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No salesman will call, at least not from us. Maybe from someone else.
New avian taxi service
[Posted by Chuck Almdale, submitted by Faron Isom]
Uber, Lyft, step aside and make way for the new.

Source: PetaPixel
The above photo was found on the PetaPixel website of Michael Zhang who supplies an amusing commentary.
While you’re on Zhang’s page, check out the photo series of an Osprey carrying a shark swallowing a fish.
Bluebird Housing Milestone
Article author Ian Kimbrey

(Photo: Barbara Weaver)
I am happy to report that we just passed ONE THOUSAND bluebirds raised in CheepCheep Homes nest boxes since my project began with one nest at Penmar Golf Course in 2009. The “trail” now runs from Long Beach in the south, all the way north to Sacramento, through L.A., Santa Barbara, Santa Maria, Lompoc and Big Sur.

Happily, COVID did not appear to adversely affect the bluebirds. Conversely, they appear to have enjoyed having Penmar and Rancho golf courses to themselves for much of the nesting season as numbers were up at both places. Special congrats to “senior” monitor (and SMBAS member) Edie Gralla, who pushed us over the line with her fourth brood this year at Rancho Park golf course. Edie fledged 28 chicks from five boxes at Rancho, up from 27 last year.

My nest box design – I call it the “chick magnet” – has proven to be irresistible to multiple winged species. Two nest boxes also hosted colonies of bees this year, until they were safely rehoused – luckily I know a bee guy – namely me. After the bees had gone, bluebirds moved back into both boxes and raised broods.
This project continues to connect us with new friends – like photographers Kathleen Waldron and Barbara Weaver who enrich the project with their SPECTACULAR photos and videos.

Anyone wishing to purchase a nest box and/or start/monitor a trail, please email Ian at cheepcheephomes@gmail.com
The Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards
[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
Some photographers have to set up and wait a long, long while in order to get their shots. Others just get lucky. Either way, these are great photographs.
The 2021 finalists are now shortlisted and voting for the winners ends in October and is apparently open to all. Go to the website and submit your vote.
This link takes you to the finalists for 2021-2016 and winners for 2020-2015. There are also a few videos which you may have to re-run a few times to see the action properly.
Link to website.

Bird Photographer of the Year | 2021 contest winners
[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
Great photos. Do you need to know more?
This takes you to the 2021 winners.
https://www.birdpoty.com/2021-winners
Once there, the tab “Winners” at the top of the page takes you to five previous years of winners.
A Siege of Bitterns | Book Recommendation
[Posted by Chuck Almdale]
There are dozens* of sub-genres of murder mysteries. If you haven’t yet heard of birding murder mysteries, add that to your list, although so far Steve Burrows is the only writer I know of in that genre. His credentials on birds and birding are excellent: birded on six continents, former editor of the Hong Kong Bird Watching Society magazine, contributing field editor for Asian Geographic. At the time he wrote his first book, A Siege of Bitterns, he lived with his wife Resa in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada. He apparently enjoys collective nouns of the venery.
A Siege of Bitterns is a good mystery and a good novel. The title is critically important. Characters are numerous, interesting and well-drawn; the environs are described in detail. I didn’t figure it out before the “big reveal.” It’s certainly not “noir” or “hardboiled;” “cozy” would work as the sub-genre, as the tone is light throughout. It’s fun to read, especially if you’re already a birder, and Burrows is not afraid to make appropriate fun of birder peculiarities.
If you’ve never been to the setting—Norfolk, England—it’s one of the top birding spots in the world and certainly at or near the top in Great Britain. There are probably more birders per square meter living there than anywhere else in the world. If you’ve never birded in Norfolk…well, now you can do it from your armchair.
A Siege of Bitterns is the first in a series of birder murder mysteries. It won the 2015 Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel, presented annually by the Crime Writers of Canada for the best Canadian crime and mystery writing published in the previous year.
Other books in the series:
A Pitying of Doves – June 2015
A Cast of Falcons – May 2016
A Shimmer of Hummingbirds – Mar 2017
A Tiding of Magpies – Nov 2018
A Dance of Cranes – Aug 2019
A Siege of Bitterns: A birder murder mystery featuring DCI Domenic Jejeune.
Steve Burrows | Pub. Point Blank | Dist. Simon & Schuster | 2014 | 344 pages
Publisher’s Description:
In this first Birder Murder mystery newly appointed police inspector Domenic Jejeune doesn’t mind ruffling a few feathers to flush out suspects in the brutal murder of a renowned ecological activist.
Newly appointed police inspector Domenic Jejeune doesn’t mind ruffling a few feathers. Indeed his success has elevated him into a poster boy for the police. The problem is Jejeune doesn’t really want to be a detective at all; he much prefers watching birds.
Recently reassigned to the small Norfolk town of Saltmarsh, located in the heart of Britain’s premier birding country, Jejeune’s two worlds collide with the grisly murder of a prominent ecological activist. His ambitious police superintendent foresees a blaze of welcome publicity, although doubts soon emerge when Jejeune’s best theory involves a feud over birdwatching lists. A second murder does little to bolster confidence.
Jejeune must call on all his birding know-how to solve the mystery and deal with unwelcome public acclaim, the mistrust of colleagues and his own insecurities. For, in the case of the Saltmarsh birder murders, the victims may not be the only casualties…
*It’s been decades since murder mysteries morphed and became a collection of genres. Here’s a quick list: caper, cozy, domestic, drawing room, forest ranger, hardboiled, investigator (sub-sub genres: male, female, black, teen male, teen female), noir (sub-sub genres by location: Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York, San Francisco), procedural, race track, religious orders, science fiction, southern, supernatural, suspense, thriller, travel, true crime, western, young adult. There are a lot more potential genres: specific sports, fishing, jungle exploration, pets, and every nation in the world, to name a few.


