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ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

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  1. chris butterworth

    S.Cyprus IDs?

    Not a Common Whitethroat, IMO, there's no yellow / pale base to the bill. Sardinian has a broad eyering, even as a juv., lacking on the OP's bird. althea Lesser Whitethroat?
  2. chris butterworth

    Sw turkey id help please

    Agree. Probably an escape but, they are in israel. ;)
  3. chris butterworth

    Plese help with the id

    Agree with Brown Shrike. The similar sub-species of Long-tailed Shrike would have the black"mask" reaching over the base of the bill in a broad band. p.s. Welcome to Birdforum Afshan.
  4. chris butterworth

    Does anyone like me think twitching gives birdwatchers a bad reputation

    Hmmm. Does travelling to NZ to see Kakapo ( and putting in two weeks of free work for the privilege ) or going to specifically see Juan Fernandez Firecrown count? I twitched the UK a lot in the '70s and '80s and I didn't see it as any different than going to far away places birding, or working...
  5. chris butterworth

    Scops Owl on a cruise ship near Penang, Malaysia

    ... and the lemon / pale yellow eyes rule out a possible wandering / vagrant / wintering Collared Scops.
  6. chris butterworth

    Naples, Florida whale/dolphin ID

    I think ;- 1. Atlantic Bottlenosed ( I'm almost 100pc on this ) 2. ditto 3. Atlantic Bottlenosed and Spotted s.l. 4. Spotted s.l.
  7. chris butterworth

    Parrot Crossbill?

    The only problem with the pale cutting edges is "Are they really pale, or is it reflection?" When the Parrots bred for the first time in the UK you could get very close views of them at their drinking puddle in Wells carpark and, even then, in good light, they weren't always obvious. On a single...
  8. chris butterworth

    migrant passerine flock, san juans, COLORADO

    Horned Lark looks good on shape and some appear to have a cleanly marked black throat ( although that could easily be shadow ).
  9. chris butterworth

    Parrot Crossbill?

    It does look rather 'bull necked' but the curve of the culmen appears to be better for Red / Common. Most Parrot have a more 'square' upper mandible with the culmen running straightish from the forehead before turning sharply downward to the tip. Having said that, there is a great deal of...
  10. chris butterworth

    Where Have All The Birds Gone? cont'd............

    I'll admit I was a touch brusque but, when faced with simplistic "solutions" and statements ( the final sentence in the post I replied to ) that just beg to be parodied I'm afraid I'm with Oscar Wilde, "I can resist anything but temptation". p.s. This old man knows exactly where his false teeth...
  11. chris butterworth

    Barnacle Goose? NE England

    It looks more like a Greylag x Canada, but hybrids can be confusing unless you get good views. There's a good selection of photos here http://www.gobirding.eu/Photos/HybridGeese.php ( the first bird is definitely weird ).
  12. chris butterworth

    Where Have All The Birds Gone? cont'd............

    It still amazes me that people can come out with trite, unthoughtout comments totally lacking any scientific basis whatsoever.Sounds, particularly subsonics, can travel for many hundreds of miles through water ( thats why Whales bl**dy "sing" ) so just "avoiding" the migration routes of Whales...
  13. chris butterworth

    UK Gibraltar Point Oct 18 2015

    Eur Herring Gull. The underside are possibly stained by contact with iron oxide (rust).
  14. chris butterworth

    Pipit UK - prob strongly marked Meadow

    Agree with Mipit. You can just make out the rufous tone to the uppertail coverts in #3 and, IMO, the "mantle braces" aren't clear / sharp enough and the eyering is too bold for 1st W RtP.
  15. chris butterworth

    Bird ID Request -- San Antonio, Texas

    The first photo appears to show a loral line and a moustachial stripe, plus the bill in #3 doesn't have that big, chunky look I'd expect from Summer. The forehead doesn't look particularly flat and the crown is more flat than peaked. Looks better for Hepatic than Summer.
  16. chris butterworth

    recommended reserves east coast

    Just in case you're getting bored with E. Anglia ( Ho Ho Ho ← hollow laughter ;) ) it's not that much further to the west coast. Check out http://www.deeestuary.co.uk/news.htm for the Wirral Wader Fest next month. Nip over to M6, off at J19 to Chester and A540 along The Wirral. You should be...
  17. chris butterworth

    unknown bird - 9/27 - NJ

    Agree with Larry. The "almost nonexistent" breast speckling is far better for Veery.
  18. chris butterworth

    New England - various

    1 House Finch. 2 Semi-palmated Sandpiper 3 American Herring Gull
  19. chris butterworth

    Wind-Farms, 400 extra turbines.

    Want to borrow my brick wall Mike? ;)
  20. chris butterworth

    Arctic or Pomarine Skua?

    Another for Pomarine. Maffong sums it up perfectly.
  21. chris butterworth

    Orinda, California - Mixed

    1. I'm unable to tell from that photo. Any more? 2. Fox Sparrow, at the front, and Golden-crowned. 3. Hermit Thrush. 4 + 5. Bushtit.
  22. chris butterworth

    Retirement to where?

    Retirement? It's galloping down the home stretch for me, and I still haven't decided if I should move to Okinawa full time, return to the UK ( be afraid, be very afraid ;) ) or ......... 1. With no financial constraints - Alice Springs. Damn near the centre of Oz, so it's about the same...
  23. chris butterworth

    Jeju, Korea - four birds

    1 Agree with Red-necked Grebe. It's a winter plumaged bird, there's no difference between males and females in plumage. 2 Yellow-streaked? 3 Looks good for Rough-legged. 4 Looks a bit bulky for Japanese but I can't think of anything else it would be.
  24. chris butterworth

    1e winter read breasted flycatcher? - Belgium

    Agree with 1st winter Northern Wheatear. They can show a bright, almost orange breast which 1st winter Red-breasted Flycatcher never does, and the Flycatcher has 2 white sides to the tail base, not a white rump. p.s. Your English is far better than most English people's understanding of Vlaams. ;)
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