House sparrows in the Tyrrenhian-Adriatic Sclerophyllous and Mixed Forests

My previous blog was from a sclerophyllous (“hard leaves”) ecoregion of Greece; this one is from the Tyrrenhian-Adriatic Sclerophyllous and Mixed Forests (PA1222), the similar ecoregion of southern Italy and Malta, rounding out our recent trip to the Mediterranean. Because there is so little original vegetation left in the areas we visited, its hard to… Continue reading House sparrows in the Tyrrenhian-Adriatic Sclerophyllous and Mixed Forests

Gods and Goddesses in the Aegean and West Turkish Sclerophyllous and Mixed Forests

In Plato’s famous Allegory of the Cave (written in Athens, about 400 BC), he posits that when we perceive people or objects and think they are real, we are in fact only seeing reflections of a true form or ideal. We can be compared to a lifelong prisoner in a cave who has only ever seen the… Continue reading Gods and Goddesses in the Aegean and West Turkish Sclerophyllous and Mixed Forests

The Uncommon Raven of the Northern Canadian Shield Taiga

I’ve just made my first trip to the Northern Canadian Shield Taiga Ecoregion (NA0612), specifically a winter visit to the capital city of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. France and I were searching the skies for the famed Aurora borealis and on our last day we did indeed see a great show, standing on a frozen lake… Continue reading The Uncommon Raven of the Northern Canadian Shield Taiga

Unwelcome to the Malheur Visitor’s Centre

Supposedly Oregon’s Malheur River was so named in about 1825 because during a Hudson’s Bay Company expedition, a cache of hidden furs had been stolen. A “malheur” in French is a hardship, disaster, or ordeal. I haven’t yet found the proof, but my alternative theory is that the first French-Canadian to “discover” this area, so… Continue reading Unwelcome to the Malheur Visitor’s Centre

Jersey Boys in Cape May

France and I were just in Cape May, NJ, looking for a particularly colorful strain of Jersey Boys. My first ecoregion birding blog was from this same area of the Northeastern Coastal Forests Ecoregion (NA0411), which extends the entire length of the New Jersey coast. That was in the spring; this time was a frigid winter day. We… Continue reading Jersey Boys in Cape May

“Dr. Pasha’s weaver, I presume?”

I’m visiting Kinshasa, in the Western Congolian Forest-Savanna Mosaic (AT0723) Ecoregion, but not much birding to be done in this city. I always have breakfast in the pleasant outdoor area of the Pullman Hotel, ringed by potted papyrus. Each morning, there is a flock of little yellow siskin-like birds dashing in and out, stealing crumbs. They are… Continue reading “Dr. Pasha’s weaver, I presume?”