Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Bird Tracker on Bicycle Dorian Anderson

 Bird Tracker on Bicycle Dorian Anderson

Image source: http://www.jenningswire.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/bigstock-Birdwatcher-Trying-To-See-The-41601805.jpg

By Frosty Wooldridge

He rolled into our house in the evening for a hot shower, conversation and bed.

Last week, one such individual graced our door in Golden, Colorado. Talk roughly high energy! New York City could harness his high-voltage life to their power grid to run it for an entire year.

During a Big Year, a birdwatcher attempts to see or hear as many bird species as (s)he can in North America in one calendar year, said Anderson. This endeavor begins on January 1st and, depending on the level of commitment, can require the birder to visit all corners of the continent all through the following 364 days. The most bold Big Years typically record between 700 and 745 species of birds while logging well in excess of 100,000 miles of plane, car, and boat travel.

Since we are members of www.warmshowers.org, Dorian picked us out as hosts after he climbed Guanella Pass and summited 14,100 foot Mt. Bierstadt on the Continental Divide. At that altitude, he captured a ptarmigan at thirteen,500 feet. At 8,000 miles into the journey, he registered that bird as number 488 on his list.

The immediate goals of this endeavor are three-fold. First, I want to discover as many bird species as possible. If I can complete the proposed route, I should find between 550 and 600 species. I hope my efforts to attain this goal will promote heightened interest in birds, bird watching, and bird conservation. Second, I hope Biking For Birds will showcase the bicycle as a healthy and environmentally sustainable form of transportation. Third, I have partnered with both The Conservation Fund and the American Birding Association. and I hope to raise $100,000 (or more!) on behalf of these organizations that focus on land conservation and promotion of bird-watching.

Bird Tracker on Bicycle Dorian Anderson

Have you ever observed a humming-bird moving roughly in an aerial dance among the flowers - a living prismatic gem.... this can be a creature of such fairy-like loveliness as to mock all description. ~W.H. Hudson, Green Mansions

As I sat there with this bird-watching enthusiast, I felt his reverence for the natural world. He spoke roughly preserving birds, butterflies and all living creatures.

Anderson pulled out his 200 mm camera lens for the perfect shot. Later, the mother sapsucker appeared with another beak-full of grubs. Andersons registered a Williamsons Sapsucker at number 489.

After spotting and photographing the sapsucker, I felt an enormous sense of adventure with Dorian Anderson. He elevated my appreciation for our fine-feathered co-travelers on planet Earth.

When you meet them, they give the impression of being normal, they appear normal and they could act normal. Thats where normal ends! Those outliers carry a nonstandard, burning passion within them that surpasses normal imagination.

After NYU, he authorized a post-doctoral position at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston to investigate the molecular mechanisms that control neural plasticity.

When you visit his site, you may enjoy lively adventure chatter, vibrant bird photography and a region to send your donations to The Conservation Fund and American Birding Association.

Anderson said, I read roughly folks who spend hundreds of 1000's of dollars to fly to places where a particular bird has been spotted. One fellow flew 200,000 miles all through his Big Year to gather as many sightings as possible. I would like to see bird-watchers and all Americans avoid expelling so plenty carbon exhaust into the biosphere. Thats why I came up with the principle of bicycling round America to discover all these bird species and not pollute the planet.

Biking for Birds is my completely crazy and hopefully fantastic twist on the traditional North American Big Year. During 2014, I will travel only by bike, foot, and kayak as I move roughly the continent in search of birds. My movements will be unaided by petroleum, natural gas and electricity. I should not have a support vehicle; everything I need will be carried on my person and my bicycle. This Big Year permutation will certainly add an unprecedented level of adventure to the endeavor, and it should set a new standard for environmentally sustainable travel.

He waved, Live well my friend.
May the birds be with you, I said. Thanks for the memories.

He offers vibrant bird photographs from his bicycle pursuit of our fine-feathered friends. His daily updates relive his adventures in bird-watching.

Dorian Anderson, lean, black-haired, vibrant smile and replete with a vigorous personality, set out on January 1, 2014 on a cold snowy day in Boston, Massachusetts to bicycle 15,000 miles round America in search of every bird species in the lower 48 states. He called his quest The Big Year which allows him to are seeking for out and photograph as many of the more than 700 species of birds thriving in America.

Individual passions glide on Americas highways in choice forms. Some folks pursue their quests of visiting all National Parks within a summer. Others carry kayaks to challenge rivers from Maine to Oregon. Still others climb mountains in pursuit of their Holy Grail. Fly-fishermen-women pursue that speckled trout in high mountain streams. Somewhere out there on the roads that crisscross the planet, an adventure-seeker pursues his or her individual dream with an exceptional sense of determination.

##

Next morning, we bicycled up to the top of Bergan Park, near my house, to are seeking for out a specific dead tree that housed a family of Williamson Sapsuckers. We heard the hungry brood calling out to their parents for more food. Within minutes, a superb male appeared wearing grubs in his beak. He sported black back feathers, yellow/white underbelly and red tuft on his neck. His leg feathers looked like an Indy 500 finishing flag.

Later in the day, we visited Buffalo Bills Grave. Soon after, we traveled on our loaded touring bikes down the fabled Lariat Loop on Lookout Mountain into Golden, Colorado. After lunch at a sandwich shop, Dorian headed north on Route 93 toward Boulder.

Email: bikingforbirds@gmail.com

After Stanford, he attended New York University where he completed a Ph.D. in Developmental Genetics. He studied how cells in the early embryo polarize and how this polarization event applications to control subsequent morphogenetic movements all through gastrulation. Ironically, it was in the most urban of environments that his birding interest became obsessive.

Why take such an enormous trip?

Visit his website: bikingforbirds.blogspot.com

Cardio Get the Most Bang for Your Buck!

Image source: https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/e9/76/39/e976396fdd9308d24808f18b45d8b1b0.jpg 2. The Run: Running is a full body wor...