Thanks, Ted.
 A few notes...
 I count the Evergreen Baikal teal on my ABA list.  This is based upon 
habitat, latitude, looks of the bird, and that it was a "loner," ignoring 
other ducks.  Will it be reconsidered for the Colorado list, and when?
 I don't count heard only birds, and therefore am missing on ABA LL 
mountain quail! And I don't count heard only owls, even.
 I already had pink-footed and barnacle geese in Rhode Island, but would 
have counted the pink as a life bird when I saw it here.
 If I saw an introduced bird, say, peafowl, five states away from an 
established population, I wouldn't count it.
 I know this thread will be taken down, but wanted to input a set of 
personal guidelines for readers' comparisons.
  
 Karl Stecher
 Aurora/Arapahoe
  
  
  

----------------------------------------
 From: "Ted Floyd" <tedfloy...@hotmail.com>
Sent: Monday, February 04, 2019 12:43 PM
To: "Colorado Birds" <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: *** SPAM 10: [cobirds] Yes, you can count the Pink-footed Goose 
(etc.)   
 Hey, all.    
 I'm writing here in official ABA (American Birding Association) capacity. 


Andy Bankert's interpretation is correct. I have confirmed this with the 
chair of the ABA Recording Standards & Ethics Committee. As long as the 
bird is on the ABA Checklist, you may count it for your ABA list. Thus, the 
Weld County Pink-footed and Barnacle geese may be counted for your ABA 
list. Note that you are not compelled to do so. The decision is based on 
your own personal assessment of the birds' statuses. Which can lead to some 
interesting dilemmas, two of which I briefly describe below. 
  
 1. Two birders discovered a White-cheeked Pintail in Florida and, 
interestingly, it was a prospective milestone for both. (Definitely #800 
for one birder, #750 as I recall for the other.) At the time the species 
was on both the ABA and the Florida lists. So it was countable. However, 
one of the birders wasn't satisfactorily persuaded that the bird was a 
natural vagrant; so he didn't count it. This is okay! It was the exact same 
bird; the identification was not in question; and the bird counted for one 
birder's list but not the other's. The two birders are still friends. Life 
goes on. 
  
 2. A glorious Smew near St. Louis delighted birders in the winter of 
1999-2000. Some of us saw that very bird. Including Yours Truly. But here's 
the rather interesting thing. The bird was seen on both sides (Missouri and 
Illinois) of the Mississippi River, with one state's committee accepting 
the record and other rejecting it. We are talking about the same bird! 
Accepted by one committee, rejected by the other. Missouri and Illinois 
birders are still friends. Life goes on. 
  
 Back to the Weld County geese. You are 100% allowed to count them for your 
ABA list--right now, without waiting for the records committee. You are 
also 100% allowed to exclude one or both species from your list. If the 
Colorado Bird Records Committee accepts, say, the Pink-footed Goose, you 
are *still* 100% allowed to exclude the species from your list--for 
example, if you feel that the bird was not satisfactorily demonstrated to 
be a natural vagrant. 
  
 Okay, that's the end of my official response. The rest is my own personal 
opinion. 
  
 The moral of this story, if you ask me is this: There are two kinds of 
people in this world, those who can accept ambiguity and uncertainty in 
life, and those whose heads explode. I, personally, delight in the diverse, 
and sometimes incompatible, approaches we bring to birding. Some folks 
don't count heard-only, exotic, and Hawaiian birds for the personal lists; 
that truly doesn't bother me. One listing authority (the ABA) excludes the 
Mexican Duck from its list, but another (eBird) not; that doesn't bother 
me, either. And some folks have cheerfully ticked the Weld County 
Pink-footed Goose off their bird lists, whilst others are taking a 
wait-and-see attitude; and that, too, is perfectly fine with me. 
  
 My take, which doesn't have to be yours, is that birds are cool and that 
I'm inclined to err on the side of inclusivity when it comes to counting 
birds for my personal list. Even feral peafowl. (By the way, the Indian 
Peafowl was recently added to the ABA Checklist. I'm just saying.) And as 
with the Florida pintail and Missouri/Illinois Smew: We're still friends; 
life goes on. 
  
 Ted Floyd 
 Lafayette, Boulder County 

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