Friends.
I lived for a brief time in the big weird state of Mississippi. It's an incredible place, wilder and more beautiful than most people would believe. I loved birding there, spending most of my time among the overgrown catfish ponds of the northwest Delta region, but also exploring deep forests, muggy bayous, and the marshy coast.
After I left, some of my friends and I started a small organization called Delta Wind Birds, which works with duck hunting outfits and catfish farmers in the Delta to manage some of their lands for migratory shorebirds. Millions of shorebirds fly up the Mississippi River each spring and fall, and because the river no longer floods like it used to, stopover habitat for these birds is rare. Delta Wind Birds (or DWB), helps pay farmers and duck hunters to draw down water on certain ponds to the proper depth for shorebirds, providing food and fuel to thousands of birds.
DWB's annual fundraiser is a Big Day attempt, trying to break the record of 175 species set in 1989. The team just missed in 2015, hitting 170. Last year conditions didn't pan out and they ended at 167.
This year, they asked me to join them. Work be damned, I'm gonna go.
It looks like this Monday, April 24th with have pretty good conditions for the attempt. (NOTE: No guarantee of the day until it happens, it could be Sunday, it could be Tuesday.) I'm flying to New Orleans on Saturday and meeting the team -- Jason Hoeksema, JR Rigby, and Hal Mitchell -- in Jackson, MS. We'll scout on Sunday and then get out there at 12:01 AM on Monday morning listening for rails and looking for owls.
I CANNOT WAIT, BUT I NEED YOUR HELP.
This is going to be fun as heck, but we're also trying to raise money to save shorebirds.
We are going to be doing our best to livestream and/or live tweet the whole day, so PLEASE follow along on my twitter (@thebirdist) and on the Delta Wind Birds Facebook page.
Click on this link to MAKE A PLEDGE FOR OUR BIG DAY ATTEMPT!
Thanks, and wish me luck!
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2 comments:
This is very important work, Nick. Yes, we have birds in Florida where I live and up north where you live,
but stopovers on migration are of critical importance and disappearing at an alarming rate. Hunters,
if they are true sportsmen, are interested in keeping healthy numbers of species, as well. Let us know how your progress is going--
Patch
Thank you, Patch! You are the best.
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