Thought this might be of interest to my Minnesota birding friends.

Madeleine Linck
Rehoboth, Mass (formerly Medina, MN)

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Barbara Volkle <barb...@theworld.com>
Date: Tue, Mar 17, 2020, 12:02 PM
Subject: [MASSBIRD] COVID-19 and birding
To: massbird <massb...@theworld.com>


Thanks to Peter Crosson for this timely and informative post.


Barbara Volkle
Northborough, MA
barb...@theworld.com

*


From: Peter Crosson <capecodbir...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 17 Mar 2020 11:36:12 -0400
Subject: COVID-19 and birding

Hi everyone,

So I know this is somewhat off-topic (and you are probably all sick of
reading about COVID-19), so admin please delete if inappropriate. But in
my non-birding day job I'm a physician, bracing for the ramping up of
COVID cases and the horrifying specter of lives lost to this disease.
It's become abundantly clear that this is a disease that needs to be
beaten on the public health front, not at the bedside. As a member of a
wonderful, vibrant birding community, with many birders "of a certain
age". I feel the need to speak up a bit about our responsibilities to
each other and to the country as a whole.

As we've all heard, social distancing is key, and birding can be a
wonderful form of social distancing. However, it's not social distancing
when you are riding in the car with other birders who don't live with
you. It's not social distancing when you are clustering in groups, and
certainly not when you are sharing optics such as scopes. Anyone of us
can be exposed to the virus through asymptomatic friends, so to restrict
yourself to hanging out with people who have no symptoms is not enough.
Since this began, I have gone birding once with another person. We met
at the site, having come in separate cars. We kept 6 feet distance
between us at all times, and did not share any optics. If you are not
following procedures like that, you're not social distancing. It's also
obviously important at more popular sites to avoid touching handrails
that other people could be touching, as the virus can live on surfaces
for up to three to five days. Frequent handwashing and use of at least
60% alcohol-based hand sanitizer is also crucial.

It discourages me when I look on eBird and see multiple people reporting
the same group checklist from a site. Maybe I am wrong, and they are all
arriving in separate cars and keeping distance between themselves, but I
doubt that's the case. We are at a tipping point in this crisis, and as
an educated and caring group we need to commit to doing everything we
can to stop COVID-19. If we lose one member of our birding community
because of this virus, it will be a tragedy. Make no mistake, if we do
not change our behavior, that is near certain.

I am happy to answer anyone's questions to the best of my ability. I'm
in frequent contact with Cape Cod Healthcare's COVID-19 response team,
keeping up with all of the latest on testing and management of cases.
Please don't hesitate to reach out to me anytime. I'm also on FB and can
be messaged there.

Thank you for reading,

Peter Crosson, MD
West Barnstable, MA
capecodbir...@gmail.com

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