I must not be a serious birder. I go out birding because I like to spend time 
outside in nature and watch birds and other wildlife. If I see a bird that is I 
think is cool then it is a good day. If I get a nice picture to share with 
people on my blog then it is an even better day. If I see a bird that is rare 
or that I have never seen before then it is a great day. I bird for my own 
enjoyment not to be in some record. If I screw up and make a mistake IDing 
something on my blog, which I already have, and someone corrects me, which they 
already have, then I thank them, which I did. They have helped me to learn and 
grow. 

I come to this list because I like to see what other birders have seen that 
might be in the area. If I see something that I think is cool then I post it so 
that others can share the experience. I also like to know what other birders 
think and feel. If someone here called me a troublemaker I would laugh, because 
I know that they would not be the first or the last to call me that. 

The point is that we all people who share a love of birding. We also all have 
feelings. We need to try to be considerate but that should never make us afraid 
to share our opinions about this passion that we love.

Ecobirder


----- Original Message ----
From: Sharon Stiteler <birdch...@gmail.com>
To: Jim Williams <two-jays at att.net>
Cc: 
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2007 2:36:56 PM
Subject: Re: [mou] religion, money, sex, and, now, birding?


LOL, Jim!


Okay, I thought all the disagreement and discussion was part of the fun.  And 
honestly, if people think this birding listserv is hostile, they should take a 
look at some of the other state bird listservs.  I've yet to see profanity show 
up here.  We've got pretty good--not perfect, but who has that?



I think we encourage discussion and disagreement, but the key is to not take it 
personally.  If you're going ask questions, don't be upset when you get answers 
if they aren't what you want to hear.  So, if the records committee finds your 
sighting unacceptable?  Repeat to yourself, "It's not me, it's my 
documentation."  You report a chukar and people on the listservs tell you it's 
not countable on an official list?  Take a big shrug and enjoy the fact that 
you saw an escaped bird attempting to stake a claim in the wild.  You saw an 
ivory-billed woodpecker at Weaver Dunes and no one believes you?  Don't sweat 
it, we still love you anyway.


Sharon










On Aug 14, 2007, at 2:24 PM, Jim Williams wrote:


 Are we to add birding and its many avenues to that list of things one 
supposedly cannot discuss without risk of offense? Is it to be religion, money, 
sex, and birding?


Good grief!


Jim Williams
Wayzata








On Aug 14, 2007, at 2:08 PM, Richard Wood wrote:


Hi all,


Pastor Al seems, IMO, to be bent on taking this list's discussions into areas 
that get people yelled at and called names by other users of the list.  I, for 
one, don't think that is necessarily a good thing to have happen.


I don't think he does it on purpose, and I enjoy it when he does, but frankly, 
most people don't like those of us that question things (we come off as being 
critical?), and I think all it does it cause a lot of trouble and lead to 
(potential) hurt feelings.


Take the recent discussion on record keeping, for example.  I wouldn't have 
voluntarily written about my "angst" toward the record keepers, but when Al 
posted, I replied, and it led to a big brehawa.  I was called by one person, 
whom shall remain nameless, a "troublemaker", when I don't think  I am.  A 
member of the MOU called me "critical", which again, I don't think I am.  I do 
question things, because I am a scientist.


My point is that we need to think seriously about when we post forays into 
"controversial" areas.  Does one want to post a note that is going to make 
others dislike each other, probably not. But we should all ask ourselves that 
each time we post a "question" to others on a list such as this.  Do you really 
want to create a situation (even unknowingly) where others will almost 
literally be at each other's throats?


Good birding,
Richard




 
Richard L. Wood, Ph. D.
Hastings, MN
rwoodphd at yahoo.com




----- Original Message ----
From: Sharon Stiteler <birdch...@gmail.com>
To: Pastor Al Schirmacher <pastoral at princetonfreechurch.net>
Cc: mnbird at lists.mnbird.net; mou-net at moumn.org
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2007 1:44:09 PM
Subject: Re: [mou] [mnbird] Suspicious Birds


Greater Roadrunner.










Sharon Stiteler
www.birdchick.com
Minneapolis, MN










On Aug 14, 2007, at 12:55 PM, Pastor Al Schirmacher wrote:


John & Chris' posts bring up a question - besides Chukars and Northern 
Bobwhites, what other birds would arouse your (escapee/release/too soon to be 
counted) suspicions in the state?


Al Schirmacher
Princeton, MN
Mille Lacs & Sherburne Counties 
_______________________________________________
mnbird mailing list
mnbird at lists.mnbird.net
http://lists.mnbird.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mnbird






Be a better Globetrotter. Get better travel answers from someone who knows.
Yahoo! Answers - Check it out.


      
____________________________________________________________________________________
Luggage? GPS? Comic books? 
Check out fitting gifts for grads at Yahoo! Search
http://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=oni_on_mail&p=graduation+gifts&cs=bz
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
http://moumn.org/pipermail/mou-net_moumn.org/attachments/20070814/802e5285/attachment.html
 

Reply via email to