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Upcoming San Diego Bird Festival: Feb. 25 – Mar. 1, 2026
[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
Birding festivals were very popular for many years. Then Covid-19 hit and the idea of getting together in large groups to talk about your hobby or vocation kind of went out the window, and they just…stopped. Our blog site still has a page devoted to California bird festivals which I diligently maintained for over a decade. I haven’t updated it since 2019, and the page still shows “26-Mar 1 Wed – Sun 2020: 24th Annual San Diego Bay Bird Festival.” But for Covid-19 this coming festival would probably read “30th Annual…” If I had learned of it earlier, I would have posted this earlier.
I encourage every birder in the area to go to this festival if you have the time free. If you have only one or two days free, you can probably sign up for a bird walk on those days. If you’ve never been to a bird festival, they are lots of fun with artwork and books and ‘stuff’ to buy, lectures to attend, dinners, bird walks led by local experts. It’s a tremendous bang for your birding buck. Meet other birders, see new birds, learn a lot.
Read more about it at San Diego Bird Festival, where you can also view their programs and register.
Or just Signup!
Or see their entire program!
Here’s an announcement I swiped off an email from Pasadena Audubon Society website.
San Diego Bird Festival Invites Nature Lovers to Marina Village:
“Where Passion Takes Flight”
SAN DIEGO, CA. The San Diego Bird Alliance is proud to announce the return of the San Diego Bird Festival, scheduled from February 25 to March 1, 2026, at the Marina Village Conference Center in Mission Bay. This premier five-day celebration centered around the theme “Where Passion Takes Flight” invites birders of all backgrounds, abilities, and experience levels to explore the region’s unique biodiversity.
The 2026 festival features an expanded lineup of world-class keynote speakers across iconic San Diego venues. Highlights include Jason Hall at Festival HQ, Makeda Dread Cheatom and Marilú Lopez-Fretts at the WorldBeat Cultural Center, Dexter Patterson at the San Diego Natural History Museum, and birding legend Kenn Kaufman at the Hyatt Regency.
“Our keynote series anchors each day, offering fresh perspectives on birds, culture, creativity, and conservation,” says the festival team. Beyond presentations, the festival offers high-demand “Signature Programs” such as Pelagic Birding trips, Birding the Border excursions, and the 100 or More Challenge.
New “Awe-Factor” programs debuting in 2026 include:
- A Walk with the Raptors: An exclusive outing with Sky Falconry featuring close-up encounters with birds of prey.
- Birding Beyond Binoculars: A nature journaling masterclass focused on mindful observation.
- 1st Annual Bird Film Festival: Featuring the debut of the documentary Hawkwatch.
- Walk, Roll, and Stroll: An accessible outing designed for mobility, sensory, and cognitive needs.
The festival also fosters a vibrant social community with daily gatherings at the Uncommon Saloon, featuring local craft beer and bird trivia. Families are encouraged to join the Free Community Days at Marina Village or attend the Bird-day Cake celebration on Sunday, March 1, to close the event.
Visit www.sandiegobirdfestival.org for more information. Early registration is highly recommended for limited-capacity trips and keynotes.
Birding Adventures Videos | YouTube
Some years ago we used to watch “Birding Adventures with James Currie” which appeared for ten or so seasons on NBC Sports and on Discovery TV. We saw only two or three seasons before it disappeared. It was kind of goofy, but fun and birdy. It did give the feel for places only an avid birder would want – perhaps slaver and pant – to go. The photography was not so magnificent that one continually wondered just how did they get that shot??!! Anyone who’s gone birding and gotten less-than-desired glimpses of a bird (and if this hasn’t happened to you you’re either not a birder, blessed, extremely lucky, or really pushy and despised by your fellow birders) will empathize with the film crew. All-in-all, it was a fun show, well worth the watching.
A few weeks or months back a blog reader shared their appreciation for something I’d posted which gave them the feel of being out birding. They’d missed that as their health was no longer as good as it used to be and they couldn’t get out of the house. Since then I’ve been keeping my eyes open, but found little. Then I remembered that TV show, and managed to track some episodes down on the web. I hope they fill the bill! (pun intended).
You can read about James Currie here.
This link below goes to A Wild Connection, which describes itself as:
… a collaboration between National Geographic wildlife TV host/producer James Currie and renowned cinematographer Josh Liberman. The show offers a unique perspective on the links between people and wildlife. From the snowy valleys of Yellowstone National Park to the humid jungles of South America and the tropical reefs of the world’s oceans, we bring you closer than ever before. Get ready… to get connected!
It claims to have 225 videos. Most seem about 22 minutes long.
This link goes directly to 109 birding videos. I don’t know if they include the original TV birding shows. No, I didn’t review all of them. Feel free to submit reviews to me.
Here’s one on the Green Jays, et.al. of the Texas Rio Grande Valley borderlands. Click it and go birding-by-proxy. Start a “seen on TV” bird list, but don’t send it in to eBird unless you want to get lots of skeptical comments from the eBird reviewers.
Evolutionary History and Biogeography of Passerines, with Diego Blanco: Zoom Evening Meeting, Tuesday, 3 March, 7:30 p.m.
You are all invited to the next ZOOM meeting
of Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society

Evolutionary History and Biogeography of Passerines, with Diego Blanco.
Zoom Evening Meeting, Tuesday, 3 March, 7:30 p.m.
Zoom waiting room opens 7:15 p.m.
Diego Blanco of the Moore Laboratory of Ornithology will present an Evolutionary History and Biogeography of Passerines. Topics will include song bird behavior, evolution, and conservation. Diego will describe the avian family tree and explain how songbirds have spread across the globe and how they’ve changed over time.
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Before Diego Blanco became an Outreach and Research Assistant at the Moore Lab of Zoology at Occidental College, he was a Los Angeles area birder and naturalist. He enjoys hiking, camping, and documenting biodiversity through photography and illustration. Diego graduated from Cornell University in 2022 and has worked as an administrative assistant at the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wild Flowers and Native Plants where he taught field sketching and bird identification classes. He spent the summer 2024 season as a point count technician with the Klamath Bird Observatory conducting surveys on bird populations and plant communities in Whiskeytown National Recreation Area and Lassen Volcanic National Park in Northern California.

(If the button above doesn’t work for you, see detailed zoom invitation below.)
Meeting ID: 825 7750 0786
Passcode: 993523
One tap mobile
+16694449171,,82577500786#,,,,*993523# US
+16699009128,,82577500786#,,,,*993523# US (San Jose)
Joining Instructions
https://us02web.zoom.us/meetings/82577500786/invitations?signature=g0Cp2iapmwGEhBXYp3jcmkGKZN5-7oZ5-7D2N4WEoAU
[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
1. Head lice hitched a ride on humans to the Americas at least twice
The parasites’ genetics can give in-depth insights into their hosts’ pasts.
You needn’t be a nitpicker to be intrigued.
By Jake Buehler, 11-8-23

2. Here’s how high-speed diving kingfishers may avoid concussions
Specific genetic tweaks seem to protect brains from 40 km/h plunges into water.
By Claudia Lopez Lloreda, 11-6-23
Analysis of the genetic instruction book of some diving kingfishers identified changes in genes related to brain function as well as retina and blood vessel development, which might protect against damage during dives, researchers report October 24 in Communications Biology. The results suggest the different species of diving kingfishers may have adapted to survive their dives unscathed in some of the same ways, but it’s still unclear how the genetic changes protect the birds.
3. Landscape Explorer shows how much the American West has changed
The online tool stitches historical aerial images into a public map
With the click of a mouse, a new mapping tool shows how places in the American West have changed over the last 70 years.
Open Landscape Explorer Link
By Brianna Randall, 12-6-23



