Thank you for the reminders, Alison.

I have taken to enjoying watching from my yard a pair of Cooper' Hawks and a 
pair of Crows who are both building nests less than a 100 yards from each other 
on either sides of my house. Lots of noisy fun.

Lynne
________________________________
From: 'Allison Hilf' via Colorado Birds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 7:49:44 AM
To: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [cobirds] Social Distancing While Birding written by Laura Erickson 
and a Dr./birder

I’m hearing via Facebook and birding listservs that a lot of people are getting 
out into the woods for birding, which seems like an excellent plan for social 
distancing, but the devil is in the details. Many parks, wildlife refuges, and 
other wonderful places have closed their facilities, including their restrooms, 
for the duration. If the bathrooms are closed, it is very bad, in every 
hygienic sense, for multiple people to be "using" the woods. When even a small 
percentage of people have bathroom emergencies while enjoying a park with 
closed facilities, it can be a serious problem. That is a big, and valid, 
reason why many parks are closed altogether.

Some birders have expressed outrage that their favorite birding spots are 
closed, and some have even boasted about parking and getting around or under 
entrance gates on foot. But very few people have the knowledge and carry the 
supplies to deal with their waste hygienically under normal conditions, much 
less when we’re in the middle of a health emergency. Imagine being the 
employees who will return after weeks or months, to clean up after scofflaws. 
When our favorite birding spots are closed, we need to make the best of it.

Dr. Peter Crosson, a birder and a medical doctor, wrote an extremely valuable 
post to a Massachusetts birding listserv, and he’s generously given me 
permission to quote it. He wrote:
In my non-birding day job I'm a physician, bracing for the ramping up of COVID 
cases and the horrifying specter of lives lost to this disease.
It's become abundantly clear that this is a disease that needs to be beaten on 
the public health front, not at the bedside. As a member of a wonderful, 
vibrant birding community, with many birders "of a certain age," I feel the 
need to speak up a bit about our responsibilities to each other and to the 
country as a whole.
As we've all heard, social distancing is key, and birding can be a wonderful 
form of social distancing. However, it's not social distancing when you are 
riding in the car with other birders who don't live with you. It's not social 
distancing when you are clustering in groups, and certainly not when you are 
sharing optics such as scopes.
Anyone of us can be exposed to the virus through asymptomatic friends, so to 
restrict yourself to hanging out with people who have no symptoms is not 
enough. Since this began, I have gone birding once with another person. We met 
at the site, having come in separate cars. We kept 6 feet distance between us 
at all times, and did not share any optics. If you are not following procedures 
like that, you're not social distancing. It's also obviously important at more 
popular sites to avoid touching handrails that other people could be touching, 
as the virus can live on surfaces for up to three to five days. Frequent 
handwashing and use of at least 60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer is also 
crucial.
It discourages me when I look on eBird and see multiple people reporting the 
same group checklist from a site. Maybe I am wrong, and they are all arriving 
in separate cars and keeping distance between themselves, but I doubt that's 
the case. We are at a tipping point in this crisis, and as an educated and 
caring group we need to commit to doing everything we can to stop COVID-19. If 
we lose one member of our birding community because of this virus, it will be a 
tragedy. Make no mistake, if we do not change our behavior, that is near 
certain.
Dr. Peter Crosson
It’s so hard to be dealing with this sudden massive disruption in our daily 
lives. Those of us who love birding are of course disappointed to be cutting 
back our activities right during the most thrilling time of year—spring 
migration, when we see so many wonderful birds when we can visit lots of 
habitat. Backyard birding may not be anywhere near as thrilling, but this is a 
time to appreciate tiny joys as we can. And building up a yard list has plenty 
of joys of its own. The more seriously we take social distancing now, the more 
of us will be able to get back into our favorite old birding practices next 
spring.

Good SAFE birding,
Allison Hilf
Aurora, CO

Sent from my iPad

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