Alan,
Thanks for your generous e-mail.
Another virtue of the site is that one gets to know the movers and shakers in
Australian birding. Keep moving and shaking.
Regards, Angus Innes.
Subject: Birding Aus Format
From:
Date: Sat, 30 Jan 2010 07:43:12 +1100
CC: ;
To:
Very well said Angus, thank you.
Alan
*******************************************************************************
Alan McBride, MBO.
Photojournalist | Traveller | Writer | Birding Guide +
Member: International Travel Writers & Photographers Alliance
National Association of Independent Writers & Editors
American Writers & Artists Inc.
Travelwriters . com
http://web.me.com/amcbride1
http://www.worldreviewer.com/member/alanmcbride/
http://www.linkedin.com/in/alanmcbride
http://www.twitter.com/alanmcbride
Good planets are hard to find; until we do, please, be green and read from the
screen
Tel: + 61 419 414 860
Fax: + 61 2 9973 2306
Skype: mcbird101
P O Box 190 | Newport Beach | NSW 2106 | Australia
This e-mail and any files transmitted with it, are confidential and intended
solely for the use of the individual or entity to which they are addressed. If
you have received this e-mail in error please notify the sender. This e-mail is
also subject to copyright. No part of it should be reproduced, adapted or
transmitted without the prior written consent of the copyright owner.
***********************************************************************************
On 29/01/2010, at 23:27 , Angus Innes wrote:
As an Aus birder working in the UK, can I express my pleasure that the balance
of opinion has come down in favour of maintaining the current format - and
express deepest thanks those who maintain the site.
The eclecticism of the site makes it stand out from dozens of other birding
sites that I access regularly. Birding Aus is not just eclectic but also
egalitarian, the essence of Australia.
"New chums" are not overawed or deterred from posting, the country's most
expert birders contribute, a regular picture of what is being seen around the
whole country is given and topical items of general interest are posted.
Inevitably some hobby horses emerge that turn on their riders but not
necessarily all readers. The latter is life, we are not all turned on by the
same items of discussion. Better to have the opportunity to ignore than not to
know what other birders think are matters of importance. A little tolerance is
necessary in life and birding.
Currently living in the most intensively served birding community in the world,
the UK, I can access daily UK rarity lists (eg through BirdGuides), daily
photographic lists of rarities (eg Surfbirds), sites for the UK RSPB reserves,
Bird Observatory postings, UK Bird Mapping sites (eg Birdtrack), London Birders
for daily sightings and discussion of the area in which I live and the websites
of several other major UK birding organisations. However nothing corresponds to
Birding Aus, nothing gives such a comprehensive glimpse of all aspects of a
whole country's birding.
I read, or scan, all postings with interest - and some nostalgia. On my regular
returns I feel that I have kept up with Australian birds and birding (aa well
as birding in Tromso). I usually have new birding places in mind to visit in
Australia when the opportunity arises, and old places to re-visit.
Part of my reasoning may reflect a far less than comprehensive knowledge of
computer matters. (It is an age thing.) Scanning Birding Aus is like dealing
with a comprehensive Index and selecting the topics that interest me, or might
interest me, but knowing that I have access to all contents. I do not feel that
my computer illiteracy is hiding important information from me. The managers of
websites such as Birding Aus should never over-estimate the knowledge of their
users, or aspiring users - and information as to the use of the site cannot be
too basic.
Angus Innes
PS I am a volunteer guide at the Wildfowl and Wetland Trusts' London Wetland
Centre. I would happily provide details of this magnificent facility, situated
on the edge of Inner London, to any visitor from Australia who wanted to put in
a few hours birding when passing through London.
_________________________________________________________________
We want to hear all your funny, exciting and crazy Hotmail stories. Tell us now
http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/195013117/direct/01/==============================www.birding-aus.org
birding-aus.blogspot.com
To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to:
=============================
|