

Moderator: Scott Waters
Cool list. Lammergeier would be an awesome bird.Curtis Hart wrote:I saw 306 new species of birds this winter in Equatorial Guinea and Ethiopia. The last was the Tawny-flanked Prinia. This put my world list at 1515. I guess 2000 is the next goal.
These are just the ones I liked best, not necessarily the rarest or prettiest.
Top 5 Bioko
1. Gray-necked Rockfowl
2. Yellow-billed Turaco
3. Gray Parrot
4. Yellowbill
5. Black-necked Wattle-eye
Top 5 Ethiopia
1. Lammergeier
2. Vulturine Guineafowl
3. Lappet-faced Vulture
4. Prince Ruspoli's Turaco
5. Pygmy Falcon
How is your ABA chase for 500 going?Andy Avram wrote:Been awhile since I've been on here. But my latest was a Kelp Gull (December 9, 2015). Tried for it and missed the other day.
Wow. That should add a few birds to the list.Curtis Hart wrote:I should have a pretty decent winter with time in Sabah, Flores, Komodo, northern Sulawesi, and Raja Ampat.
chrish wrote:Wow. That should add a few birds to the list.Curtis Hart wrote:I should have a pretty decent winter with time in Sabah, Flores, Komodo, northern Sulawesi, and Raja Ampat.
Rajah Ampat is very high on my "to visit" list. Snorkeling there is supposed to be the best on the planet. Add a few Birds-of-Paradise and the trip would be complete! I hope we'll see a bird post on the forum!
Not as well as hoped. Life got a little wonky for a few years here. I am still 16 or 17 birds away, but going to S. Texas this December for another shot at Lower Rio Grande Valley birding. If I play it perfect, I'll make it since this there isn't a ton of regular occurring birds left for me down there.Curtis Hart wrote:How is your ABA chase for 500 going?Andy Avram wrote:Been awhile since I've been on here. But my latest was a Kelp Gull (December 9, 2015). Tried for it and missed the other day.
This is tragic to hear Brian. And the thing was, you knew better. You had seen grown adults throw away otherwise productive lives when they started birding. It starts off so innocently, "Maybe I'll just take a photo of this Robin" and the next thing you know you are dressed in all khaki, laden with scopes, big lenses and binoculars and whispering things like "ticks", "lifer", "LBJ", and "ebird" to other addicts as you stare pointlessly through your lens hoping for that briefest fix.Brian Hubbs wrote:I would have passed 300 if I hadn't had to have hernia surgery this month. I haven't been birding in 3 and a half weeks...I'm getting cabin fever...
chrish wrote:This is tragic to hear Brian. And the thing was, you knew better. You had seen grown adults throw away otherwise productive lives when they started birding. It starts off so innocently, "Maybe I'll just take a photo of this Robin" and the next thing you know you are dressed in all khaki, laden with scopes, big lenses and binoculars and whispering things like "ticks", "lifer", "LBJ", and "ebird" to other addicts as you stare pointlessly through your lens hoping for that briefest fix.Brian Hubbs wrote:I would have passed 300 if I hadn't had to have hernia surgery this month. I haven't been birding in 3 and a half weeks...I'm getting cabin fever...
The worst moment is when you say "maybe I should stop road-cruising early so I can get up and look for (fill in the bird name) first thing in the morning". It is a pathetic and slippery slope.