geonuc wrote:Thanks for the update!
Rommie wrote:Hi Thump, thanks for checking in! I figured you were too busy enjoying yourself in retirement to do so, and am happy to see I'm right.
Re: birding, hilarious that that's my pandemic hobby too (well and hiking before the snow hit, and buying a house which is totally a new hobby one takes on). Heading down to South America to find some new ones sounds amazing!
Thumper wrote:We did drive through and make two brief stops at Death Valley (but only to pee). It looked like most of the place was essentially shut down. What I found remarkable was summit day. We woke up at 3:30am to start our ascent. It was probably 38 degrees at 12,000 feet. A few hours later, after traversing some snow, we were at the summit at 14,505 ft, and probably 40-45 degrees. After descending 7000 ft we got in the car and a few hours later were were at -252 feet, and 127 degrees. Quite a day.
Thumper wrote:They call Whitney a "walk up."
Yeah, dream on...
Thumper wrote:Rommie wrote:Hi Thump, thanks for checking in! I figured you were too busy enjoying yourself in retirement to do so, and am happy to see I'm right.
Re: birding, hilarious that that's my pandemic hobby too (well and hiking before the snow hit, and buying a house which is totally a new hobby one takes on). Heading down to South America to find some new ones sounds amazing!
Ha as fun is birding is, Mrs. T calls me an "angry birder" for my propensity to get frustrated when I cannot positively identify a new one. Pete is a prolific birder and I brought this up with him. I will be no help in identifying calls or most of the exotic birds of Ecuador. Last year he topped 1100 species to his "life list." If I worked hard, I could probably come up with a hundred. I'm sure I've seen birds in the past that I didn't positively identify, but that doesn't really count.
Yeah, birding should be fun. We got to meet with Pete and his wife recently and we talked about this. I told him I'm looking forward to the trip and having fun. But I'm not going to obsess about identifying as many birds as possible. He totally agreed. I'm not exactly sure where we are going. He had a couple of options and laid out the pros and cons. We both agreed on Option 2... I'm just not sure what/where that is. I think it's Eastern Ecuador. He's working on the logistics now. He just booked flights, at least I just paid him for airline tickets.Rommie wrote:Thumper wrote:Rommie wrote:Hi Thump, thanks for checking in! I figured you were too busy enjoying yourself in retirement to do so, and am happy to see I'm right.
Re: birding, hilarious that that's my pandemic hobby too (well and hiking before the snow hit, and buying a house which is totally a new hobby one takes on). Heading down to South America to find some new ones sounds amazing!
Ha as fun is birding is, Mrs. T calls me an "angry birder" for my propensity to get frustrated when I cannot positively identify a new one. Pete is a prolific birder and I brought this up with him. I will be no help in identifying calls or most of the exotic birds of Ecuador. Last year he topped 1100 species to his "life list." If I worked hard, I could probably come up with a hundred. I'm sure I've seen birds in the past that I didn't positively identify, but that doesn't really count.
So, Thumper, assuming you come back sometime, where were you going to go birding in Ecuador?
Turns out this gal is heading there next month for her honeymoon, a lodge in the Yasuni National Park and the Galapagos, because it's stupid cheap and everyone in those areas is already fully vaccinated (and you need very fancy travel insurance to visit the Galapagos already). I am not going out of my way to do serious birding on my honeymoon, but suspect I'll get a healthy number for the list anyway.
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