I did manage to get my official (old) ABA area list to over 700, just before the area was expanded to include Hawaii. This normally would be a huge accomplishment that I would celebrate, except that I feel like I should have hit this milestone about 10 or 15 years ago (My ABA #600 was Kirtland's Warbler way back in 1997). I guess I just haven't traveled as much this last decade as I did in the past. Oh well! I'm an official ABA 700 club member now, when all the big boys are now in up in the 900s!
I also got to bird in Spain, The Netherlands, and Mexico this year. These were all work trips, with a little bit of designated birding, mostly on my own.
All in all, I added 4 birds to my ABA area list (Cassia Crossbill, White-winged Tern, Common Greenshank, and Corn Crake).
I was able to add 23 additional birds to my World list--8 in Mexico and 13 in an eight hour layover in Madrid.
Here are my Top 10 favorites for the year:
10) Eurasian Penduline Tit
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9) Spotless Starling
OK, its just a starling without spots. No big deal. But growing up prejudiced against starlings in the US, it was fun to start seeing other starling species. I never did see one close enough to get a good photo. And there really isn't much to see. But it was fun to see anyway!
8) Spanish Sparrow
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7) Cassia Crossbill
I've been a big fan of the crypto-species crossbills ever since learning about their diversity back in the early 1990s. When this form was declared a good species by the AOS this summer, and learning that I had just lost Thayer's Gull to lumping with Iceland Gull, I made a detour up into the hills of southern Idaho to search for this bird on my way from Utah up to Oregon this summer. I wasn't able to get very satisfying looks, but had at least one flyover calling this call type. I look forward to going back up to this beautiful area again (I saw four moose up there in just over an hour) and getting better looks someday. Looking for new birds takes you to great places you'd otherwise maybe never visit.
6) Eurasian Griffin
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5) White-winged Tern
I moved to the East Coast for the first time in 1994, when this bird was almost annual in the DelMarVa area, so it was on the top of my most wanted birds list. Then it pretty much stopped showing up. I was out West this summer when one showed up in western PA, then one showed up during the Big Sit at Tinicum NWR 10 minutes from my house. I was there early the next morning and got to watch it for 20 minutes or so before torrential rains set in and the bird disappeared, never to be seen again. Unfortunately, it was too far away for photos, but great to watch as it patrolled back and forth along the back edge of the main impoundment on the refuge. Super bonus to this bird for being my official ABA Bird #700!
4) Gray Silky-flycatcher
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3) Eurasian Hoopoe
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2) Corn Crake
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1) Smew
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