Re: [cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-06 Thread Glenn Wilson
I wonder how much last winter affected insects. It was hard on me. 

Glenn Wilson
Endicott, NY
www.WilsonsWarbler.com

On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:39 AM, John and Sue Gregoire  wrote:

We'll join that observation and sentiment. Lynda, we were just commenting on how
"safe" it is to walk barefoot -not at all a good thing.

We've studied all this to death and it's past time for action. Does anyone know
where the academic leadership is on this (these) issues? Continually amazed 
that a
major U like CU and CLO aren't out in the forefront of this, FLAP and so many 
other
needed efforts.
-- 
John and Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel Haven Avian Migration Observatory
5373 Fitzgerald Road
Burdett,NY 14818-9626
Website: http://www.empacc.net/~kestrelhaven/
"Conserve and Create Habitat"

> On Sun, July 6, 2014 08:25, Stephanie Greenwood wrote:
> My garden which I've designed for bees & butterflies is also relatively and 
> sadly
> quiet.
> 
> Stephanie Greenwood
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> 
>> On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:04 AM, Linda Orkin  wrote:
>> 
>> Thanks for these observations Fritzie. I care. I'm there with you. It's a 
>> tragedy.
>> And now we are on the cusp of another horrible pesticide related to Agent 
>> Orange
>> being approved. Along with new agent orange ready GMO companion plants. I, 
>> too,
>> have silently blooming white clover in my yard. I was thinking how just 20 
>> years
>> ago you could not walk barefoot at this time of year for fear of being 
>> stung. Not
>> so now.
>> 
>> If people don't wake up now the poisoning of this world, not our world but 
>> all
>> beings world, will be entire and complete. And this is an appropriate 
>> discussion
>> for a listserv made up of people who love birds, I would think.
>> 
>> And gas should cost $100 per gallon.
>> 
>> Linda
>> 
>> Sent from my iPhone
>> 
>>> On Jul 6, 2014, at 12:19 AM, John and Fritzie Blizzard 
>>> 
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Three horned larks were standing on Dublin Hill Rd. (east of Aurora) 
>>> between Rte.
>>> 34 B & Black St. which goes north as a continuation of Indian Field Rd..
>>> 
>>> Here in Union Springs we saw 2 soaring ospreys over our house & one on the 
>>> NYSEG
>>> Transfer Station nest on No. One Rd. across the field from us. On 27 June, 
>>> Becky
>>> & I found 2 nest starts (new to us) on power poles in the trailer park down
>>> Firelane 15 north of Union Springs. We didn't find anyone to ask about 
>>> when, or
>>> if, they may have been active.
>>> 
>>> In the afterglow of sunset tonight I watched chimney swifts going in & out 
>>> of the
>>> tall chimney on the girl's dorm at Union Springs Academy. I have noticed a
>>> remarkable lack of barn & tree swallows here this summer, compared to 
>>> previous
>>> years.
>>> 
>>> Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" ... & eventually people got her message 
>>> & did
>>> something about it. This evening as we drove by 100s of acres of weed-free 
>>> corn &
>>> soybean fields,  I thought about seeing only one honey bee so far, no 
>>> Monarch
>>> butterflies & few of any kind of butterflies. Our yard is FULL of white 
>>> clover
>>> which normally would be abuzz with honey bees.
>>> 
>>> We still have mosquitoes & black flies, insects that need water in which to 
>>> lay
>>> eggs & blood of warm blooded bodies on which to live ... water & blood. They
>>> thrive. We scratch.
>>> 
>>> Honey bees that pollinate 30 BILLON dollars worth of crops in the US are 
>>> fast
>>> disappearing. Thanks to indiscriminate, as well as deliberate use of
>>> insecticides, weed killers & fungicides by home owners, golf course owners, 
>>> large
>>> & small farmers, etc. the honey bee, the one little insect that  determines 
>>> what
>>> food crops we may still be able to grow may become in the same ranks as the
>>> carrier pigeon. Indeed, it may already be too late.
>>> 
>>> I have included fungicides because I have in hand an article stating that
>>> scientists at MD U & the USDA have now found evidence that bees that ate 
>>> pollen
>>> contaminated with fungicides  are 3 times as likely to be infected with 
>>> parasites
>>> that cause colony collapse disorder.
>>> 
>>> I wonder ... WHO CARES???
>>> 
>>> Fritzie, in Union Springs   where gas was $3.63.9 on Fri., 4 July 2104
>>> --
>>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
>>> Welcome and Basics
>>> Rules and Information
>>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>>> Archives:
>>> The Mail Archive
>>> Surfbirds
>>> BirdingOnThe.Net
>>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
>>> --
>> --
>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
>> Welcome and Basics
>> Rules and Information
>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>> Archives:
>> The Mail Archive
>> Surfbirds
>> BirdingOnThe.Net
>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
>> --
> 
> --
> 
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> 
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> 1) http://www.ma

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-06 Thread Geo Kloppel
Linda  wrote:

> And gas should cost $100 per gallon.

That would certainly put a crimp in our frivolous birding activity! :-)

For anyone whose birding habit is already costing too much at the pump, I'd 
like to recommend backyard beekeeping; it's truly a wonderful hobby.

Ecological degradation is of course nothing new. The worst event the world has 
ever experienced occurred some 630 million years ago, when the burden of 
reckless runaway photosynthesis began to load the planet's atmosphere with 
poisonous oxygen, leading to an explosion of newly-evolved exploiters 
(animals). The place has never been the same since!

-Geo Kloppel
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-06 Thread Stanley Scharf
I agree with sentiments offered..
Here is something refreshing  regarding honey bees I recently  chanced
upon...
http://www.bestbees.com/


On Sun, Jul 6, 2014 at 8:39 AM, John and Sue Gregoire 
wrote:

> We'll join that observation and sentiment. Lynda, we were just commenting
> on how
> "safe" it is to walk barefoot -not at all a good thing.
>
> We've studied all this to death and it's past time for action. Does anyone
> know
> where the academic leadership is on this (these) issues? Continually
> amazed that a
> major U like CU and CLO aren't out in the forefront of this, FLAP and so
> many other
> needed efforts.
> --
> John and Sue Gregoire
> Field Ornithologists
> Kestrel Haven Avian Migration Observatory
> 5373 Fitzgerald Road
> Burdett,NY 14818-9626
>  Website: http://www.empacc.net/~kestrelhaven/
> "Conserve and Create Habitat"
>
> On Sun, July 6, 2014 08:25, Stephanie Greenwood wrote:
> > My garden which I've designed for bees & butterflies is also relatively
> and sadly
> > quiet.
> >
> > Stephanie Greenwood
> > Sent from my iPad
> >
> >
> >> On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:04 AM, Linda Orkin  wrote:
> >>
> >> Thanks for these observations Fritzie. I care. I'm there with you. It's
> a tragedy.
> >> And now we are on the cusp of another horrible pesticide related to
> Agent Orange
> >> being approved. Along with new agent orange ready GMO companion plants.
> I, too,
> >> have silently blooming white clover in my yard. I was thinking how just
> 20 years
> >> ago you could not walk barefoot at this time of year for fear of being
> stung. Not
> >> so now.
> >>
> >> If people don't wake up now the poisoning of this world, not our world
> but all
> >> beings world, will be entire and complete. And this is an appropriate
> discussion
> >> for a listserv made up of people who love birds, I would think.
> >>
> >> And gas should cost $100 per gallon.
> >>
> >> Linda
> >>
> >> Sent from my iPhone
> >>
> >>> On Jul 6, 2014, at 12:19 AM, John and Fritzie Blizzard <
> job121...@verizon.net>
> >>> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Three horned larks were standing on Dublin Hill Rd. (east of Aurora)
> between Rte.
> >>> 34 B & Black St. which goes north as a continuation of Indian Field
> Rd..
> >>>
> >>> Here in Union Springs we saw 2 soaring ospreys over our house & one on
> the NYSEG
> >>> Transfer Station nest on No. One Rd. across the field from us. On 27
> June, Becky
> >>> & I found 2 nest starts (new to us) on power poles in the trailer park
> down
> >>> Firelane 15 north of Union Springs. We didn't find anyone to ask about
> when, or
> >>> if, they may have been active.
> >>>
> >>> In the afterglow of sunset tonight I watched chimney swifts going in &
> out of the
> >>> tall chimney on the girl's dorm at Union Springs Academy. I have
> noticed a
> >>> remarkable lack of barn & tree swallows here this summer, compared to
> previous
> >>> years.
> >>>
> >>> Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" ... & eventually people got her
> message & did
> >>> something about it. This evening as we drove by 100s of acres of
> weed-free corn &
> >>> soybean fields,  I thought about seeing only one honey bee so far, no
> Monarch
> >>> butterflies & few of any kind of butterflies. Our yard is FULL of
> white clover
> >>> which normally would be abuzz with honey bees.
> >>>
> >>> We still have mosquitoes & black flies, insects that need water in
> which to lay
> >>> eggs & blood of warm blooded bodies on which to live ... water &
> blood. They
> >>> thrive. We scratch.
> >>>
> >>> Honey bees that pollinate 30 BILLON dollars worth of crops in the US
> are fast
> >>> disappearing. Thanks to indiscriminate, as well as deliberate use of
> >>> insecticides, weed killers & fungicides by home owners, golf course
> owners, large
> >>> & small farmers, etc. the honey bee, the one little insect that
>  determines what
> >>> food crops we may still be able to grow may become in the same ranks
> as the
> >>> carrier pigeon. Indeed, it may already be too late.
> >>>
> >>> I have included fungicides because I have in hand an article stating
> that
> >>> scientists at MD U & the USDA have now found evidence that bees that
> ate pollen
> >>> contaminated with fungicides  are 3 times as likely to be infected
> with parasites
> >>> that cause colony collapse disorder.
> >>>
> >>> I wonder ... WHO CARES???
> >>>
> >>> Fritzie, in Union Springs   where gas was $3.63.9 on Fri., 4 July
> 2104
> >>> --
> >>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
> >>> Welcome and Basics
> >>> Rules and Information
> >>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> >>> Archives:
> >>> The Mail Archive
> >>> Surfbirds
> >>> BirdingOnThe.Net
> >>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
> >>> --
> >> --
> >> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
> >> Welcome and Basics
> >> Rules and Information
> >> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> >> Archives:
> >> The Mail Archive
> >> Surfbirds
> >> BirdingOnThe.Net
> >> Please submit your observations to eBird!
> >> --
> >
> > --
> >
> > Cayugabirds-L List Info:
> > http:

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-06 Thread John and Sue Gregoire
We'll join that observation and sentiment. Lynda, we were just commenting on how
"safe" it is to walk barefoot -not at all a good thing.

We've studied all this to death and it's past time for action. Does anyone know
where the academic leadership is on this (these) issues? Continually amazed 
that a
major U like CU and CLO aren't out in the forefront of this, FLAP and so many 
other
needed efforts.
-- 
John and Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel Haven Avian Migration Observatory
5373 Fitzgerald Road
Burdett,NY 14818-9626
 Website: http://www.empacc.net/~kestrelhaven/
"Conserve and Create Habitat"

On Sun, July 6, 2014 08:25, Stephanie Greenwood wrote:
> My garden which I've designed for bees & butterflies is also relatively and 
> sadly
> quiet.
>
> Stephanie Greenwood
> Sent from my iPad
>
>
>> On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:04 AM, Linda Orkin  wrote:
>>
>> Thanks for these observations Fritzie. I care. I'm there with you. It's a 
>> tragedy.
>> And now we are on the cusp of another horrible pesticide related to Agent 
>> Orange
>> being approved. Along with new agent orange ready GMO companion plants. I, 
>> too,
>> have silently blooming white clover in my yard. I was thinking how just 20 
>> years
>> ago you could not walk barefoot at this time of year for fear of being 
>> stung. Not
>> so now.
>>
>> If people don't wake up now the poisoning of this world, not our world but 
>> all
>> beings world, will be entire and complete. And this is an appropriate 
>> discussion
>> for a listserv made up of people who love birds, I would think.
>>
>> And gas should cost $100 per gallon.
>>
>> Linda
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>>> On Jul 6, 2014, at 12:19 AM, John and Fritzie Blizzard 
>>> 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Three horned larks were standing on Dublin Hill Rd. (east of Aurora) 
>>> between Rte.
>>> 34 B & Black St. which goes north as a continuation of Indian Field Rd..
>>>
>>> Here in Union Springs we saw 2 soaring ospreys over our house & one on the 
>>> NYSEG
>>> Transfer Station nest on No. One Rd. across the field from us. On 27 June, 
>>> Becky
>>> & I found 2 nest starts (new to us) on power poles in the trailer park down
>>> Firelane 15 north of Union Springs. We didn't find anyone to ask about 
>>> when, or
>>> if, they may have been active.
>>>
>>> In the afterglow of sunset tonight I watched chimney swifts going in & out 
>>> of the
>>> tall chimney on the girl's dorm at Union Springs Academy. I have noticed a
>>> remarkable lack of barn & tree swallows here this summer, compared to 
>>> previous
>>> years.
>>>
>>> Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" ... & eventually people got her message 
>>> & did
>>> something about it. This evening as we drove by 100s of acres of weed-free 
>>> corn &
>>> soybean fields,  I thought about seeing only one honey bee so far, no 
>>> Monarch
>>> butterflies & few of any kind of butterflies. Our yard is FULL of white 
>>> clover
>>> which normally would be abuzz with honey bees.
>>>
>>> We still have mosquitoes & black flies, insects that need water in which to 
>>> lay
>>> eggs & blood of warm blooded bodies on which to live ... water & blood. They
>>> thrive. We scratch.
>>>
>>> Honey bees that pollinate 30 BILLON dollars worth of crops in the US are 
>>> fast
>>> disappearing. Thanks to indiscriminate, as well as deliberate use of
>>> insecticides, weed killers & fungicides by home owners, golf course owners, 
>>> large
>>> & small farmers, etc. the honey bee, the one little insect that  determines 
>>> what
>>> food crops we may still be able to grow may become in the same ranks as the
>>> carrier pigeon. Indeed, it may already be too late.
>>>
>>> I have included fungicides because I have in hand an article stating that
>>> scientists at MD U & the USDA have now found evidence that bees that ate 
>>> pollen
>>> contaminated with fungicides  are 3 times as likely to be infected with 
>>> parasites
>>> that cause colony collapse disorder.
>>>
>>> I wonder ... WHO CARES???
>>>
>>> Fritzie, in Union Springs   where gas was $3.63.9 on Fri., 4 July 2104
>>> --
>>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
>>> Welcome and Basics
>>> Rules and Information
>>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>>> Archives:
>>> The Mail Archive
>>> Surfbirds
>>> BirdingOnThe.Net
>>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
>>> --
>> --
>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
>> Welcome and Basics
>> Rules and Information
>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>> Archives:
>> The Mail Archive
>> Surfbirds
>> BirdingOnThe.Net
>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
>> --
>
> --
>
> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsWELCOME
> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsRULES
> http://www.NortheastBirding.com/CayugabirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm
>
> ARCHIVES:
> 1) http://www.mail-archive.com/cayugabirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
> 2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/Cayugabirds
> 3) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/CAYU.html
>
> Please submit your observatio

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-06 Thread Stephanie Greenwood
My garden which I've designed for bees & butterflies is also relatively and 
sadly quiet. 

Stephanie Greenwood
Sent from my iPad


> On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:04 AM, Linda Orkin  wrote:
> 
> Thanks for these observations Fritzie. I care. I'm there with you. It's a 
> tragedy. And now we are on the cusp of another horrible pesticide related to 
> Agent Orange being approved. Along with new agent orange ready GMO companion 
> plants. I, too, have silently blooming white clover in my yard. I was 
> thinking how just 20 years ago you could not walk barefoot at this time of 
> year for fear of being stung. Not so now. 
> 
> If people don't wake up now the poisoning of this world, not our world but 
> all beings world, will be entire and complete. And this is an appropriate 
> discussion for a listserv made up of people who love birds, I would think. 
> 
> And gas should cost $100 per gallon. 
> 
> Linda
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
>> On Jul 6, 2014, at 12:19 AM, John and Fritzie Blizzard 
>>  wrote:
>> 
>> Three horned larks were standing on Dublin Hill Rd. (east of Aurora) between 
>> Rte. 34 B & Black St. which goes north as a continuation of Indian Field 
>> Rd.. 
>> 
>> Here in Union Springs we saw 2 soaring ospreys over our house & one on the 
>> NYSEG Transfer Station nest on No. One Rd. across the field from us. On 27 
>> June, Becky & I found 2 nest starts (new to us) on power poles in the 
>> trailer park down Firelane 15 north of Union Springs. We didn't find anyone 
>> to ask about when, or if, they may have been active.
>> 
>> In the afterglow of sunset tonight I watched chimney swifts going in & out 
>> of the tall chimney on the girl's dorm at Union Springs Academy. I have 
>> noticed a remarkable lack of barn & tree swallows here this summer, compared 
>> to previous years. 
>> 
>> Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" ... & eventually people got her message 
>> & did something about it. This evening as we drove by 100s of acres of 
>> weed-free corn & soybean fields,  I thought about seeing only one honey bee 
>> so far, no Monarch butterflies & few of any kind of butterflies. Our yard is 
>> FULL of white clover which normally would be abuzz with honey bees.
>> 
>> We still have mosquitoes & black flies, insects that need water in which to 
>> lay eggs & blood of warm blooded bodies on which to live ... water & blood. 
>> They thrive. We scratch.
>> 
>> Honey bees that pollinate 30 BILLON dollars worth of crops in the US are 
>> fast disappearing. Thanks to indiscriminate, as well as deliberate use of 
>> insecticides, weed killers & fungicides by home owners, golf course owners, 
>> large & small farmers, etc. the honey bee, the one little insect that  
>> determines what food crops we may still be able to grow may become in the 
>> same ranks as the carrier pigeon. Indeed, it may already be too late.
>> 
>> I have included fungicides because I have in hand an article stating that 
>> scientists at MD U & the USDA have now found evidence that bees that ate 
>> pollen contaminated with fungicides  are 3 times as likely to be infected 
>> with parasites that cause colony collapse disorder.
>> 
>> I wonder ... WHO CARES??? 
>> 
>> Fritzie, in Union Springs   where gas was $3.63.9 on Fri., 4 July 2104
>> --
>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
>> Welcome and Basics
>> Rules and Information
>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>> Archives:
>> The Mail Archive
>> Surfbirds
>> BirdingOnThe.Net
>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
>> --
> --
> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
> Welcome and Basics
> Rules and Information
> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> Archives:
> The Mail Archive
> Surfbirds
> BirdingOnThe.Net
> Please submit your observations to eBird!
> --

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-06 Thread Linda Orkin
Thanks for these observations Fritzie. I care. I'm there with you. It's a 
tragedy. And now we are on the cusp of another horrible pesticide related to 
Agent Orange being approved. Along with new agent orange ready GMO companion 
plants. I, too, have silently blooming white clover in my yard. I was thinking 
how just 20 years ago you could not walk barefoot at this time of year for fear 
of being stung. Not so now. 

If people don't wake up now the poisoning of this world, not our world but all 
beings world, will be entire and complete. And this is an appropriate 
discussion for a listserv made up of people who love birds, I would think. 

And gas should cost $100 per gallon. 

Linda

Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 6, 2014, at 12:19 AM, John and Fritzie Blizzard  
wrote:

> Three horned larks were standing on Dublin Hill Rd. (east of Aurora) between 
> Rte. 34 B & Black St. which goes north as a continuation of Indian Field Rd.. 
> 
> Here in Union Springs we saw 2 soaring ospreys over our house & one on the 
> NYSEG Transfer Station nest on No. One Rd. across the field from us. On 27 
> June, Becky & I found 2 nest starts (new to us) on power poles in the trailer 
> park down Firelane 15 north of Union Springs. We didn't find anyone to ask 
> about when, or if, they may have been active.
> 
> In the afterglow of sunset tonight I watched chimney swifts going in & out of 
> the tall chimney on the girl's dorm at Union Springs Academy. I have noticed 
> a remarkable lack of barn & tree swallows here this summer, compared to 
> previous years. 
> 
> Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" ... & eventually people got her message & 
> did something about it. This evening as we drove by 100s of acres of 
> weed-free corn & soybean fields,  I thought about seeing only one honey bee 
> so far, no Monarch butterflies & few of any kind of butterflies. Our yard is 
> FULL of white clover which normally would be abuzz with honey bees.
> 
> We still have mosquitoes & black flies, insects that need water in which to 
> lay eggs & blood of warm blooded bodies on which to live ... water & blood. 
> They thrive. We scratch.
> 
> Honey bees that pollinate 30 BILLON dollars worth of crops in the US are fast 
> disappearing. Thanks to indiscriminate, as well as deliberate use of 
> insecticides, weed killers & fungicides by home owners, golf course owners, 
> large & small farmers, etc. the honey bee, the one little insect that  
> determines what food crops we may still be able to grow may become in the 
> same ranks as the carrier pigeon. Indeed, it may already be too late.
> 
> I have included fungicides because I have in hand an article stating that 
> scientists at MD U & the USDA have now found evidence that bees that ate 
> pollen contaminated with fungicides  are 3 times as likely to be infected 
> with parasites that cause colony collapse disorder.
> 
> I wonder ... WHO CARES??? 
> 
> Fritzie, in Union Springs   where gas was $3.63.9 on Fri., 4 July 2104
> --
> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
> Welcome and Basics
> Rules and Information
> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> Archives:
> The Mail Archive
> Surfbirds
> BirdingOnThe.Net
> Please submit your observations to eBird!
> --

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Please submit your observations to eBird:
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[cayugabirds-l] Horned larks, C. swifts today 5 July 2014

2014-07-05 Thread John and Fritzie Blizzard
Three horned larks were standing on Dublin Hill Rd. (east of Aurora) 
between Rte. 34 B & Black St. which goes north as a continuation of 
Indian Field Rd..

Here in Union Springs we saw 2 soaring ospreys over our house & one on 
the NYSEG Transfer Station nest on No. One Rd. across the field from us. 
On 27 June, Becky & I found 2 nest starts (new to us) on power poles in 
the trailer park down Firelane 15 north of Union Springs. We didn't find 
anyone to ask about when, or if, they may have been active.

In the afterglow of sunset tonight I watched chimney swifts going in & 
out of the tall chimney on the girl's dorm at Union Springs Academy. I 
have noticed a remarkable lack of barn & tree swallows here this summer, 
compared to previous years.

Rachel Carson wrote "Silent Spring" ... & eventually people got her 
message & did something about it. This evening as we drove by 100s of 
acres of weed-free corn & soybean fields,  I thought about seeing only 
one honey bee so far, no Monarch butterflies & few of any kind of 
butterflies. Our yard is FULL of white clover which normally would be 
abuzz with honey bees.

We still have mosquitoes & black flies, insects that need water in which 
to lay eggs & blood of warm blooded bodies on which to live ... water & 
blood. They thrive. We scratch.

Honey bees that pollinate 30 BILLON dollars worth of crops in the US are 
fast disappearing. Thanks to indiscriminate, as well as deliberate use 
of insecticides, weed killers & fungicides by home owners, golf course 
owners, large & small farmers, etc. the honey bee, the one little insect 
that  determines what food crops we may still be able to grow may become 
in the same ranks as the carrier pigeon. Indeed, it may already be too late.

I have included fungicides because I have in hand an article stating 
that scientists at MD U & the USDA have now found evidence that bees 
that ate pollen contaminated with fungicides  are 3 times as likely to 
be infected with parasites that cause colony collapse disorder.

I wonder ... WHO CARES???

Fritzie, in Union Springs   where gas was $3.63.9 on Fri., 4 July 2104

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