
First bird of the morning', right outside the hotel room! House sparrow! Actually, I took this yesterday, the sparrows appear to be used to hotel patrons feeding them. The sea is crashing, the wind is howling and it's rain, rain so I'm staying in this morning. Last night I went to a dinner hosted by
Swarovski with a few folks from
Cape May Bird Observatory,
WildBird on the Fly, and
Jay from birdJam at this wonderful little restaurant called Freda's. When the mussels appetizer was served, it got a little ugly, there was some competition, but Clay Taylor, the
Swarovksi rep said that we had to our best black
oystercatcher call to get them. I found this unfair as there are American
oystercaters on the east coast and black
oystercatchers on the west coast. Plus, I also felt
birdJam had the unfair advantage--they always seem to have a portable speaker hidden in a pocket. Had it been a behavior challenge and we had to act out an
oystercather--I would have nailed it.
WildBird on the Fly and I showed off our nails. She took me for my first ever manicure--I had no idea that was that much dead skin just around my finger tips. I chose
Kreme de la Kremlin for my nails, she had something I think called Sparkles in the Snow.

And I was just sorting through some emails last night and found Frank Taylor's banding report from last weekend and this oh so cool shot of red-tailed hawk flying low right into the nets. What a great shot! If I weren't in such a cool birding place at the moment, I'd have total banding envy!
Okay, time to tweak my
PowerPoint for Saturday, take a shower, and prep for the bird show this afternoon. I wonder how the other bird
bloggers are fairing this morning?
Labels: Blog Conferences, Cape May Autumn Weekend
2 Comments:
Hi Sharon,
Waa waa waa (that's the sound of me moaning) since I've also had to cancel my trip to Cape May this weekend. Hope to catch up with you some time. Have a great time. I'll be reading!
Well, this garden blogger is happily sitting inside watching the rain pour and counting Pine Siskins at our feeders. 8 are now scarfing down thistle and sunflower seeds.
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