How about tthese -
like a group of eggs ready to crack -
a CLUTCH of twitchers.
 Or perhaps this one which aptly explains how they all end up being  
together
a ROUND-UP of twitchers
Or how about this
A TURNOUT of twitchers!
cheers
David Taylor
On 06/03/2009, at 2:05 PM,  wrote:
 
How about an "irrupt of twitchers", from the definition irruption: "To
increase rapidly and irregularly in number"
Andrew Bell
 
Interesting.  Is there a Latin version of "twitchers" that you could
insert to make a wholly Latin phrase?
On 06/03/2009, at 1:18 PM, Ian May wrote:
 
mobile vulgus of twitchers
Latin phrase meaning "the easily moveable crowd," from which the
term "mob" originally derives.
L&L Knight wrote:
 
I've received on off-line suggestion of "a tic(k) of twitchers".
This  combines the nervous behaviour [tic] with the activity of
ticking.   There is also a social dimension in that twitchers get
to meet one  another and hence add ticks to the list of twitchers
they have seen/met.
LK
On 06/03/2009, at 10:16 AM, John Harris wrote:
 
Not sure that I speak for all those that were not able to make it
to  Bundy but how about the collective "B*stard Birders", or
"Birding  Buff's" - a play on words of course, "a gaggle of
grippers", "Bundy  Buggers"......... the list would go on.
Yours in all things "green"
Regards
John Harris
 President, Victorian Association for Environmental Education  
(VAEE)
Manager, Environment and Sustainability
Donvale Christian College
155 Tindals Rd Donvale 3111
03 9844 2471  Ext 217
0409 090 955
 
L&L Knight <> 6/03/2009 11:07 am >>>
 
 
  I have had an off-line suggestion of a "twittering of twitchers"  
for
the collective noun.  While BAussers are a relatively hip group, I
didn't the sort of iPhone activity that would indicate extensive
twittering (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter if you are
unfamiliar with a blogging phenomenon that may hit the twitching
scene).
 Please send your responses to the group so they can be archived  
for
sociological posterity.  [BAussers who are not interested in the
subject can now delete all emails with this header].
Regards, Laurie.
Begin forwarded message:
 
From: L&L Knight <>
Date: 6 March 2009 9:35:13 AM
To: Birding Aus <>
Subject: [Birding-Aus] Some Buffy Comments
<snip>
I don't often run into large groups of birders like that [the
exceptions are tour groups, wader study groups and pelagic
boatloads].  I was wondering what the appropriate collective
 
 
noun is
 
for a group of twitchers that forms in the vicinity of a rarite -
perhaps in a similar manner to the way a flock of seabirds forms
around a school of bait fish.   Any suggestions?
Regards, Laurie.
 
 
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