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Re: Sandhill Cranes

Subject: Re: Sandhill Cranes
From: "Rich Peet" <>
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2004 03:22:17 -0000
Congrates, I was watching the news and saw that you nailed the peak.
It is a site those mass migrations.

That is a record high that we are at on those Whoopers. In fact there
probably were never that many of them. But that is in dispute. Either
way they are at risk.

Mass migrations are fun to follow. Duluth MN just set a record for
Bald Eagles in migration and we are getting so many now that they are
forming kettles.

Guess it is time for me to chase those ducks now.

Rich

--- In  "Martyn Stewart"
<> wrote:
> Amazing sight, just bloody wonderful! I have never seen so many
cranes in
> one place, this is to die for and if you ever wanted to record a
species,
> this is the one, GUARENNTED to get over 500.000 cranes in an 80 mile
> stretch!!!!!!!! I got some great recordings for which I will sort
out and
> put up, I spent a morning and a night in a blind with maybe 40.000
birds
> screaming the house down, juvenile and adult voices; the juveniles
were just
> about having their balls drop into adulthood :-)
>
> Some nice places in Nebraska to record and I think maybe one of the
quieter
> places (no human pollution) certainly early morning anyway!
>
> I stayed around Grand Island and there were plenty of places to get
away
> from the I-80, but man, what about those bloody ticks!!!!!!!!!
>
> I got back and had a shower the first day and the wife went
bonkers, in fact
> she put everything into the washing machine when we got home at
1:00am this
> morning!
>
> Paranoid or what!!!!!!
>
> No Whooping Cranes :-( apparently they are still down in Texas, do
you know
> there are only 198 left!!! (Migrating whooping cranes)
>
>=20
>
> Martyn
>
>=20
>
> Martyn Stewart
>
> http://www.naturesound.org
>
> Make every Garden a wildlife Habitat
>
>=20
>
>=20
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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>From   Tue Mar  8 18:26:30 2005
Message: 22
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 2004 18:52:06 -0800
From: "Martyn Stewart" <>
Subject: RE: Nebraska - albino Sandhill.

Crazy, I saw a picture in the Crane meadows facility in Grand Island of an
albino Sandhill crane that was taken recently, of course, most people were
identifying a whooping crane and all the biologists were racing out to get =
a
look!!

Martyn

Martyn Stewart
http://www.naturesound.org
Make every Garden a wildlife Habitat


-----Original Message-----
From: Marty Michener 
Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2004 8:59 AM
To: 
Subject: RE: [Nature Recordists] Nebraska - albino Sandhill.

Martyn:

David Rintoul just moments ago on BirdChat reported recently seeing an
albino Sandhill Crane, seen from I80.



I send my best regards,

Marty Michener
MIST Software Assoc. Inc.
P. O. Box 269,
Hollis, NH      03049


Graminoids - a new book for naturalists who have never been able to
identify sedges and grasses.
http://www.enjoybirds.com/HomePublishing/PubHome.htm#gram

  ----------


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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



"Microphones are not ears,
Loudspeakers are not birds,
A listening room is not nature."
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