[UPDATE: Here's a link to a great site about birding and other wildlife in Beijing and beyond: https://birdingbeijing.com.]
When I taught a masters of public administration class in Beijing in 2004, I paid close attention to the birds I saw. We had a fifth floor walk up apartment in the faculty housing on campus and so we had a treetop view from our apartment. The most prominent bird at the time was an azure magpie.
But I was surprised to learn that most of my students were unaware of the birds on campus. They simply didn't see them on campus. They were surprised that there were birds and that their American professor was interested in them.
I searched bookstores for birding guides. I identified birds by taking pictures and sending them to a birder friend in Anchorage who sent them to her birder friend in Japan who would identify the birds and then I could google them to confirm.
Eventually a student took me to the biggest bookstore in Beijing - about five stories - and we found a birding book published by, I think, the World Wildlife Association. I'd even look straight up and sometimes see flocks of birds way, way up high above Beijing.
So when Emily retweeted this video, I was excited. The Chinese government has stopped reclamation projects along the Yellow Sea where migratory birds stop on their migration path.
This post is for my students in Beijing. Ben (Frank), I hope you'll pass the video along to your old classmates.
There is a variety of people speaking here - from China, from Cornell University, from New Zealand, and from Anchorage.
Thanks to all these folks for making this happen. (This video is dated May 23, 2021)
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