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interesting event observed during a float trip
"William Claspy" wrote in message ... On 8/9/04 7:17 PM, in article , "Wolfgang" wrote: hey bill, i just came a cross a reference to frances and frederick in a 2000 book about extinct birds.......have fun! :) Grrrrr. I'm busy, man, BUSY! Idle hands are the tools of the devil. :) What's the latest on the end of the month? The last I heard from Jay, he was amenable to the weekend of the 27th. I haven't talked to him in about a week. I'll call him tonight to try to firm things up. To stay on topic, I've got four books in the ornithology portion of my collection (as opposed to the collection here at work, which is likely not Premier) that deal solely with raptors, and can bring 'em along if you'd like. :-) Send me an email with the titles. Still have clear memories of watching a bald eagle take trout from the Sparrow Rapids of the Ontonogan.... That's one fine bird, and one fine piece of trout water. I see eagles up there fairly frequently, but have never seen one fishing. However, I did get to watch ospreys on the Plover river near Stevens Point some years ago.....always a thrilling sight. I've fished at Sparrow Rapids a couple of times. Never caught anything. Jay tells me there is better water nearby. We'll see. Wolfgang |
interesting event observed during a float trip
Ken Fortenberry wrote in message m...
outdoor educational venues on the planet I met more professional ornithologists and their serious birder students than you have Reminds me of a Saturday morning when I was out pulling weeds in my front yard when a couple stopped their SUV across the road and started looking up in the sky with their binoculars. I mosied across and asked them what they're looking at, and one said "I think its a buteo." I was sooo tempted to say "and here I thought it was just a hawk" :-) But I held my tongue and just said "Wow", and went back to my weeding. I'm not going to look anything up, but I've always heard that goldens were bigger, and my own experiences seem to bear that out (although I could be fooling myself). I've seen quite a few of both up close. One of the neatest nature show videos I've ever seen was of a golden diving and taking a young antelope. Jon. |
interesting event observed during a float trip
Ken Fortenberry wrote in message m...
outdoor educational venues on the planet I met more professional ornithologists and their serious birder students than you have Reminds me of a Saturday morning when I was out pulling weeds in my front yard when a couple stopped their SUV across the road and started looking up in the sky with their binoculars. I mosied across and asked them what they're looking at, and one said "I think its a buteo." I was sooo tempted to say "and here I thought it was just a hawk" :-) But I held my tongue and just said "Wow", and went back to my weeding. I'm not going to look anything up, but I've always heard that goldens were bigger, and my own experiences seem to bear that out (although I could be fooling myself). I've seen quite a few of both up close. One of the neatest nature show videos I've ever seen was of a golden diving and taking a young antelope. Jon. |
interesting event observed during a float trip
"rw" wrote in message ... According to the Audubon Master Guide to Birding, Bald Eagles actually run a bit larger than Golden Eagles: 76-109cm for the Bald vs. 76-101.5 for the Golden. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. I googled up this website yesterday http://www.baldeagleinfo.com/index.html ; it points out that there are two basic species of baldies- the southern bald and the northern bald- the dividing line is about the 40th parallel. The southerns tend to be smaller than the northern bird. maybe we saw a golden whacked be a southern bald- hard to say. But the presumed golden eagle was noticeably "bigger" than the bald. When the Golden took off after his spat with the Bald- he launched and flew upriver, banked across the river just in front of the boat, and headed downriver- I'll bet he took about 400 or more yards to gain tree top height- looked like a fully loaded B 52 trying to get off the ground. jh |
interesting event observed during a float trip
On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 07:38:20 -0500, "Wolfgang" wrote:
wrote in message .. . On Mon, 9 Aug 2004 20:53:08 -0500, "Wolfgang" wrote: wrote in message .. . ...What do I win?! What do I win?! I'm going to guess it ain't self respect. Yeah, I figured you'd have to do some guessing when it comes to knowing anything about self respect... Wolfgang who knows that ain't how you get that. Well, geez, you stupid son of a bitch - if you know how NOT to get it, do the opposite, and maybe you'd stand a chance... No matter how you dress it up, the "I'm rubber, you're glue" gambit is impossible to disguise. Still, you are progressing.....we are all very proud of you. Wolfgang Sumribus omnititicus et facit ignorarium.... HTH, R |
interesting event observed during a float trip
wrote in message ... Sumribus omnititicus et facit ignorarium.... I don't know what that means. Would you care to translate? Wolfgang |
interesting event observed during a float trip
wrote in message ... Sumribus omnititicus et facit ignorarium.... I don't know what that means. Would you care to translate? Wolfgang |
interesting event observed during a float trip
"John Hightower" wrote in
: I googled up this website yesterday http://www.baldeagleinfo.com/index.html ; it points out that there are two basic species of baldies- the southern bald and the northern bald- the dividing line is about the 40th parallel. What is the air speed of a coconut-laden southern bald eagle? Scott |
interesting event observed during a float trip
"John Hightower" wrote in
: I googled up this website yesterday http://www.baldeagleinfo.com/index.html ; it points out that there are two basic species of baldies- the southern bald and the northern bald- the dividing line is about the 40th parallel. What is the air speed of a coconut-laden southern bald eagle? Scott |
interesting event observed during a float trip
On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 09:56:38 -0500, "Wolfgang" wrote:
wrote in message .. . Sumribus omnititicus et facit ignorarium.... I don't know what that means. Would you care to translate? Certainly - it means, generally, the same thing as "Le creusette/crossitte monteffe blantuer de la ventrois detredeur"...well, not absolutely exactly, of course, but close enough for government work, IAC.... |
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