Hello, Birders.

 

Some things never change. Soon after I moved to Colorado, 13.5 years ago, 
somebody asked me to spread the word if I found reliable cedar waxwings. 
And, just the other day, I got pretty much the exact same request. So here 
goes: This cloudy Sunday morning, Nov. 1, I found a flock of 32 *cedar 
waxwings* at Walden Ponds, Boulder County. (Also at Walden Ponds this 
morning: *wood duck*, a seemingly red-eyed *Plegadis* ibis, *Harlan hawk*, 
*Virginia 
rail*, *greater yellowlegs*, *eastern bluebird*, and *swamp sparrow*.)

 

Back to the waxwings. When I arrived in Colorado in the spring of 2002, 
pretty much the only way to get the word out was via COBirds. But change 
was in the air. Within a year or so, the groundbreaking *Colorado County 
Birding* website was launched. Instead of having to ask for directions to 
Walden Ponds, you could get that info from Colorado County Birding. You 
still can; you can get directions, and a whole lot more:

1. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-CCB

 

Okay, but what if you want to know the exact location of the waxwing flock? 
(That's a bit like asking for the exact location of an electron, I 
suppose.) Well, that brings up another e-resource that was just gaining 
currency around the time I moved here. Something called Google. In 
particular, *Google Maps*. Here's the exact location, right down to the 
particular tree, of the waxwings this morning:

2. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-GM

 

Google has come a long way since 2002. So has *eBird*. In planning your 
search for the waxwings, maybe you want to know what else to expect? Here 
ya go, my eBird checklist for Walden Ponds from this morning:

 

3. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-eB1

 

eBird is so much more than checklists. eBird will very soon be unveiling a 
major new functionality, an "*add media*" option. Here's a sneak preview, a 
photo of a particularly interesting waxwing in this morning's flock:

4. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-eB2

 

Maybe you'll want to be on the lookout for that particular bird. Or maybe 
you just need more general information. Maybe you just want to know what to 
listen for. eBird can do it. Here's *audio*, uploaded to eBird, of the 
flock this morning:

 

5. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-eB3

 

Pretty cool. But maybe you're way into "ear birding," and you want more 
than the audio and animated spectrogram provided by eBird. No problem. Just 
bop on over to *Xeno-Canto* for all the technical specs on these waxwings' 
vocalizations:

 

6. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-XC

 

Conversely, maybe you *don't* want all that fancy output and analysis from 
Xeno-Canto. Totally fine. With *SoundCloud*, you can just listen:

 

7. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-SC

 

Y'know, my characterization of SoundCloud ("you can just listen") isn't 
entirely fair. You can "like" recordings, "follow" the recordist, "share" 
recordings, build your own "playlist," and more. SoundCloud introduces a 
dimension that simply wasn't there in 2002: online social media. Speaking 
of online social media, here's how the vocalizations of this morning's 
waxwings are presented on *Twitter*:

 

8. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-T

 

Where there's smoke, there's fire. From a consideration of Twitter, we 
proceed of course to *Facebook*, and, in particular, to CFO's flourishing 
and rapidly expanding Facebook presence. Here, on Facebook, are all 32 of 
this morning's waxwings:

 

9. http://tinyurl.com/CedW-2015-11-01-FB

 

All of which might leave you wondering:

 

10. What's left in it for *COBirds*? Whither COBirds? Here's my take. I 
think COBirds serves a valuable role as an aggregator; COBirds is where it 
all comes together. Xeno-Canto and Facebook and eBird et al. are marvelous, 
but they generate only a partial record of the total Colorado birding 
experience. A post to COBirds provides context that those other resources 
really cannot; COBirds tells the rest of the story; COBirds is, to use a 
good Boulder word, holistic. If you want facts and data (and that's fine), 
go to eBird; If you want fancy technical stuff (totally fine), go to 
Xeno-Canto and such sites; if you want the online social media experience 
(also fine), join Twitter and Facebook and so forth. But for the fullest 
immersion in the Colorado birding community online, stick with COBirds. 
It's still relevant.

 

Ted Floyd

Lafayette, Boulder County

 

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