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The Big Year Podcast

Robert Baumander
The Big Year Podcast
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  • Season 3, Episode 2: Natasza Fontaine and Robert Gundy Florida Big Year and Artist of the
    Happy Podcast day, one and all!  Welcome to back to The Big Year Podcast.  Thank you once again for joining me.   It’s April 15, 2025 and spring migration is well underway here in southwestern Ontario.  It’s actually a bit of a miracle that I finished this episode on time because the last 2 weeks have been very busy for me and my fellow birders.  It started with a Western Grebe in Port Credit, a Black-headed Gull, at Port Colborne, followed by a Long-billed Dowitcher right here in Brant County.  The fun continued with over 50 American White Pelicans at Holiday Beach and a female Harlequin Duck down in Chatham-Kent.  I also go my first Ruffed Grouse and Common Loon for Brant County, but the real excitement was the chase for a Crested Caracara in Essex County, not too far from the Ontario/Michigan boarder, on April 7.   Dozens of birders flocked to the small town of Amherstburg for a once in a lifetime look at this large falcon that lost its way.  This bird should have been in Texas, and after a long day of searching seemed to have returned home.  I had then tried for a Yellow-headed Blackbird back in Chatham, but near blizzard conditions sent me home to contemplate missed opportunities.  However, on Wednesday the weather was nice again, so I decided to go back and look for the Yellow-headed Blackbird.  To my complete surprise, before I even arrived at McGeachy Pond, I was alerted to the return of the caracara, not in Amherstburg, but right there in Chatham, only 15 minutes from where I was parked at the side of the road.   Talk about being in the right place at the right time.  I drove, I saw, I counted a new Canada Lifer!  And I got to spend time with some of my favourite birding friends, including Kelly Sue, who you met on season one of the podcast.  She lived only 5 minutes away.  And yesterday we had another rare bird party as dozens of us migrated to Stoney Creek for a rare spring sighting of a Loggerhead Shrike.  And all through that I was trying to find time to finish this podcast.  Not only that, it’s the onset of allergy season and my head feels like it’s full of teddy bear stuffing.  Today’s episode features Robert Gundy and Natasza Fontaine.  Robert is a biologist and Natasza was the 2024 ABA Bird of the Year Artist, painting the Golden-winged Warbler.  And they both completed a record setting (Covid)Florida Big Year in 2020.   
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  • Season 3, Episode 1: Jean Iron
    Yes, The Big Year Podcast is back. And after a long, cold, snowy winter, the temperatures are finally on the rise and the birds are finally on migration. It’s March 15, 2025 as I sit down to write this, I’m looking out my front window, here Brantford, Ontario to bright blue skies and hearing Northern Cardinals in full song, a sure sign of spring and the migration season to come. I hope you are all in the spring migration spirit, shedding those layers and putting on your fancy spring birding plumage.  As for me, I just switch from fleece lined cargo pants to regular cargo pants, and of course, my biggest plumage change is from a winter fur fedora to a straw, summer fedora. So, welcome to the first episode of Season 3.  Being an Ontario birder myself, I figured there’s no better place to start than with one of Ontario's most respected birders, Jean Iron. Many of you have met Jean at a hawk watch at Lynn shores in the fall, out at Niagara, looking for gulls in the winter or at Point Peel National Park in the spring. You may have met her, but now you'll get a chance to know her. I first ran into Jean early in January 2012 on one of my first rare bird chases to see a King Eider, and she taught me a valuable lesson that I have taken to heart ever since, and it was a lesson she also learned early in her birding life. Thanks for taking the time come visit and enjoy the show.   Oh, while you’re here, I'd like to ask you to please check out my new book, “Have you a Seagull?” on Apple Books, for C$4.99 https://books.apple.com/us/book/have-you-seen-a-seagull/id6742723612 It's a great book to read with your kids teach them about the wide variety of birds many of us call “seagulls,” and perhaps spark their journey into birding. As of this recording, it's only available on Apple books, but will be available on other digital platforms soon and hopefully in print before too long.  50% of all digital sales will go to bird conservation efforts, so, if not for me, get it for the birds and for the next generation of birders. Thanks again.  
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  • Season 2, Episode 9: The Season Finale
    It is December of 2024 and we’ve come to the end of another season of The Big Year Podcast.  Welcome one and all as we look back on another year of birding or are looking forward to next year and possibly your own Big Year.  If so, let me know and we can have a chat, sometime.  I love to hear your stories, big or small.   Today, we have a mixed bag of birding guests.  Over the course of 2024 I've recorded a few short conversation with birders I’ve met during my travels and I’ll have a preview of some of the guests we will be meeting early in Season 3.  But before we get to that… One birder's story we have yet to really get into, is today’s guest.  I’ve been wanting to talk to him and let him tell his story in a bit more detail ever since I began this podcast, but he’s been busy birding and doing his own podcast and it’s been tough to get him to commit chatting with us.  Part of the reason it’s been so hard is he’s me.  Yes, today I get to talk to me, and find out a bit more about why he, I mean me, got into birding and learn little more about his, I mean my, Big Years.  Later in the show we'll meet with Gavin from Alberta who recently passed 400 species for 2024, Jean Iron, one of Ontario's most illustrious birders, who taught me an important lesson way back in January 2012, and Robert and Natasha Fontaine, who did a Florida Big Year not too long ago.  Natasha, has her own claim to fame, beyond Big Year Birding.  Listen on to find out more. As always, I hope you enjoy and thanks to each and every one of you out there in Listening Land.  Thanks for your support and until March of 2025, enjoy your birding wherever you are.  Unless you're in Australia, then have a great summer. Thanks again, and hear me next year.
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  • Season 2, Episode 8: Josh Gant, 2020 Ocean County, NJ Big Year
    Well, it's Friday, November 7, 2024. I'm now five weeks late for my latest podcast, this episode with Joshua Gant, which was supposed to have appeared on October 1st. Well, I got busy in October, actually in September as well, and I started a project that kept me pretty busy. Not only was I building a set of cat shelves in the living room for the cats to play on this winter, I was building a dream project of mine. I was born in 1960, and in 1966, the TV show Star Trek appeared, and by the time I was about 13 or 14, I was getting into woodworking, and I loved building the props from Star Trek.  I used Lego and wood and tape and markers to make my own phaser and communicator, and kind of destroyed my brothers clock radio to get the parts I needed. So, yeah, that was a different time. I was not a birder way back then, but I was an obsessive compulsive, though I didn't know that at the time, and I decided at that point that I was going to make the ultimate prop from Star Trek, the command chair that Captain Kirk sat in. Well, as a 13 year old with crappy tools from Canadian tire and a bunch of plywood and other scraps of wood that I found behind apartment buildings and things like that, I tried to make one. I didn't get very far. It fell apart before it even got started. Well, fast forward to 2024 and as a woodworker, who builds a lot of my own furniture, I decided it was time to build my own chair. So that's what I've been doing the last six weeks.  debuted it on Halloween, and it was a success, and now it's in my recroom as my TV chair, so woo hoo for me, but as far as my podcast is concerned, yeah, I kind of dropped the ball on that. So, the last few days, I've been working feverishly to finish the podcast, which I did yesterday, and the episode is finally ready. Josh Gant is a birder from Tom's River, New Jersey, and he did an Ocean County Big Year in 2020. So thank you for your patience and your continued support of my little show.  I appreciate everything that people say to me when I meet them in the field. It's always exciting to know that I put something out there that people enjoy - all three of you 😏 - Thank you very much.
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  • Season 2 Episode 7: Danny Bernard and his Accidental Michigan Big Year
    Well, it’s September 1, 2024, the Dog Days of Birding are behind us and fall migration is underway, signalling the end of the summer breeding season and birds booking their flights south for the winter.  Happily for birders, there are no direct flights from the breeding grounds in the north to the wintering grounds in the south, which means we are graced by the presence of southern migrants.  When the wind is just right, shorebirds and seabirds pass through, many of them stopping to refuel at various mudflats. rivers, lakes and ponds, where they fill their bellies with enough food to get them through the next stage of their journey. Some birds, like jaegers and southern migrating gulls, like the Sabine’s, don’t always stop as they pass over the lake.  In that case, birders who want to count such birds as Long-tailed Jaeger, Parasitic Jaeger or any other rarity that happens to be blown off course, head to the beaches and cliff edges for the annual lake and sea watches. This is especially important if you’re doing a Big Year.  In the case of today’s guest, and myself in 2022, we were lake watching on opposite sides of Lake Huron.  Danny Bernard was looking for jaegers and other rarities for his Michigan State Big Year and I was scanning the waters for a Long-tailed Jaeger to complete my jaeger trifecta for my Canada Big Year,(Long-tailed, Parasitic and Pomarine).  Luckily for me, birders like Danny were communicating from the US side whenever they had a sighting and that helped me get to see my only Long-tailed Jaeger of the year.  I should have had them up in The Yukon in the summer, but that’s another story, for another show.  Suffice it to say, we both got our bird and celebrated in style.  Pie for Danny and a steak dinner for me.  Though we didn’t know it, we were destined to cross paths again, this time, instead of across the lake, we met over the internet.   And as we were talking about alternative Big Years, that got both of us thinking. There are so many ways to do a Big Year.  Who says it has to be a state or county or even start on January 1st?  Well, the record keepers for the ABA area might have a thing or two to say about it, if you want an official title, but what the heck.  If you want your Big Year to start on your birthday, go for it, or perhaps your wedding anniversary.  In that case, be prepared for it to be your last anniversary.  Unless, of course, your spouse is as rabid a Big Year birder as you, in that case, have at it.  More and more, couples or brothers or even best friends are teaming up to do Big Years.  4 eyes and ears are better than two of each, and you get to split the driving and hotels bills.  Which reminds me that a future episode will feature local Brant County birders Ellen and Jerry Horak, who as of this date, are 3/4 of the way through their Ontario Big Year.  In 2023 they did a Brant county Big Year, and  in 2025 will be heading out across the country together to see if they can count over 400 species during their Canada Big Year.  I’ll look forward to hearing how easy or perhaps hard it is to bird everywhere, every day together.  So, since I need to wrap up this introduction, without further blather from me, let’s log into our Teams meeting and check in with Danny Bernard and his record breaking 2022 Michigan Big Year.
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About The Big Year Podcast

Welcome to the Big Year Podcast, a show devoted to birders who do Big Years. A Big Year is a 365 day commitment to see as many birds as possible in a defined area, including the ABA Area, states, provinces or counties in the US and Canada.
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