Hi all,
Apologies for a slightly long and on-but-diverging-from-topic addition
to the thread . . .
I am recording with Wildlife Acoustics SM2s in New York, NY this
spring, at my apartment and in conjunction with a joint Fordham - New
York City Audubon project using a small scale radar and
I am recording near the westernmost point of continental Europe, Cabo da Roca
in Portugal. My expectations are much lower than in autumn, when birds from a
large part of Europe pass through here. In spring they have much less reason to
do so, but who knows they might surprise me.
I already
I have a recording station on the coast of the Northumberland Strait (Gulf
of St. Lawrence) in northern Nova Scotia. I tend to be slow on the analysis.
John
From: bounce-45148036-28417...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-45148036-28417...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of David La
Puma
Sent:
I'll be recording in Cleveland Heights, Ohio (east side of Cleveland, about 7
km
from Lake Erie as the warbler flies). I'll be using one of Bill Evans' new
OldBird rigs and another mic that seems to do a little better with thrushes,
but
not as well with sparrow/warblers. I'm planning to
I am just starting here in Ann Arbor, Michigan (South East Michigan). I
mean really starting, as it is my first season.
I agree it could be fun to create a map of all the listening stations in
North America!
Laurent
On Mon, Apr 2, 2012 at 11:54 PM, David La Puma wrote:
> Can we get an update
David et al.,
I'll be recording in Northern NJ though I am a complete amateur and
don't have an automated recording station--lots of manual exporting in
real time happening at my house. I can't provide calls/hour data,
therefore, but I get a nice sample of some of the species overhead.
Learning