February 17, 2020

I started my birding trip at around 4:00 pm on February 17th, 2020. It was a pretty sunny day, the sky was clear and it was about 32 degrees Fahrenheit. There was some wind but it was mostly blocked by the surrounding buildings. I started at Redstone campus, observing the green for a bit then started to walk towards main street. I saw a couple of European starlings fly overhead. I walked past a large bush and saw a bunch of House Sparrows in its branches. I saw a couple of rock pigeons perched on top of a building. At one point I saw an American Crow fly overhead. European Starlings seem to fly together. The ones I saw were flying together. There was only one instance where I saw a single European Starling flying alone. They flap their wings pretty quickly and don’t glide very much. Rock pigeons on the other hand flap there wings slightly slower but seem to glide even less that European Starlings. A European Starlings wings are slightly smaller and more pointed but overall they have a similar shape to that of a Rock Pigeon. I’m most likely not seeing very many birds because it is the middle of winter. Most birds likely are less active, conserving energy to keep themselves warm. Getting slightly further from areas with high human traffic as well as waiting until the weather is warmer will probably result in me seeing more birds.

Publicado el febrero 18, 2020 05:09 TARDE por jgoodma4 jgoodma4

Comentarios

I've got a few suggestions for your future entries. First one is you need to get a photo or recording of at least one bird for your observations. Otherwise you entered them well, including the count. As for the journal itself, it could use some more detail regarding behavior of the birds as well as habitat. Even if you are on campus, you could describe what you are looking at in terms of trees or buildings or open area, where the birds are and why, etc. As far as the prompt is concerned, it would be nice to get some more details that relate to what you've learned in class or from readings. If you aren't sure, you can always speculate based on what you know about birds or the species you are observing.

Publicado por chloesardonis hace alrededor de 4 años

Oh, one more thing. Make sure you link your observations to the journal entry. This will become more important as the number of observations and entries grow. Thanks.

Publicado por chloesardonis hace alrededor de 4 años

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