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Your Birding Day
On the road in Nova Scotia
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<blockquote data-quote="Edward" data-source="post: 1297421" data-attributes="member: 822"><p>Terrific pictures, Stuart (I particularly like the monchrome background to the BW Warbler) and a couple to make me envious: after two spring trips to the US and almost 30 warblers later, I still haven't managed to find one of the most common, Palm.</p><p></p><p>As for the whales then you are right, Humpbacks do tend to steal the show. One animal breached nearly 300 times in a row over a period of three hours in Husavik in NE Iceland two years ago. The two Blue Whales I saw didn't do anything as exciting: it's just seeing half the horizon rise out of the water and the realisation that you are actually looking at a Blue Whale that makes them so special.</p><p></p><p>And Butterbutt is the most hideous bird jargon I've ever heard, worse than the heinous PG Tips.</p><p></p><p>Any more instalments to come?</p><p></p><p>E</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Edward, post: 1297421, member: 822"] Terrific pictures, Stuart (I particularly like the monchrome background to the BW Warbler) and a couple to make me envious: after two spring trips to the US and almost 30 warblers later, I still haven't managed to find one of the most common, Palm. As for the whales then you are right, Humpbacks do tend to steal the show. One animal breached nearly 300 times in a row over a period of three hours in Husavik in NE Iceland two years ago. The two Blue Whales I saw didn't do anything as exciting: it's just seeing half the horizon rise out of the water and the realisation that you are actually looking at a Blue Whale that makes them so special. And Butterbutt is the most hideous bird jargon I've ever heard, worse than the heinous PG Tips. Any more instalments to come? E [/QUOTE]
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Birding
Your Birding Day
On the road in Nova Scotia
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