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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211103T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211103T200000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20211018T210117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211018T210244Z
UID:6516-1635962400-1635969600@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Winter Sparrows Workshop 2021  - Day 2
DESCRIPTION:Workshop Dates:\nNov 1 & 3\, 2021\n6:00pm – 8:00pm\n$100 total per person for both sessions \nThis workshop will be a basis to identify the wintering sparrows in California\, with a focus on the Bay Area. We hope to also give you a background to understand a bit about the biology\, evolutionary history\, migration\, and behavior of our sparrow fauna. With regards to identification\, we will give more details on the trickier species. Although this is not a bird sound workshop\, we will dabble in the vocal aspects of sparrows\, particularly those useful for identification or that are particularly interesting\, such as the recent song change that is racing through populations of White-throated Sparrows. Apart from the classic field guide\, “field mark” approach to identification\, we will try to short-cut to holistic ways to identify sparrows by looking at the entire bird\, shapes\, impression\, and facial expression to aid in identification. We are lucky to have a really varied set of sparrows in California that remain with us through much of the winter or move south towards us during this season. Unlike the warblers where most of them are gone in winter\, the sparrows are often more abundant and diverse in winter in many spots in the continent\, so take this workshop to prepare for the Christmas Bird Counts and a winter full of sparrow watching!
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/winter-sparrows-workshop-2021-copy/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211101T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211101T200000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20211018T205908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211018T210135Z
UID:6512-1635789600-1635796800@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Winter Sparrows Workshop 2021 - Day 1
DESCRIPTION:Workshop Dates:\nNov 1 & 3\, 2021\n6:00pm – 8:00pm\n$100 total per person for both sessions \nThis workshop will be a basis to identify the wintering sparrows in California\, with a focus on the Bay Area. We hope to also give you a background to understand a bit about the biology\, evolutionary history\, migration\, and behavior of our sparrow fauna. With regards to identification\, we will give more details on the trickier species. Although this is not a bird sound workshop\, we will dabble in the vocal aspects of sparrows\, particularly those useful for identification or that are particularly interesting\, such as the recent song change that is racing through populations of White-throated Sparrows. Apart from the classic field guide\, “field mark” approach to identification\, we will try to short-cut to holistic ways to identify sparrows by looking at the entire bird\, shapes\, impression\, and facial expression to aid in identification. We are lucky to have a really varied set of sparrows in California that remain with us through much of the winter or move south towards us during this season. Unlike the warblers where most of them are gone in winter\, the sparrows are often more abundant and diverse in winter in many spots in the continent\, so take this workshop to prepare for the Christmas Bird Counts and a winter full of sparrow watching!
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/winter-sparrows-workshop-2021/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210909T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210909T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210817T214908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210817T215408Z
UID:6135-1631206800-1631212200@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Snowy Plover Conservation in the Bay Area
DESCRIPTION:Snowy Plover Conservation in the Bay Area: Successes and Challenges in a Shifting Landscape \nThe Western Snowy Plover (Charadrius nivosus nivosus) is a federally threatened\, ground-nesting shorebird species that breeds\, roosts\, and forages along the Pacific Coast from Southern Washington down to the tip of Baja California. While their typical habitat across the range is sandy beaches\, within the San Francisco Bay\, where up to 10% of the range-wide breeding population may be found\, Snowy Plovers instead utilize salt panne habitat found within former salt production ponds. Snowy Plovers in the Bay Area face unique challenges to recovery compared to other parts of the range due to their habitat type and location within a large urbanized area. For close to 20 years\, SFBBO has been working closely with federal\, state\, and local agencies to better understand these challenges and help Snowy Plovers meet regional recovery goals. This talk will focus on recent Snowy Plover conservation successes and challenges within the South Bay\, especially within Alameda County\, which annually holds the majority of Snowy Plover breeding in the Bay Area. \nBen Pearl is a science director at SFBBO who specializes in Snowy Plover and Least Tern research and conservation. Ben grew up in San Luis Obispo\, where he attained an early love for nature exploring the nearby tide pools and oak forests. He completed his B.S. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at U.C. Santa Cruz\, and first came to SFBBO while beginning his Masters at San Jose State University. For his Master’s thesis\, he examined how various factors affect plover foraging habitat selection during the winter in the South San Francisco Bay.  \nPlease register – the Zoom link will be sent in the confirmation. If you have any questions\, please contact Sirena Lao\, Environmental Education and Outreach Specialist\, at slao@sfbbo.org. \nThis program is possible thanks to SFBBO donors with additional support from Cargill. To help keep these events going\, we hope you’ll consider making a suggested donation of $5 or more if you can. Your tax-deductible donation helps us make these events available to the public and engage broad audiences with birds\, nature\, science\, and conservation. You may donate in increments of $5 below\, click here to donate a different amount\, or contact us for other ways to donate.
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/snowy-plover-conservation-in-the-bay-area/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210715T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210715T180000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210604T211512Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210604T211512Z
UID:5510-1626368400-1626372000@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Bird Photography 101
DESCRIPTION:Join San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory as wildlife and conservation photographer Sebastian Kennerknecht discusses the basics of bird photography\, including settings\, composition\, equipment\, how to get close to your subject\, ethics\, and his mental approach when photographing birds. \nSebastian Kennerknecht is a wildlife and conservation photographer with over fourteen years of experience visually covering wildlife and environmental issues internationally. He has produced high quality editorial photographs\, time-lapses\, videos\, and web content featured in and by the New York Times\, Washington Post\, BBC Wildlife\, Smithsonian\, The Economist\, Science\, and Conservation International\, among others. Sebastian graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Ecology and Evolution from the University of California – Santa Cruz\, won NANPA’s emerging photographer award\, and is an associate fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers.
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/bird-photography-101/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210603T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210603T180000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210511T230010Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210511T230010Z
UID:5441-1622739600-1622743200@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Life in a Salty Desert: How Song Sparrows Have Adapted to Life in the San Francisco Bay
DESCRIPTION:Sparrows are one of the most widespread bird species across North America—but the Song Sparrows of the San Francisco Bay aren’t just any ordinary backyard bird. These birds are the only Song Sparrows equipped to survive in the harsh\, inhospitable environment of the salt marsh. Each arm of the Bay is home to a different subspecies\, making this a hotspot for genetic diversity. Learn what makes these little brown birds different from all the rest\, and why it is so important to protect their native habitat. \nChloe Mikles is a first-year PhD student at the Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University. She has a B.S. in Animal Science from Cornell University\, where she worked with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology studying evolutionary biology in songbirds. She has studied birds in Kenya and Australia\, but the birds of the San Francisco Bay are the most fascinating to her. Chloe is passionate about sharing her love for the outdoors and research with others. Check out her website and follow her on Twitter. 
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/life-in-a-salty-desert-how-song-sparrows-have-adapted-to-life-in-the-san-francisco-bay/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210526T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210526T200000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210511T232742Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210511T232821Z
UID:5457-1622052000-1622059200@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Bird Identification Techniques Workshop 2021—Part 2
DESCRIPTION:There are many challenges to becoming a birder\, particularly if you want to know what everything you are looking at is! In other words\, you want to put a name to a face. The problem is that it does take a lot of practice; the good thing is that practice is birding\, and that is fun! One major challenge is that we focus so much of field marks that sometimes we do not see the forest for the trees. The real way we identify birds is by looking at them not as parts\, but as wholes\, not only in pattern and color\, but also in the way they move and behave. In addition\, we hardly ever focus on one of the most important features on a bird: the face! This workshop begins with getting you to understand how the brain identifies birds–the psychology and brain science behind bird identification. We use that to understand how we can best use our innate skills at recognition to apply this to birding. We also discuss tips and tricks that apply to certain groups of birds and facilitate their identification. We think about techniques that may work to speed up learning birds and also tips on how to get better at bird identification even when you are not out in the field on a birding trip. Your computer can even be a learning tool! This will be a holistic\, multi-faceted workshop on bird identification. I guarantee to you that it will not be like any birding how-to classes you have attended before. I am hoping you will come out of it with a brand-new outlook on bird identification\, and one that will hopefully take away some of the frustration felt in trying to identify birds yourself! \nAlvaro Jaramillo is an internationally known ornithologist and expert. Alvaro has a B.S. in Zoology and an M.S. in Ecology and Evolution from the University of Toronto\, and also conducted research at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver\, British Columbia. An expert on the birds of California and North America\, he wrote the American Birding Association Field Guide to Birds of California and New World Blackbirds. He is also an authority on the birds of Chile\, authoring Birds of Chile (2003)\, collaborating on Chile’s Important Bird Areas program\, and helping to identify a new bird species there\, Oceanites pincoyae (Pincoya Storm-Petrel). An author and contributor to numerous field guides and popular publications\, Alvaro’s passion is not only to understand the biology and natural history of birds\, but to enrich other’s enjoyment of birds and further avian conservation and he leads birding trips throughout the world with his company\, Alvaro’s Adventures. 
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/bird-identification-techniques-workshop-2021-copy/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding,Birding Classes
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210524T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210524T200000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210511T230820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210511T232718Z
UID:5444-1621879200-1621886400@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Bird Identification Techniques Workshop 2021—Part 1
DESCRIPTION:There are many challenges to becoming a birder\, particularly if you want to know what everything you are looking at is! In other words\, you want to put a name to a face. The problem is that it does take a lot of practice; the good thing is that practice is birding\, and that is fun! One major challenge is that we focus so much of field marks that sometimes we do not see the forest for the trees. The real way we identify birds is by looking at them not as parts\, but as wholes\, not only in pattern and color\, but also in the way they move and behave. In addition\, we hardly ever focus on one of the most important features on a bird: the face! This workshop begins with getting you to understand how the brain identifies birds–the psychology and brain science behind bird identification. We use that to understand how we can best use our innate skills at recognition to apply this to birding. We also discuss tips and tricks that apply to certain groups of birds and facilitate their identification. We think about techniques that may work to speed up learning birds and also tips on how to get better at bird identification even when you are not out in the field on a birding trip. Your computer can even be a learning tool! This will be a holistic\, multi-faceted workshop on bird identification. I guarantee to you that it will not be like any birding how-to classes you have attended before. I am hoping you will come out of it with a brand-new outlook on bird identification\, and one that will hopefully take away some of the frustration felt in trying to identify birds yourself! \nAlvaro Jaramillo is an internationally known ornithologist and expert. Alvaro has a B.S. in Zoology and an M.S. in Ecology and Evolution from the University of Toronto\, and also conducted research at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver\, British Columbia. An expert on the birds of California and North America\, he wrote the American Birding Association Field Guide to Birds of California and New World Blackbirds. He is also an authority on the birds of Chile\, authoring Birds of Chile (2003)\, collaborating on Chile’s Important Bird Areas program\, and helping to identify a new bird species there\, Oceanites pincoyae (Pincoya Storm-Petrel). An author and contributor to numerous field guides and popular publications\, Alvaro’s passion is not only to understand the biology and natural history of birds\, but to enrich other’s enjoyment of birds and further avian conservation and he leads birding trips throughout the world with his company\, Alvaro’s Adventures. 
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/bird-identification-techniques-workshop-2021/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding,Birding Classes
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210520T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210520T180000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210511T215745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210511T224922Z
UID:5435-1621530000-1621533600@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Blackbirds—A Journey Through the Americas
DESCRIPTION:The Icteridae are the blackbirds\, but they include many colorful species such as the orioles and meadowlarks as well as the all-black species\, such as cowbirds and grackles. Some of the tropical species\, such as the oropendolas are downright amazing-looking and sounding birds. This group of birds is only found in the Americas and they are amongst our most interesting of landbirds\, behavior\, mating strategies\, and breeding biology is more diverse than in any other group of songbirds in our continent. This talk is to introduce people to the awesomely interesting group of birds. After this talk\, you won’t walk by a Brewer’s Blackbird or Red-winged Blackbird without thinking about how much more complex they are than a sparrow or a warbler. Our quest to see the diversity of the blackbirds will also take us to some interesting parts of the American continent and the Caribbean. \nAlvaro Jaramillo is an Affiliated Senior Biologist with SFBBO and the owner of Alvaro’s Adventures where he leads workshops and birding trips throughout the world. He has a B.S. in Zoology and an M.S. in Ecology and Evolution from the University of Toronto\, and also conducted research at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver\, British Columbia. He is an author and contributor to numerous field guides and popular publications\, including the American Birding Association Field Guide to Birds of California and New World Blackbirds. 
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/blackbirds-a-journey-through-the-americas/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210408T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210408T180000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210325T180126Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210325T180126Z
UID:5322-1617901200-1617904800@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Singing Hummingbird Feathers and the Quiet Flight of Owls (and Other Birds)
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Chris Clark will present ongoing research in his lab\, starting with work on how hummingbirds make sounds with their tail feathers during courtship displays. Then he will shift to ongoing research he is conducting on why owls have evolved to fly quietly. \nDr. Clark grew up in Seattle where he started birdwatching at age 15. After graduating from Washington State University with a degree in Zoology\, he received his Ph.D. at UC Berkeley in 2009. He then worked in the Peabody Museum at Yale University before starting a faculty position in the Evolution\, Ecology and Organismal Biology department at UC Riverside. \nThis talk is recommended for high school and up. Please register – the Zoom meeting link will be sent in the confirmation. If you have trouble registering or have any questions\, please contact Sirena Lao\, Environmental Education and Outreach Specialist\, at slao@sfbbo.org. \nThis program is possible thanks to the support of SFBBO donors. To help keep these events going\, we hope you’ll consider making a suggested donation of $5 or more if you can. Your tax-deductible donation helps us make these events available to the public and engage broad audiences with birds\, nature\, science\, and conservation. You may donate in increments of $5 below or click here to donate a different amount.
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/singing-hummingbird-feathers-and-the-quiet-flight-of-owls-and-other-birds/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210325T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210325T180000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210212T201609Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210325T174952Z
UID:5129-1616689800-1616695200@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Reconsider the Coot—Crazy Reproductive Antics of a Common Marsh Denizen
DESCRIPTION:Coots are often overlooked by birders because they are so common. Dr. Bruce Lyon has been studying the reproductive antics of American coots for the past two decades and has discovered that there is far more to this bird than meets the eye. He will highlight some of his discoveries about the parental and reproductive strategies of coots and answer questions such as: Why do some coot females lay their eggs in the nests of other coot females? What do the birds that receive these unwanted foster eggs do? Coots are just as bizarre when it comes to raising their own kids\, and there are many puzzling features of coot parental care behavior. For example\, why do coots lay far more eggs than they can normally raise and why do they beat up their kids so much? And\, finally\, why are baby coots born with such a ridiculously fluorescent orange plumage? \nIn addition\, because Dr. Lyon’s coot research was done in a wild part of central British Columbia\, he will briefly highlight a few of the special birds encountered at the study site. Finally\, he’ll discuss how the research program is expanding to ask similar questions in a mysterious coot in the High Andes of Argentina. \nBruce Lyon is a professor of Evolutionary Ecology at the University of California\, Santa Cruz. His research focuses on the evolution of reproductive strategies and mating behavior of birds. His long-term research on the adaptive basis of brood parasitism in American coots has sought to understand why parasitism within species evolves and how the behavior influences other aspects of social behavior. Dr. Lyon has also investigated the evolution of ornamental plumage signals in a variety of species\, including lark buntings\, lazuli buntings and the evolution of ornamental offspring plumage in the newly hatched chicks of American coots. Most recently\, he has conducted a decade long investigation into the winter social lives of migrant golden-crowned sparrows that spent their winters on the Arboretum of the University of California\, Santa Cruz. \nPlease register – the Zoom meeting link will be sent in the confirmation. If you have trouble registering or have any questions\, please contact Sirena Lao\, Environmental Education and Outreach Specialist\, at slao@sfbbo.org.
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/reconsider-the-coot-crazy-reproductive-antics-of-a-common-marsh-denizen/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210311T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210311T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210212T201005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210212T201005Z
UID:5123-1615482000-1615487400@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:A Walk Through a Bay Area Birder’s Garden
DESCRIPTION:Join Barbara Coll as she walks through her garden live! As she walks around her yard\, she will point out the feeders\, plants\, and water elements that attract the 63 species she has recorded in 30+ years of living in Menlo Park on the San Francisquito Creek. She will also discuss feeder/birdbath maintenance\, the current Pine Siskin irruption and subsequent Salmonella outbreak\, seed types\, and which plants the birds love. Barbara will share many videos and photos of the birds that she sees from her home windows. She is also a fanatic eBird user and will introduce you to the Yard tracking feature. \nBarbara Coll is a regular volunteer with SFBBO. She took her birding to a new level a few years ago by starting to photograph the birds she sees. When she retired from the insanity of Silicon Valley and the digital marketing world\, she found birding a wonderful mix of nature\, challenge and statistics. Barb’s website with all her photography can be found at www.barbsbirds.me. \nThis event will be fun\, casual\, and family-friendly! Please register – the Zoom meeting link will be sent in the confirmation. If you have trouble registering or have any questions\, please contact Sirena Lao\, Environmental Education and Outreach Specialist\, at slao@sfbbo.org.
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/a-walk-through-a-bay-area-birders-garden/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210225T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210225T183000
DTSTAMP:20260514T122634
CREATED:20210212T200213Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210212T200213Z
UID:5116-1614272400-1614277800@mtdiablobirds.org
SUMMARY:Almaden Lake - Evolution of the Environment and How Birds Adapt
DESCRIPTION:Through SFBBO’s Colonial Waterbird Program\, our biologists and community science volunteers have monitored populations of colony nesting waterbirds during the breeding season at more than 70 sites throughout the Bay Area. Join us to hear Larry Manning\, who has been a colonial waterbird monitoring volunteer for nearly 20 years\, as he discusses the history of Almaden Lake in San Jose and the birds that nest there. \nLarry Manning was introduced to birding about 40 years ago by Lou Young\, who was his boss at NASA Ames Research Center and an SFBBO board member. Lou and his wife Jean and Larry and his wife Judie participated in a lot of the SFBBO Fall Birding Challenges. As Larry started thinking about retirement\, he decided that he wanted to be involved is environmental conservation activities and started doing easement monitoring and trail patrol for Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District\, invasive species eradication for Peninsula Open Space Trust\, and Snowy Plover monitoring for San Mateo County Parks at Kelly Beach in Half Moon Bay. He started with SFBBO about 20 years ago doing nesting surveys in the tidal marshes behind Moffett Field and Snowy Plover surveys in the San Mateo Bridge area.  About 18 years ago he moved his participation to monitoring the nesting site at Almaden Lake and then added monitoring at the Llagas Creek site in Morgan Hill and the Los Gatos Creek Park. He has also participated in the SFBBO Birds in your Neighborhood Program and given presentations to the national Well Connected Program. \nThis program is family-friendly. Please register – the Zoom meeting link will be sent in the confirmation. If you have trouble registering or have any questions\, please contact Sirena Lao\, Environmental Education and Outreach Specialist\, at slao@sfbbo.org.
URL:https://mtdiablobirds.org/event/almaden-lake-evolution-of-the-environment-and-how-birds-adapt/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Birding
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR