I don't usually contribute to these discussions for fear of beating a dead 
horse, but I'll make an exception.  
 
Both the MOU and MNbird listservs have high traffic at this time of year.  No 
problem for me, I read about 1 out of 10 posts anyway.  I don't have any issues 
with people posting anything related to birds in Minnesota, regardless of what 
it is.  Unless I'm misinformed, this seems to be the intent of both listservs.  
I don't believe, that rarity should be the only factor on the value of a post.  
Personally, I'd be more interested in Evening Grosbeaks 10 miles from my home 
than I would an Ivory Gull in Rock County.    
 
There is, however, one step posters could take to eliminate the need for this 
discussion altogether--use the 'subject' line on emails effectively!  (For the 
record, the ONLY nasty flaming I've ever endured from the listservs resulted 
from an anonymous hothead upset when I made this same suggestion a few years 
ago--no big deal, I have thick skin.  Otherwise, my experience with Minnesota 
birders--novice to expert--has always been exceptional!  I somehow don't 
believe that there are a bunch of elitist snobs prowling on MOU-Net waiting to 
pounce on unsuspecting rookies.)  
 
So often, people post to the listservs (and other email communication) with 
vague subject lines such as "Question" "Birding Today" "Help" "Birds" "Sparrow" 
"An idea" "Something to think about" or "(No subject)".  Subject lines like 
this tell the recipient nothing about the contents and defeat the purpose of 
the subject line.  If your email has a subject line such as "Lake County Spruce 
Grouse" or "Shorebird photos I'd like to share" "Request for bird feeding 
information" "Want to carpool to the Superior Landfill Saturday?" "Backyard 
oriole story" or "Help me ID this warbler", you probably would NOT get nasty 
emails because people would either easily realize they are not interested and 
delete your message without having to open it (no high traffic complaints from 
the rarity-hunters), or they would open it knowing exactly what they are 
spending their time on.
 
All we're waiting on up north are the flycatchers, vireos, most warblers and 
shorebirds and a few other odds and ends.  At least small numbers of most other 
groups are being accounted for at this time!         Shawn 
Conradhttp://users.2z.net/itasca_chippewa_birding/ 
_________________________________________________________________
Stay in touch when you're away with Windows Live Messenger.
http://www.windowslive.com/messenger/overview.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_Refresh_messenger_052008
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
http://moumn.org/pipermail/mou-net_moumn.org/attachments/20080505/49cee7e8/attachment-0001.html
 
  • [mou] New Listserv Michael Hendrickson
    • [mou] MOU listserv thought - subject lines shawn conrad

Reply via email to