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Unread 01-01-2015, 12:51 PM   #1
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Destry,
Thanks for alerting me to this book. Very informative and sad story. After reading it and visiting the Passanger pigeon web page I vetured about 45 miles south to a place listed on the sight - the Fairbanks Museum in St. johnsbury,Vt. where the site listedthey had a Passanger sample on display. I wanted to see it and kind of pay my respects. I found a well preserved and well presented pair of each sex layed out next to a similar exhibit of Carolina Parrakeets. Well worth the trip.
Later in the day I had a reception elsewhere to go to and there I got talking about the day. I was surprised and bummed that about half the folks I mentioned this to had not heard of the story of this bird. I hope mr Greenburg has great success in getting his words out there to others
Regards
Eric
By the way the research and explanations associated with your picture were a great plus to the story!
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Unread 01-01-2015, 08:42 PM   #2
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I believe that I have read in the past that the farmers of the day would turn their pigs loose in the hardwoods to feed on the mast. They hated the competition for feed created by the Passenger pigeons. Hence at night they burned the birds in their roost trees when they found them.
I've raised Homing pigeons many years for training the pointing dogs and had weasels enter the coop at night killing every single bird without one leaving the coop. If the passengers were at all like the homers, they would sit tight in a burning tree before flying out into the darkness.
If true, that type of mass killing would surely put a hurt on any species.
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Unread 01-03-2015, 10:18 AM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Eric Grims View Post
Later in the day I had a reception elsewhere to go to and there I got talking about the day. I was surprised and bummed that about half the folks I mentioned this to had not heard of the story of this bird.
Unfortunately, so many tree hungers "educate" themselves by LISTENING to opinions and trumped up statistics from others. very few would ever take the time to research and seek data to educate themselves independently as Eric did. I find that few are educated beyond the attitude that all hunting is bad.
These are the same elitists that look at us hunters with contempt.

Educated, sane conversations, apparently like Eric had at the reception, will hopefully progress some individuals to look further into the conservation that hunters provide through significant financial support, and habitat restoration and conservation. We should all take the time to intelligently engage the sane tree hungers to educate them further.

Sorry for preaching to the choir here, but living in the suburbs of Atlanta I am constantly reminded how many people actually think hunting in any form should be banned forever.... Along with all guns. Ruffed Grouse hunting in Georgia is almost non existent now that the tree huggers successfully banned all logging in our national forest of 867,000 acres back in the 90's.
The over hunting of the Passenger Pigeon is a disgrace, but I have to believe the extinction had more to do with habitat destruction.


Kudos Eric for taking the time.

Tom
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