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#1
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go-bassn wrote:
Loons=Cormorants w/color All the loons I've ever seen have been resplendent in black and white. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#2
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"Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message All the loons I've ever seen have
been resplendent in black and white. Black and White are colors. |
#3
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![]() "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message All the loons I've ever seen have been resplendent in black and white. Black and White are colors. Ah! A scientist! Oh goody. Wolfgang well, what the hell......we ain't had a good bunch of crossposted loons in quite a while. this could be fun. ![]() |
#4
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On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 01:41:24 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: go-bassn wrote: Loons=Cormorants w/color All the loons I've ever seen have been resplendent in black and white. Eyes are bright. Very interesting eyes to see if you get close enough to a loon. Which is generally only if it's willing to let you close. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
#5
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& one more color than the common cormorant...
Like I said, cormorants with colorS... Warren "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message All the loons I've ever seen have been resplendent in black and white. Black and White are colors. Ah! A scientist! Oh goody. Wolfgang well, what the hell......we ain't had a good bunch of crossposted loons in quite a while. this could be fun. ![]() |
#6
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![]() "go-bassn" wrote in message ... & one more color than the common cormorant... Hm.... Both the beginning and the end of that sentence got chopped off somehow before it got to my screen. ![]() But, hey, the middle part is really pretty! ![]() Like I said, cormorants with colorS... Well, no, what you actually wrote was: "Loons=Cormorants w/color". O.k., so, this gets confusing real quick. If loons are cormorants with color, it naturally follows (that is, it's implicit) that cormorants are loons WITHOUT color, which is to say that cormorants are entirely colorless. But, others have suggested that loons have TWO colors. Still o.k. so far.....this doesn't violate the loons=cormorants w/color postulate. But, right up at the top of this page you clearly state that loons have ONE more color than the common cormorant. You see the problem here? ![]() Wolfgang who, while he makes no claim to understanding science, sure does think it's a whole lot of fun watching others do it. ![]() |
#7
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Basically Wolfgang, a turd is a turd no matter how you paint it ;-)
Warren "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "go-bassn" wrote in message ... & one more color than the common cormorant... Hm.... Both the beginning and the end of that sentence got chopped off somehow before it got to my screen. ![]() But, hey, the middle part is really pretty! ![]() Like I said, cormorants with colorS... Well, no, what you actually wrote was: "Loons=Cormorants w/color". O.k., so, this gets confusing real quick. If loons are cormorants with color, it naturally follows (that is, it's implicit) that cormorants are loons WITHOUT color, which is to say that cormorants are entirely colorless. But, others have suggested that loons have TWO colors. Still o.k. so far.....this doesn't violate the loons=cormorants w/color postulate. But, right up at the top of this page you clearly state that loons have ONE more color than the common cormorant. You see the problem here? ![]() Wolfgang who, while he makes no claim to understanding science, sure does think it's a whole lot of fun watching others do it. ![]() |
#8
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On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 12:05:02 -0500, "go-bassn"
wrote: & one more color than the common cormorant... Like I said, cormorants with colorS... Nope. Here is a picture of a cormorant. http://www.fnal.gov/ecology/wildlife..._Cormorant.jpg Here is a picture of a loon. http://www.fnal.gov/ecology/wildlife...ommon_Loon.jpg Different tail, different head shape, different beak, different nesting habits, different voaclizations, different fishing techniques and, yes, different plumage. hth g.c. Warren "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message All the loons I've ever seen have been resplendent in black and white. Black and White are colors. Ah! A scientist! Oh goody. Wolfgang well, what the hell......we ain't had a good bunch of crossposted loons in quite a while. this could be fun. ![]() |
#9
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go-bassn wrote:
& one more color than the common cormorant... Like I said, cormorants with colorS... Warren "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message All the loons I've ever seen have been resplendent in black and white. Black and White are colors. Ah! A scientist! Oh goody. Wolfgang well, what the hell......we ain't had a good bunch of crossposted loons in quite a while. this could be fun. ![]() Double-crested Cormorant Phalacrocorax auritus Identification Tips: * Length: 27 inches Wingspan: 50 inches * Sexes similar * Large, dark waterbird with a long, hooked bill and long tail * Long, thin neck * Gular area squared off and orange, extending straight down across throat * Orange lores * Often perches with wings spread to dry them Adult: * Entirely black plumage * Small white plumes on head during breeding season Immatu * Pale throat and chest darkening below to dark belly; some individuals are entirely pale underneath * Brownish back and upperwings Similar species: Loons are similar on the water, but lack hooked bills. Anhinga has a long, pointed bill and a much longer tail. All adult cormorant species in the U.S. are separable by the shape and color of the gular areas. No other species has orange lores and gular region that does not form a point at the gape. Neotropical Cormorant can be similar but is slimmer and longer-tailed, and has a differently shaped gular area. Great Cormorant is also similar but has a yellowish, pointed gular area surrounded with white as an adult. Immatures are dark-chested and pale bellied, unlike Double-crested. Length and wingspan from: Robbins, C.S., Bruun, B., Zim, H.S., (1966). Birds of North America. New York: Western Publishing Company, Inc. |
#10
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The are a few Red throated loons on Tillamook bay. They seem to enjoy
miserable weather. They are supposed to be Red-throated, the heads are gray but it's hard to see the red throat, if in fact it is red in winter. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Have you noticed loons/divers wintering in southeastern US? | Ken Fortenberry | Bass Fishing | 8 | December 1st, 2005 05:10 AM |
Have you noticed loons/divers wintering in southeastern US? | Thomas Littleton | Fly Fishing | 0 | November 26th, 2005 12:37 AM |