  • Here is the punkiest of all chicks. I don’t know if this is cute or ugly. What do you think? https://bit.ly/U7QGJ
    Tweeted at 09.00 July 8: 44 clicks. Total clicks: 88 Additional retweets: 2
  • A crow is never just a crow. Hand on heart – do you recognise the Fish Crow? https://bit.ly/ee88I
    Tweeted at 09.30 July 8: 25 clicks. Total clicks: 38 Additional retweets: 1
  • Absolutely one of the prettiest North American Warblers. Hooded Warbler. Good photos.  https://bit.ly/XpBGv
    Tweeted at 10.10 July 8: 22 clicks. Total clicks: 22
  • Birding in Britsh Columbia – vast views of fjords and forest. https://bit.ly/mLjns
    Tweeted at 10.50 July 8: 27 clicks. Total clicks: 29 Additional retweets: 2
  • Reading Larry Jordan’s report with lovely photos from Audubon Outing To Lassen Volcanic National Park https://bit.ly/lEGzy
    Tweeted at 14.11 July 8: 16 clicks. Total clicks: 19
  • Birds out my office window may not sound very exciting, but believe me it is! David Ringer’s office is in Nairobi https://bit.ly/YEpEa
    Tweeted at 14:44 July 8: 9 clicks. Total clicks: 33
  • I want to band birds, be a waitress, and teach says Reina 5y after a visit to a banding station https://bit.ly/ykVWe
    Tweeted at 15:25 July 8: 16 clicks. Total clicks: 16
  • Who done it? Want to play detective? Who killed the White-winged Dove? https://bit.ly/EOrqB
    Tweeted at 16.08 July 8: 15 clicks.  Total clicks: 15
  • It may be common in North America, but nevertheless the vibrant red Northern Cardinal is eyegasm https://bit.ly/t37Rl
    Tweeted at  16.38 July 8: 24 clicks. Total clicks: 25
  • I am Cerulean with envy in spiite that Mike keeps on posting BAD PHOTOS OF GOOD BIRDS – I still need it. https://bit.ly/aUwiy
    Tweeted at 17.08 July 8: 25 clicks. Total clicks: 25
  • Redwing Blackbird courting and posing. https://bit.ly/X8k4o
    Tweeted at 17.40 July 8: 16 clicks. Total clicks: 16
  • White-headed woodpecker swoops Clings to corneous bark of stump Disappears before my eyes – Excellent photoblog https://bit.ly/f4bka
    Tweeted at 18.20 July 8: 24 clicks. Total clicks: 24
  • Barred Eagle-owl takes a monkey in Singapore. Impressive! https://bit.ly/hTzF4
    Tweeted at 18.50 July 7: 28 clicks. Total clicks: 28 Additional retweets: 1
  • Delaware’s first record Roseate Spoonbill was Tweeted! What a great bird. https://bit.ly/3nf6f
    Tweeted at 19.30 July 8: 18 clicks. Total clicks: 59
  • Great shot of Brown Thornbill – a tit-like bird with a pointed fine bill from Australia. https://bit.ly/12PlXD
    Tweeted at 20.00 July 8: 18 clicks. Total clicks: 18
  • Birding Gamboa and Pipeline road in Panama. https://bit.ly/IIh1K
    Tweeted at 20.40 July 8: 11 clicks. Total clicks: 11
  • I bet you never seen a Yellow-breasted Grosbeak. It’s not in the book, yet here is a photo. https://bit.ly/3MbcA4
    Tweeted at 21.20 July 8: 60 clicks. Total clicks: 60. Additional Retweets. 5

Studying this list we learn 2 things.

  1. Those post that are re-tweeted have considerably larger number of hits. Lesson learnt: Retweet often. Those bloggers that you retweet will be in re-tweet dept to you!
  2. I have followers all over the world. This means that not all of my followers will be on Twitter at the same time. You can very well re-tweet your own message of a blog post several times per day, if you are in a similar position.  I have peaks at 3 AM (Europe wakes up/arrive to work and get connected), 6-9.30 AM (US /Canada wake up),  a fairly good peak around 5-7 pm and a very good peak around when posting just after 9 PM (US/Canada logged in coast to coast to coast). Remember all my times are (-5 GMT).

Use this info and start re-tweeting the posts presented here and resend your own blog posts one more time to Twitter.

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Message to the bloggers taking part in this issue of IATB.

OMG!* I am the host. Everyone says this is a great way to get one’s blog discovered by fellow bloggers. Cool! But when it comes down to numbers, is it really productive for anyone to participate in a blog carnival? Do you get any extra clicks to your blog, because you participate in I and the bird – or other blog carnivals. UPDATE: Obviously, not complaining as a host.  I am know this will bring some traffic to the blog. I am concerned for the participants.

Here are the brutal facts. My participation in 10 different issues of IATB have provided  less than 50 clicks in total. Fellow bloggers, you are usually fast to comment in the comment section, but do you click through? I know most of you have read many of the blogs before they are published, so OK, you are excused.  Fact remains, blog carnivals do not generate a lot of visits to your blog. Mike Bergin argued that it does give back links which is true, but backlinks are usually most important if you are trying to get good google rating for specific keywords and you actually sell something. If you just want readers to your nature blog you shall find that backlinks in blog carnivals have hardly any value what so ever.
During my short period as a blogger I have also been privileged to be guest blogger both on NatureBlogNetwork and Birdchick. One would have thought that these popular blogs would have brought excellent traffic. But only a handful hits from each. I am not trying to be an ungrateful smart-ass, I am just calling fellow nature bloggers to some reflection. How can we really help each other to better traffic? It is clear that both blog carnivals and guest blogging fail the original purpose.

We need to help each other to get readers. This is not a narcissistic cry for help screaming “look at me”! (I know I come across this way sometimes!!).  I want more readers to find the great variety of nature related stories that are being told. Why? This is part of a religion if you like. It is ultimately about saving souls. We need more souls caring for nature. We need to inspire more people to discover the wonders of nature. We need an army of nature lovers. Only then can we build a better and greener future. We are living on the edge of ecological catastrophe. That is the reason why your blog needs more readers. Even if you are only writing and posting pictures for your own enjoyment and those closest to you, you are still part of this movement. And if you decided to participate in this issue of “I and the bird”, was it not because you were thinking some more people should read what I have written?

Message to all other people who find their way here.

This is a collection of articles by naturebloggers about birds. I and the bird is given every 2 weeks and presents some of the finest bird blogging there is. It is  like a “Bird Bloggers digest” and something of an institution. But as an old institution, this is issue #104,  it is also perhaps getting a bit dusty. I decided to put some live into this issue and to modernize it somewhat. I am  interested this time to find a new way for the participants to get visitors to their blogs.

Here is the strategy.

1.  Use social media to let people know about your blog. Each participant will be tweeted, facebooked, stumbled and dugg.

2.  A great title for each blog. When tweeting not many people will check out if one only writes: “New Blog post…check it out here!”. Try some superlatives. Such as “The world’s most beautiful colorless Warbler”

3. I am not going to try to outsmart all the previous “I and the Bird” deliveries. I am not writing this in my native language and therefor I don’t have vocabulary to impress you with a very literate piece. And I don’t have a smart thread or story to tie around the contributions. This is going to be remembered being the most boring “I and the Bird” in history. But if I can help it, you shall get some visitors to your site.

4.  A great clickable photo from each article will hopefully invite to click through. Click on the photo and you will arrive at the blog. This is getting a bit long (so the photo section will be presented in the part 2 of  I and the bird #104.

Here are the participants presented one-by-one in a twitter-friendly format. Your job is to:

1. Read every blogpost. When you have read it – please Digg it and/or Stumble-Upon (preparing another blogpost on the social bookmarking services)
2. Retweet the headline of each blogpost together with the short link. You could just copy and paste of course…or try to come up with a catchier title than mine. Remember you have 140 characters to use.

  • Exquisite photos of the world’s most beautiful colorless warbler. 7 sec with a B&W Warbler. https://bit.ly/imnvC
  • Forget about monopoly. Here is the ultimate board game for birders. https://bit.ly/mzQbt
  • Good Mourning Dove and other stunning bird photos at first light a summer morning. https://bit.ly/qCY0L
  • Flying Jewels from Texas Golf Coast. Hummingbirds at Quintana Neotropical Bird Sanctuary brings memories from childhood. https://bit.ly/F7cz1
  • How to paint the Bobolink and a video of its aerial display https://bit.ly/14feaC
  • Did you know that pigeons give milk to their offspring? https://bit.ly/6ZIL2
  • Baby Grebes ride in the back… err.. ON the back! https://bit.ly/18Q37S
  • Mama, Feed me now. I can Swallow anything. Wonderful Haiku! https://bit.ly/o3Z9k
  • Have you ever seen 50000 Purple Martins falll from the sky? Check out the video on this site. https://bit.ly/GdMEN
  • Fantastic flight shots of New Zealand Falcon by National Geography photographer Rob Suisted https://bit.ly/tfdh4
  • The puffin is the Toucan of the Northern seas with that colorful beak. Check these smashing photos. https://bit.ly/wYwbq
  • Here is the punkiest of all chicks. I don’t know if this is cute or ugly. What do you think? https://bit.ly/U7QGJ
  • A crow is never just a crow. Hand on heart – do you recognise the Fish Crow? https://bit.ly/ee88I
  • Absolutely one of the prettiest North American Warblers. Hooded Warbler. Good photos. https://bit.ly/XpBGv
  • Birding in Britsh Columbia – vast views of fjords and forest. https://bit.ly/mLjns
  • Reading Larry Jordan’s report with lovely photos from Audubon Outing To Lassen Volcanic National Park https://bit.ly/lEGzy
  • Birds out my office window may not sound very exciting, but believe me it is! David Ringer’s office is in Nairobi https://bit.ly/YEpEa
  • I want to band birds, be a waitress, and teach says Reina 5y after a visit to a banding station https://bit.ly/ykVWe
  • Who done it? Want to play detective? Who killed the White-winged Dove? https://bit.ly/EOrqB
  • It may be common in North America, but nevertheless the vibrant red Northern Cardinal is eyegasm https://bit.ly/t37Rl
  • I am Cerulean with envy in spite that Mike keeps on posting BAD PHOTOS OF GOOD BIRDS – I still need it. https://bit.ly/aUwiy
  • Red-winged Blackbird courting and posing. https://bit.ly/X8k4o
  • White-headed woodpecker swoops Clings to corneous bark of stump Disappears before my eyes – Excellent photoblog https://bit.ly/f4bka
  • Barred Eagle-owl takes a monkey in Singapore. Impressive! https://bit.ly/hTzF4
  • Delaware’s first record Roseate Spoonbill was Tweeted! What a great bird. https://bit.ly/3nf6f
  • Great shot of Brown Thornbill – a tit-like bird with a pointed fine bill from Australia. https://bit.ly/12PlXD
  • Birding Gamboa and Pipeline road in Panama. https://bit.ly/IIh1K
  • I bet you never seen a Yellow-breasted Grosbeak. It’s not in the book, yet here is a photo. https://bit.ly/3MbcA4

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