While you are on the site, in your browser find and click "Add to Home Screen" A CGN beaver app icon will then be created to your phone that is directly link to the site.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Indeed, the range of Long-billed Curlew is well south of the Yukon (southern BC & Alberta, now quite common in central BC) but I think those birds are Whimbrels, as Longwalker suggested. They seem to have a dark eye-line and crown, suggesting a 'stripey' head, which is generally absent from the more plain-headed Long-billed Curlew.
guilty as charged... birder / wildlife biologist / ornithologist / hunter. I always keep a list of birds seen during my hunting excursions. Eventually I'll put them in 'ebird' so they'll be more useful to the general birding & scientific community
Interesting combination, and one that many people who understand neither interest can't seem to grasp. Tell your hunting buddies that you are a "birdwatcher" and most of them roll their eyes and look at you as though you had revealed you were a closet vegan. Mention to other birders that you also hunt, and you will often be treated like a pedophile.
Of course, it can sometimes be handy to have an ace up your sleeve to offend almost anyone who pisses you off!
The skills and interests of birders and hunters are complimentary. Actually most of my hunting buddies are also birders, and the other way around. A natural combination in my experience. The best hunters are also "naturalists" and the best naturalists are hunters.
I agree that they certainly SHOULD be, and you're lucky if it works out that way. I grew up close to Point Pelee, a major birders' mecca in Ontario, and there was a lot of conflict between the two groups.
Try checking out one of the largely-British birding websites and see how you are received as a hunter...those people are the cutting edge of rabid anti-hunting mentality.