June 2, 2015, Summer Lake, Oregon 鈥 When I tell people I鈥檓 from Oregon, they usually picture a green, wet place covered by trees鈥攚hich is an excellent description of western Oregon, where most people live (including me). But the eastern half of the state is completely different: It鈥檚 a wide, open desert.
Eastern Oregon is characterized by sagebrush, rimrock, pine flats, and cowboys鈥攕traight out of a Zane Grey or Louis L鈥橝mour novel. Road signs here call it the 鈥淥regon Outback,鈥 and the description is appropriate; the landscape is more similar to central Australia than the drippy Pacific Northwest rainforest. I love birding in eastern Oregon鈥攊t鈥檚 a totally wild experience. As I write this, a pack of coyotes is howling outside the window.
My dad and I spent the day near Summer Lake, an alkali flat in basin-and-range territory. The highlight for me was a pair of new owls: A family of Long-eared Owls which I discovered in a remote stand of juniper trees, and a Short-eared Owl which emerged at dusk to hunt the marshes at Summer Lake. With the Great Grays yesterday and a roosting Great Horned this afternoon, it鈥檚 been a good run of owls lately!
When we checked in to our room this evening, I mentioned my adventures to the woman at the Summer Lake Inn. 鈥淵ou mean like that movie, 'The Big Year鈥?鈥 she asked. 鈥淲ell, yes,鈥 I replied, 鈥渆xcept worldwide.鈥 鈥淲ow, everybody鈥檚 seen that movie!鈥 she said. 鈥淣ice!鈥
I鈥檝e heard similar reactions many times this year, even from non-birders. I guess 鈥淭he Big Year鈥 (a recent film about birders starring Jack Black, Owen Wilson, and Steve Martin) has really affected the world鈥檚 general impression of birders鈥攆or better or worse . . .
New birds today: 12
Year list: 2725
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