Category Archives: Miscellanea

More About Jupiterians and the Fungi Which They Overlight . by Alice B. Clagett *

More About Jupiterians and the Fungi Which They Overlight

Image: “Mycorrhizal fungi are in symbiotic relationship with plants. The relationship is usually mutualistic, the fungus providing the plant with water and minerals from the soil and the plants providing the fungus with photosynthesis products. Some fungi are however parasitic, taking products from the plant without providing benefits. Conversely, some mixotrophic or parasitic plants connect with mycorrhizal fungi as a way to obtain photosynthesis products from other plants. Finally, saprotrophic (or saprophytic) fungi live on dead organic matter without establishing a symbiosis with plants,” by Charlotte Roy, Salsero 35, Nefronus, 6 August 2020, in Wikimedia Commons … https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mycorrhizal_network.svg … CC BY-SA 4.0 International

Image: “Mycorrhizal fungi are in symbiotic relationship with plants. The relationship is usually mutualistic, the fungus providing the plant with water and minerals from the soil and the plants providing the fungus with photosynthesis products. Some fungi are however parasitic, taking products from the plant without providing benefits. Conversely, some mixotrophic or parasitic plants connect with mycorrhizal fungi as a way to obtain photosynthesis products from other plants. Finally, saprotrophic (or saprophytic) fungi live on dead organic matter without establishing a symbiosis with plants,” by Charlotte Roy, Salsero 35, Nefronus, 6 August 2020, in Wikimedia Commons … https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mycorrhizal_network.svg … CC BY-SA 4.0 International

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Dear Ones,

Today I got a query from a reader that I am delighted to hear is reaching out to the other sentient members of our planetary system. It is good to have an open mind when attempting this, because many sentient members of our planetary system are very different from human beings.

Please be careful in your attempts to contact the Jupiterians; they are not in the least like handsome men with superpowers.

Nor are the energy configurations of planetary lifeforms similar to those of the Council of Nine Planets or to what we term Ascended Masters.

  • Ascended Masters are ascended human beings.
  • The Council of Nine likely represents Planet Entities rather than planetary lifeforms.
  • In the same way our Sun can be considered a Solar Entity on which dwell Solar lifeforms.

Planetary lifeforms …

  • can be beneficial to human beings, as in the case of the sentient beings of Venus and in a physical sense, some of the sentient beings of Mars;
  • they can be a challenge to human physical or mental health, as is the case with the Jupiterians and Saturnians that I encountered;
  • or they might conceivably be a threat to human existence if, for example, we encounter hostile planetary lifeforms comprising or capable or manipulating X-rays or ultraviolet rays.
  • On the other hand, beneficent planetary beings comprising or capable of manipulating UV-B energy , which is capable of transforming our DNA (for better or for worse) might quite favorably affect human Soul evolution.

. . . . .

While I find it intriguing to meet very different sentient beings, sometimes I find that contact with them adversely affects my health. This was my experience with the Jupiterians.

The most that I know about Jupiterians is in this First Contact blog of mine …

Link: “First Contact: Encounter with the Jupiterians,” channeled by Alice B. Clagett, written and published on 2 June 2021; filmed and film published on 26 August 2021; updated on 10 August 2024 … https://wp.me/p2Rkym-n7o ..

That page takes a while to load because it is long. It might be best to view it on PC with a high-speed modem.

I sense Jupiterians as overlighting the fungi of Earth. That includes yeasts, rusts, smuts, mildews, molds, and mushrooms.

I get that fungi make humans sick by infiltrating their GI tract and epidermis. Also that yeasts can cause infection in our mouths and intestines, and in the case of women, in the vagina.

So as to bring fungi and yeast into balance with other microorganisms in my body, I avoid eating foods that fungi and yeasts like, which I take to be wheat and sugar. Cheese, bread, beer, wine, cider, rice, and soy sauce have fungi in them, so I avoid these foods. Mushrooms are the sexual organs of fungi, so I avoid eating them most of the time.

Fungi thrive on skin flakes from humans, which dust mites eat, so I try to keep my house as clean as possible to avoid both contact with both fungi and dust mites.

I have a hunch that fungi like this kind of music, so I usually play other sorts of music at home …

Link: “Protosapien,” by Jupiterian, at Bandcamp … https://jupiterian.bandcamp.com/music ..

I sense Earth fungi as one great neural network or sentient organism. Because of the adverse health effects I felt while contacting them, I avoid telepathic contact with them.

There may be humans one of whose many incarnational experiences has been the experience of fungal incarnation; I expect these might relate well to Jupiter and Jupiterians.

In the same way, there may be humans one of whose many incarnational experiences has been the experience of reptile incarnation; I expect these might relate well to Reptilians.

Lightworkers who have ‘under the belt’ these unusual incarnational memories may prove very helpful in telepathic outreach to Earth beings often overlooked by human telepaths.

Just to let my readers know, right now I am telepathing with Songbirds and Ravens, which are an easy telepathic reach for me. This outreach gives me a sense of joy, and joy bolsters my immune system; so it goes.

Very good luck to my fellow Lightworkers and to all my readers in their outreach to other sentient beings in the Solar System of Earth.

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Written and published on 10 August 2024

Image: “Jupiterians,” adapted from Image by Free Fun Art from Pixabay, Pixabay Content License … COMMENTS: Mushrooms are only the Jupiterians’ sexual organs. Their bodies are massive, filamentous and amorphous. They are among the most successful Earth colonists. Their contribution to Earth’s biomass is second only to those of plants and of the Martian colonists of Earth impolitely referred to in human parlance as ‘bacteria’. It occurs to me that Jupiterians know we eat their sexual organs. This may offer their species a ratiocination for their non-symbiotic colonization of our human gastrointestinal tracts and our skin. –Alice B. Clagett

Image: “Jupiterians,” adapted from Image by Free Fun Art from Pixabay, Pixabay Content License …

COMMENTS: Mushrooms are only the Jupiterians’ sexual organs. Their bodies are massive, filamentous and amorphous. They are among the most successful Earth colonists. Their contribution to Earth’s biomass is second only to those of plants and of the Martian colonists of Earth impolitely referred to in human parlance as ‘bacteria’. It occurs to me that Jupiterians know we eat their sexual organs.

This may offer their species a ratiocination for their non-symbiotic colonization of our human gastrointestinal tracts and our skin. –Alice B. Clagett

 

Music by Alfred Grupstra from Pixabay
“Jupiter” – Pixabay license

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Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0). Attribution: By Alice B. Clagett.
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Jupiter, Jupiterians, microbes, fungi, yeasts, interspecies and extraterrestrial communication, health, alternative medicine, diet, balance, New Earth, Lightworkers, DNA, Saturnians, Martians, sentient beings of Venus, Ascended Masters, Council of Nine, Sun, my favorites, miscellanea,

The Ballad of James Harris – aka The Demon Lover – a Critique from the Point of View of Women . by Alice B. Clagett *

The Ballad of James Harris - aka The Demon Lover - a Critique from the Point of View of Women

Image: “Self-Portrait,” by Alice B. Clagett, 21 June 2024, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..

Image: “Self-Portrait,” by Alice B. Clagett, 21 June 2024, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..

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  • INTRODUCTION
  • VIDEO BY ALICE
  • SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
  • VIDEO CREDITS

INTRODUCTION

Dear Ones,

Here is a critique … from the point of view of women … of the “Ballad of James Harris,” otherwise known as “The Demon Love” and “The House Carpenter.”

There is an edited Summary after the video …

VIDEO BY ALICE

SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO

The Ballad of James Harris – aka The Demon Lover – a Critique from the Point of View of Women
By Alice B. Clagett

Hello, Dear Ones, It’s Alice. I Am of the Stars.

I have some comments today on a ballad variously known as “The House Carpenter,” and “The Ballad of James Harris,” and “The Daemon Lover.”

These are comments to do with men rather than with women. In the past “The Daemon Lover” was meant to be a warning for married women not to stray. I feel that is important, especially if they have children.

But more important to me … because I have run into it many times amongst men … is the Soul wounding exhibited by men who were once in love with a woman and then are spurned by her … and then she takes up with another man, and what happens if she goes back to the original lover. Or even this: What happens if she leaves a man and then goes back to him?

This has to do with some very gnarly energies in the noosphere … in the astral realm here on planet Earth.

I am using a public domain version of the Ballad from the Internet Archive. The source is Pepys Ballads.

Link: “Pepys Ballads, IV, 101 ; from a copy in Percy’s papers” … https://archive.org/stream/englishandscopt204chiluoft/englishandscopt204chiluoft_djvu.txt ..

It starts off with an overview of how the whole thing started, which goes like this …

1 THERE dwelt a fair maid in the West,
Of worthy birth and fame,
Neer unto Plimouth, stately town,
Jane Reynolds was her name.

2 This damsel dearly was belovd
By many a proper youth,
And what of her is to be said
Is known for very truth.

3 Among the rest …

[that is, among the rest of her suitors]

… a seaman brave
Unto her a wooing came;
A comely proper youth he was,
James Harris calld by name.

So this man is a sailor (a ‘seaman’). And amongst all the men that Jane Reynolds knew … all the suitors that loved her fondly … the one that she decided upon … the one that she ‘set her cap upon’ … was named James Harris. And he was a sailor.

Now in those days a man and a woman would become betrothed, and that was a sacred trust. If that resulted in offspring before marriage, then there was a law called “Breach of Promise” that held the man to his former word.

So ‘becoming betrothed’ was an extremely important concept at that time. And even to agree that they would soon marry was equivalent to betrothal. And that pertains to this next stanza …

4 The maid and young man was agreed,
As time did them allow,
And to each other secretly
They made a solemn vow,

5 That they would ever faithfull be
Whilst Heaven afforded life ;
He was to be her husband kind,
And she his faithfull wife.

6 A day appointed was also
When they was to be married ;
But before these things were brought to pass
Matters were strangely carried.

So that is the ‘setup’. They secretly agreed that they would be married, and a day was appointed for the marriage. But then something happened … something really bad.

Now begins the Ballad proper, which is Number 243, called “James Harris (The Daemon Lover).”

7 All you that faithfull lovers be
Give ear and hearken well,
And what of them became at last
I will directly tell.

8 The young man he was prest to sea, …

[That means he was forced to go to sea.]

And forced was to go ;
His sweet-heart she must stay behind,
Whether she would or no.

9 And after he was from her gone
She three years for him staid,
Expecting of his comeing home,
And kept herself a maid.

[‘Maid’ means ‘maiden’. It means never having experienced romantic love.]

10 At last news came that he was dead
Within a forraign land,
And how that he was buried
She well did understand,

11 For whose sweet sake the maiden she
Lamented many a day,
And never was she’ known at all
The wanton for to play.

So in all that time when she was dealing with the grief that she felt for her lost beloved, she never fooled around; she never had a lover. She was true to his memory.

Ok now …

12 A carpenter that livd hard by,
When he heard of the same,
Like as the other had done before,
To her a wooing came.

[So he went to her house as a suitor.]

13 But when that he had gained her love …

[That is, through courtship]

… They married were with speed, …

[It is not the drug; this means they were quickly married]

And four years space, being man and wife,
They loveingly agreed.

[So for four years they agreed to be loving man and wife together.]

14 Three pritty children in this time
This loving couple had,
Which made their father’s heart rejoyce,
And mother wondrous glad.

15 But as occasion servd, one time
The good man took his way
Some three days journey from his home,
Intending not to stay.

[So the husband went away from home for three days and left the mother with their three children there.]

16 But, whilst that he was gone away,
A spirit in the night
Came to the window of his wife,
And did her sorely fright.

[That means a ghost or Spirit or astral being made an apparition, or appeared in her home while the husband was away … which is the time that a woman is most vulnerable. The spirit frightened her; it “did her sorely fright.”]

So now the Spirit speaks …

17 Which spirit spake like to a man,
And unto her did say,
‘My dear and onely love,’ quoth he,
‘Prepare and come away.

[He is asking her to go away with him.]

You may recall the name of Jane Reynolds’ first suitor … the one she really loved so greatly was James Harris.

Have you been listening to the Songbirds? Just here they are objecting to the sadness expressed in the poem.

It sounds to me as if the little birds have been ‘taken over’ or ‘obsessed’ by two Shamans who are power-over men trying to force their will upon me. This is weird in the extreme. Who could these Shamans be, I wonder?

The Shamans are causing the Songbirds to speak very rudely. They are talking so loudly I can barely make myself heard.

So now to continue …

18 ‘ James Harris is my name,’ quoth he,
‘Whom thou didst love so dear,
And I have traveld for thy sake
At least this seven year.

[He is saying he was looking for her for seven years.]

19 ‘And now I am returnd again,
To take thee to my wife,
And thou with me shalt go to sea,
To end all further strife.’

[He is suggesting that she should go to sea with him to prevent the husband from fighting with her or with James Harris.]

20 ‘O tempt me not, sweet James,’ quoth she,
‘ With thee to go …

There is a big fight going on with the Songbirds. The fight was so loud that I misspake the stanza and had to repeat it.

Mr. Raven wonders what in heaven’s name is going on here. Can you hear him?

I say to the birds: Please, please! Please don’t do that!

20 ‘O tempt me not, sweet James,’ quoth she,
‘ With thee away to go ;
If I should leave my children small,
Alas! what would they do?

21 ‘My husband is a carpenter,
A carpenter of great fame ;
I would not for five hundred pounds
That he should know the same.’

So now, she says no. She says she cannot do it; that her husband is a famous carpenter, and that she loves her children, and that she cannot imagine what would happen to them if she left them.

Now it is the Daemon Lover’s chance to respond. He says …

22 ‘I might have had a king’s daughter,
And she would have married me;
But I forsook her golden crown,
And for the love of thee.

This is spoken very forcefully, is it not?

23 ‘Therefore, if thou ‘It thy husband forsake,
And thy children three also,
I will forgive the[e] what is past,
If thou wilt with me go.’

And she says …

24 ‘If I forsake my husband and
My little children three,
What means hast thou to bring me to,
If I should go with thee?’

She is saying: Where would I find myself? What do you have to offer me if I should agree with this?

Now I am going to move on to Ballad 243G, which is a different version of the same Daemon Lover ballad …

Citation: Motherwell’s Minstrelsy, p. 93.

The lady is asking the apparition … the ghost: What have you in store for me? What property do you have? What could you offer me if I were to go away with you? And the Daemon Lover says …

1 ‘I HAVE seven ships upon the sea,
Laden with the finest gold,
And mariners to wait us upon ;
All these you may behold.

2 ‘And I have shoes for my love’s feet,
Beaten of the purest gold,
And lined wi the velvet soft,
To keep my love’s feet from the cold.

Then, I am presuming, they get on the ship. And he says to her …

3 ‘O how do you love the ship ?’ he said,
‘Or how do you love the sea ?
And how do you love the bold mariners
That wait upon thee and me ? ‘

And she says …

4: ‘O I do love the ship,’ she said,
1 And I do love the sea ;
But woe be to the dim mariners,
That nowhere I can see ! ‘

So she is on the ship with the apparition. It may be a ghost ship. He proposes that there are sailors on board the ship, but she cannot see any. So already there is trouble.

5 They had not sailed a mile awa,
Never a mile but one,
When she began to weep and mourn,
And to think on her little wee son [her very small son].

Now it is the Daemon Lover’s turn. He says …

6 ‘O hold your tongue, my dear,’ he said,
‘And let all your weeping abee,
For I’ll soon show to you how the lilies grow
On the banks of Italy.’

7 They had not sailed a mile awa,
Never a mile but two,
Until she espied his cloven foot,
From his gay robes sticking thro,

Ok, there is something wrong. The man that she used to know is not the same as he used to be. In fact, he has a diabolical aspect to him.

So what is this that happened when she loved a man, and the man went away and deserted her … and then she finally married someone else and had children.

And then he returns, if only in her mind … and begins a campaign that she should love him and not this new person. In other words, the apparition is jealous of her happy married life.

Or even it could be, I feel, that a man who once loved a woman might feel, telepathically, that she might find someone else that loves her, and then becomes, in aspect and demeanor, something like this Daemon Lover. He becomes enraged. He does whatever he can to destroy her.

Ok, there is just a little bit more to this …

8 They had not sailed a mile awa,
Never a mile but three,
When dark, dark, grew his eerie looks,
And raging grew the sea.

He was in a rage. He was an enraged, jealous man. Many men descend to this after leaving a woman, instead of moving on to new love … to perfect their ability to have a loving relationship … they cannot release themselves from that old vow. They cannot move on to someone new.

Consequently they destroy the life of the person they once loved and their own life as well. Do you know what I mean? Very bad things can happen when a man does not allow a woman to move on … when he cannot stop stalking her new husband; when he cannot stop trying to destroy her love for him. You see?

Ok, the last stanza …

9 They had not sailed a mile awa,
Never a mile but four,
When the little wee ship ran round about,
And never was seen more.

It could have been one of those upside-down tornadoes that sink the ships into the sea, you know?

Jealousy is the dark opposite of love. It can happen in a woman too. But in this case what you have is a woman who adjusted to the loss of a man and the man who comes back and haunts her telepathically, and brings her to ruin because he himself has turned Dark and sour.

You know, many men think this is just how it is, when a man is spurned or when a man deserts a woman, that the man will feel cruel to the end of his days and injure the woman before all with whom he speaks.

But I do not feel that way.

I think many men adopt a very useful attitude towards women they once loved, and pick out all the good things that happened at that time, and look forward to those things in a new relationship. That is what I think.

There is always trouble amongst women about men stalking them, and men trying to rape them, and men trying to kill them … and all this awful stuff … simply because we have a lot of heart energy, and the men think that they can take advantage of us for that reason.

It is a terrible situation, here in the third dimension, that all of us women have to face. Men can be protectors, but when they become jealous … when they become enraged … they can take the strength with which God endowed them and use it against us too.

Well, I wish the best for the women of Earth because without us … without our children and without our nurturing and educating abilities … there would be no human life on Earth.

I hope the men will understand that we have great value, we women on Earth. Men are not the only valuable people on Earth.

I am asking you men not to be arrogant, simply because you are strong. Strength is only half of the ingredient. The other half is the grace and love that women bring into a man’s life.

Well. That is the sober last of it, regarding this Ballad of the Daemon Lover, otherwise known as the Ballad of James Harris or The House Carpenter.

The interesting thing is that, in years past … in the ancient days … this Ballad was purported to be a warning to women not to leave their husbands. And so you have that side of the issue … the male side of the issue … and now you have the women’s side of the issue. Maybe those two will make a copacetic whole.

The Source

These versions of the Ballad came from …

Link: Pepys Ballads, IV, 101; from a copy in Percy’s papers. And I got them from the Internet Archive … https://archive.org ..

Why Have I Not Just Moved On?

Someone asked me on the psychic plane why I did not just move on and find someone else. Sometimes after a relationship ends is that a man … while not himself stalking and so forth … has a negative attitude that he conveys to his friends.

And his friends take it upon themselves to give a woman ‘her just deserts’. So a man who is well liked, and has lots of male friends, can enlist a hundred strong, self-willed, arrogant … I have to say … men on his side to take up for him in terms of …

[sound of a weedwhacker] … You know, there is a lot of Dark Interference today …

… to take up for him in terms of stalking and harassing and raping. And if it does not happen on the physical plane, it can happen on the astral plane. You know? This is something that women have to deal with all the time.

I heard of a case where a man was so unforgiving that every time his ex-wife would marry, he would go and harass the new husband that she had, until that man would leave because he was afraid to stay with the woman. And that this happened many times.

I would not want that to happen to me, or to any man that I liked.

A person has to consider the greatest good for the greatest number of people. If two people … I and my new friend … would be suffering because of my action of becoming romantically involved again … instead of just me suffering because I do not have that romance in my life, what should I do? I try to pick the thing that is the least damaging to the most number of people.

That is why I am steering clear of men: I don’t want that crap to happen to them … that crap that may have happened to someone else. It is really gruesome, when you come right down to it. That is the story.

The Downside of the Shamanic Practice of Entering the Bodies of Animals

I would like to interject right here why it is that I spoke sternly to the Songbird. It seems to me that the behavior of that particular Songbird was not typical of a Songbird.

It is possible that, if a Songbird were very upset over the tenor and the emotions of a person talking, it might speak like that. But I do not feel it would go on and on like that.

There have been numerous incidents of Shamans … I do not know who … walking into animals with whom I have talked in the last few weeks. I think that is what may have happened with the Songbird.

I am really against Shamans taking control of Songbirds and of Ravens and of Hawks. I think it is a very stupid idea to do that.

For one thing, every time that you enter a being that is not a human being, your Soul matter becomes more similar to theirs, and less similar to that of other humans. If you continue with that, at the end of your lifetime you are likely to be reincarnated as that animal, rather than in human form.

Many people long for human form because of the degree of Free Will they enjoy when in that form. So most people … if they stop to think … would not try that walking into the form and skin of beings that are not human for that reason: Because it degrades our human Soul matter.

In recent days I have found that many, many animals do have free will, and that it is only human hubris or pride that prevents us from realizing this. So it might not be that bad, if you do not mind being incorporated as a Songbird in your next incarnation.

It is bad for the birds, though, because you are trying to rule over their free spirits by doing that. It is as bad as if you did that to a human being. Trying to mind control and leap into the skin of a Songbird is a bad thing to do, from that perspective: from the perspective of wanting to retain your own Free Will, you see?

In this lifetime you have a chance to develop your Free Will, and to allow other people to develop their Free Will too. If there is nothing but Power Over in the world, there is no such thing as Free Will. You have none, and other people have none either.

Help us to create a world that is good for everyone. Don’t be a Shaman who jumps into animals and controls them; or into human beings.

. . . . .

This is just a little excursion into what happened at that very moment when the Songbirds were fiercely and uncustomarily arguing with each other.

God bless you all,
And keep you safe,
And be with you
Through all your days.

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Filmed and published on 21 June 2024; youtube transcription edited on 21 January 2026

VIDEO CREDITS

“The Ballad of James Harris – aka The Demon Lover – a Critique from the Point of View of Women”
by Alice B. Clagett

Filmed and produced on 21 June 2024
Location: San Fernando Valley, CA

CC BY-SA 4.0 International

…………..

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0). Attribution: By Alice B. Clagett.
More license information

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culture, poetry appreciation, Divine feminine, Divine masculine, reincarnation, Soul devolution, Free Will, power over, Shamanism, Shapeshifting, skinchanging, therianthropy, jealousy, rage, forgiveness, emotions, obsession, possession, my favorites, miscellanea,

Penalties for Shooting Migratory Birds, Including Ravens, Songbirds, and Many Other Types of Birds . by Alice B. Clagett *

What problem? Oh, the problem of ETs on Earth?
But what if the ETs are us humans?
What if all the beings on Earth are ETs?

Then again, what if, as the Buddhists say, all the beings on Earth are humans?
What if, as the Esotericists say, rocks are humans too? My gosh! Rock my world!

Image: “Raven Talk,” by Colin, 30 April 2016, in Wikimedia Commons … https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jubilee_and_Munin,_Ravens,_Tower_of_London_2016-04-30.jpg … CC BY-SA 4.0 International … DESCRIPTION: “Jubilee and Munin, Ravens of the Tower of London. Jubilee was hatched in Somerset in 2012 and wears a gold band. He was given to the Queen on her Diamond Jubilee. Munin was hatched in North Uist in 1995 and wears a light green band. She is the oldest raven at the tower. Identification confirmed with Chris Skaife, Ravenmaster at the Tower.”

Image: “Raven Talk,” by Colin, 30 April 2016, in Wikimedia Commons … https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jubilee_and_Munin,_Ravens,_Tower_of_London_2016-04-30.jpg … CC BY-SA 4.0 International … DESCRIPTION: “Jubilee and Munin, Ravens of the Tower of London. Jubilee was hatched in Somerset in 2012 and wears a gold band. He was given to the Queen on her Diamond Jubilee. Munin was hatched in North Uist in 1995 and wears a light green band. She is the oldest raven at the tower. Identification confirmed with Chris Skaife, Ravenmaster at the Tower.”

To turn off the background music that runs when this page starts, click once or twice on the arrow on the audio bar at the bottom of the page …

Dear Ones,

Just in case there should be a knee-jerk reaction to nuke all the birds in my neighborhood, I looked up penalties for shooting migratory birds. Since these are laws, I think I’m on the safe side to quote verbatim.

Here is what I found out …

Penalties for shooting migratory birds, including Ravens, Songbirds, and many other types of birds are as follows …

“Misdemeanor offenses shall be fines a maximum of $5000 and or imprisoned for not more than six months for individuals, or $10,000 fine for an organization.

“Felony offenses shall be fined maximum of $250,000 and/or imprisoned for not more than two years for an individual or $100,000 for an organization.

“All guns, nets, traps, and other equipment vessels, vehicles, and other means of transportation used by any person while pursuing, hunting, taking, trapping, ensnaring, capturing, killing, or in making any attempt thereof shall be forfeited to the United States and held under the authority of the Secretary of Interior.” — from https://www.epa.gov/enforcement/criminal-provisions-us-criminal-code-title-18-and-other-statutes ..

Here is a List of Migratory Birds covered by the above penalties. Search by name of bird … e.g., Raven. If you find that bird on the list, then the penalties apply. …

Table 2 to Paragraph (c)(2)—Taxonomic Listing of Birds Protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act

Species scientific name Species common name
(i) Order Anseriformes
Family Anatidae
(1) Subfamily Dendrocygninae
Dendrocygna autumnalis Black-bellied Whistling-Duck.
Dendrocygna arborea West Indian Whistling-Duck.
Dendrocygna bicolor Fulvous Whistling-Duck.
(2) Subfamily Anserinae
Anser canagicus Emperor Goose.
Anser caerulescens Snow Goose.
Anser rossii Ross’s Goose.
Anser albifrons Greater White-fronted Goose.
Anser erythropus Lesser White-fronted Goose.
Anser fabalis Taiga Bean-Goose.
Anser serrirostris Tundra Bean-Goose.
Anser brachyrhynchus Pink-footed Goose.
Branta bernicla Brant.
Branta leucopsis Barnacle Goose.
Branta hutchinsii Cackling Goose.
Branta canadensis Canada Goose.
Branta sandvicensis Hawaiian Goose.
Cygnus buccinator Trumpeter Swan.
Cygnus columbianus Tundra Swan.
Cygnus cygnus Whooper Swan.
(3) Subfamily Anatinae
Cairina moschata Muscovy Duck.
Aix sponsa Wood Duck.
Sibirionetta formosa Baikal Teal.
Spatula querquedula Garganey.
Spatula discors Blue-winged Teal.
Spatula cyanoptera Cinnamon Teal.
Spatula clypeata Northern Shoveler.
Mareca strepera Gadwall.
Mareca falcata Falcated Duck.
Mareca penelope Eurasian Wigeon.
Mareca americana American Wigeon.
Anas laysanensis Laysan Duck
Anas wyvilliana Hawaiian Duck.
Anas zonorhyncha Eastern Spot-billed Duck.
Anas platyrhynchos Mallard.
Anas diazi Mexican Duck.
Anas rubripes American Black Duck.
Anas fulvigula Mottled Duck.
Anas superciliosa Pacific Black Duck.
Anas bahamensis White-cheeked Pintail.
Anas acuta Northern Pintail.
Anas crecca Green-winged Teal.
Aythya valisineria Canvasback.
Aythya americana Redhead.
Aythya ferina Common Pochard.
Aythya baeri Baer’s Pochard.
Aythya collaris Ring-necked Duck.
Aythya fuligula Tufted Duck.
Aythya marila Greater Scaup.
Aythya affinis Lesser Scaup.
Polysticta stelleri Steller’s Eider.
Somateria fischeri Spectacled Eider.
Somateria spectabilis King Eider.
Somateria mollissima Common Eider.
Histrionicus histrionicus Harlequin Duck.
Melanitta perspicillata Surf Scoter.
Melanitta deglandi White-winged Scoter.
Melanitta stejneger Stejneger’s Scoter.
Melanitta nigra Common Scoter.
Melanitta americana Black Scoter.
Clangula hyemalis Long-tailed Duck.
Bucephala albeola Bufflehead.
Bucephala clangula Common Goldeneye.
Bucephala islandica Barrow’s Goldeneye.
Mergellus albellus Smew.
Lophodytes cucullatus Hooded Merganser.
Mergus merganser Common Merganser.
Mergus serrator Red-breasted Merganser.
Nomonyx dominicus Masked Duck.
Oxyura jamaicensis Ruddy Duck.
(ii) Order Phoenicopteriformes
Family Phoenicopteridae
Phoenicopterus ruber American Flamingo.
(iii) Order Podicipediformes
Family Podicipedidae
Tachybaptus dominicus Least Grebe.
Podilymbus podiceps Pied-billed Grebe.
Podiceps auritus Horned Grebe.
Podiceps grisegena Red-necked Grebe.
Podiceps nigricollis Eared Grebe.
Aechmophorus occidentalis Western Grebe.
Aechmophorus clarkii Clark’s Grebe.
(iv) Order Columbiformes
Family Columbidae
Patagioenas squamosa Scaly-naped Pigeon.
Patagioenas leucocephala White-crowned Pigeon.
Patagioenas flavirostris Red-billed Pigeon.
Patagioenas inornata Plain Pigeon.
Patagioenas fasciata Band-tailed Pigeon.
Streptopelia orientalis Oriental Turtle-Dove.
Alopecoenas stairi Shy Ground Dove.
Alopecoenas xanthonurus White-throated Ground Dove.
Columbina inca Inca Dove.
Columbina passerina Common Ground Dove.
Columbina talpacoti Ruddy Ground Dove.
Geotrygon montana Ruddy Quail-Dove.
Geotrygon chrysia Key West Quail-Dove.
Geotrygon mystacea Bridled Quail-Dove.
Leptotila verreauxi White-tipped Dove.
Zenaida asiatica White-winged Dove.
Zenaida aurita Zenaida Dove.
Zenaida macroura Mourning Dove.
Ptilinopus perousii Many-colored Fruit-Dove.
Ptilinopus porphyraceus Crimson-crowned Fruit-Dove.
Ptilinopus roseicapilla Mariana Fruit-Dove.
Ducula pacifica Pacific Imperial-Pigeon.
(v) Order Cuculiformes
Family Cuculidae
(1) Subfamily Crotophaginae
Crotophaga ani Smooth-billed Ani.
Crotophaga sulcirostris Groove-billed Ani.
(2) Subfamily Neomorphinae
Geococcyx californianus Greater Roadrunner.
(3) Subfamily Cuculinae
Urodynamis taitensis Long-tailed Koel.
Hierococcyx nisicolor Hodgson’s Hawk-Cuckoo.
Cuculus canorus Common Cuckoo.
Cuculus optatus Oriental Cuckoo.
Clamator coromandus Chestnut-winged Cuckoo.
Coccyzus melacoryphus Dark-billed Cuckoo.
Coccyzus americanus Yellow-billed Cuckoo.
Coccyzus minor Mangrove Cuckoo.
Coccyzus erythropthalmus Black-billed Cuckoo.
Coccyzus vieilloti Puerto Rican Lizard-Cuckoo.
(vi) Order Caprimulgiformes
Family Caprimulgidae
(1) Subfamily Chordeilinae
Chordeiles acutipennis Lesser Nighthawk.
Chordeiles minor Common Nighthawk.
Chordeiles gundlachii Antillean Nighthawk.
(2) Subfamily Caprimulginae
Nyctidromus albicollis Common Pauraque.
Phalaenoptilus nuttallii Common Poorwill.
Antrostomus carolinensis Chuck-will’s-widow.
Antrostomus ridgwayi Buff-collared Nightjar.
Antrostomus vociferus Eastern Whip-poor-will.
Antrostomus arizonae Mexican Whip-poor-will.
Antrostomus noctitherus Puerto Rican Nightjar.
Hydropsalis cayennensis White-tailed Nightjar.
Caprimulgus jotaka Gray Nightjar.
(vii) Order Apodiformes
(A) Family Apodidae
(1) Subfamily Cypseloidinae
Cypseloides niger Black Swift.
Streptoprocne zonaris White-collared Swift.
(2) Subfamily Chaeturinae
Chaetura pelagica Chimney Swift.
Chaetura vauxi Vaux’s Swift.
Chaetura brachyura Short-tailed Swift.
Hirundapus caudacutus White-throated Needletail.
Aerodramus spodiopygius White-rumped Swiftlet.
Aerodramus bartschi Mariana Swiftlet.
(3) Subfamily Apodinae
Apus apus Common Swift.
Apus pacificus Fork-tailed Swift.
Apus melba Alpine Swift.
Aeronautes saxatalis White-throated Swift.
Tachornis phoenicobia Antillean Palm-Swift.
(B) Family Trochilidae
Subfamily Trochilinae
Colibri thalassinus Mexican Violetear.
Anthracothorax prevostii Green-breasted Mango.
Anthracothorax aurulentus Puerto Rican Mango.
Anthracothorax viridis Green Mango.
Eulampis jugularis Purple-throated Carib.
Eulampis holosericeus Green-throated Carib.
Eugenes fulgens Rivoli’s Hummingbird.
Heliomaster constantii Plain-capped Starthroat.
Lampornis amethystinus Amethyst-throated Mountain-gem.
Lampornis clemenciae Blue-throated Mountain-gem.
Calothorax lucifer Lucifer Hummingbird.
Archilochus colubris Ruby-throated Hummingbird.
Archilochus alexandri Black-chinned Hummingbird.
Mellisuga minima Vervain Hummingbird.
Nesophlox evelynae Bahama Woodstar.
Calypte anna Anna’s Hummingbird.
Calypte costae Costa’s Hummingbird.
Selasphorus calliope Calliope Hummingbird.
Selasphorus rufus Rufous Hummingbird.
Selasphorus sasin Allen’s Hummingbird.
Selasphorus platycercus Broad-tailed Hummingbird.
Selasphorus heloisa Bumblebee Hummingbird.
Riccordia maugaeus Puerto Rican Emerald.
Cynanthus latirostris Broad-billed Hummingbird.
Basilinna leucotis White-eared Hummingbird.
Basilinna xantusii Xantus’s Hummingbird.
Orthorhyncus cristatus Antillean Crested Hummingbird.
Ramosomyia violiceps Violet-crowned Hummingbird.
Saucerottia beryllina Berylline Hummingbird.
Amazilia rutila Cinnamon Hummingbird.
Amazilia yucatanensis Buff-bellied Hummingbird.
(viii) Order Gruiformes
(A) Family Rallidae
Gallirallus philippensis Buff-banded Rail.
Gallirallus owstoni Guam Rail.
Neocrex erythrops Paint-billed Crake.
Pardirallus maculatus Spotted Rail.
Aramides axillaris Rufous-necked Wood-Rail.
Rallus obsoletus Ridgway’s Rail.
Rallus elegans King Rail.
Rallus crepitans Clapper Rail.
Rallus limicola Virginia Rail.
Crex crex Corn Crake.
Porzana carolina Sora.
Gallinula galeata Common Gallinule.
Gallinula chloropus Eurasian Moorhen.
Fulica atra Eurasian Coot.
Fulica alai Hawaiian Coot.
Fulica americana American Coot.
Porphyrio martinicus Purple Gallinule.
Porphyrio flavirostris Azure Gallinule.
Porphyrio porphyrio Purple Swamphen.
Porzana tabuensis Spotless Crake.
Coturnicops noveboracensis Yellow Rail.
Hapalocrex flaviventer Yellow-breasted Crake.
Laterallus jamaicensis Black Rail.
(B) Family Aramidae
Aramus guarauna Limpkin.
(C) Family Gruidae
Subfamily Gruinae
Antigone canadensis Sandhill Crane.
Grus grus Common Crane.
Grus monacha Hooded Crane.
Grus americana Whooping Crane.
(ix) Order Charadriiformes
(A) Family Recurvirostridae
Himantopus himantopus Black-winged Stilt.
Himantopus mexicanus Black-necked Stilt.
Recurvirostra americana American Avocet.
(B) Family Haematopodidae
Haematopus ostralegus Eurasian Oystercatcher.
Haematopus palliatus American Oystercatcher.
Haematopus bachmani Black Oystercatcher.
(C) Family Charadriidae
(1) Subfamily Vanellinae
Vanellus vanellus Northern Lapwing.
(2) Subfamily Charadriinae
Pluvialis squatarola Black-bellied Plover.
Pluvialis apricaria European Golden-Plover.
Pluvialis dominica American Golden-Plover.
Pluvialis fulva Pacific Golden-Plover.
Charadrius morinellus Eurasian Dotterel.
Charadrius vociferus Killdeer.
Charadrius hiaticula Common Ringed Plover.
Charadrius semipalmatus Semipalmated Plover.
Charadrius melodus Piping Plover.
Charadrius dubius Little Ringed Plover.
Charadrius mongolus Lesser Sand-Plover.
Charadrius leschenaultii Greater Sand-Plover.
Charadrius wilsonia Wilson’s Plover.
Charadrius collaris Collared Plover.
Charadrius alexandrinus Kentish Plover.
Charadrius montanus Mountain Plover.
Charadrius nivosus Snowy Plover.
(D) Family Jacanidae
Jacana spinosa Northern Jacana.
(E) Family Scolopacidae
(1) Subfamily Numeniinae
Bartramia longicauda Upland Sandpiper.
Numenius tahitiensis Bristle-thighed Curlew.
Numenius phaeopus Whimbrel.
Numenius minutus Little Curlew.
Numenius borealis Eskimo Curlew.
Numenius americanus Long-billed Curlew.
Numenius madagascariensis Far Eastern Curlew.
Numenius arquata Eurasian Curlew.
(2) Subfamily Limosinae
Limosa lapponica Bar-tailed Godwit.
Limosa limosa Black-tailed Godwit.
Limosa haemastica Hudsonian Godwit.
Limosa fedoa Marbled Godwit.
(3) Subfamily Arenariinae
Arenaria interpres Ruddy Turnstone.
Arenaria melanocephala Black Turnstone.
Calidris tenuirostris Great Knot.
Calidris canutus Red Knot.
Calidris virgata Surfbird.
Calidris pugnax Ruff.
Calidris falcinellus Broad-billed Sandpiper.
Calidris acuminata Sharp-tailed Sandpiper.
Calidris himantopus Stilt Sandpiper.
Calidris ferruginea Curlew Sandpiper.
Calidris temminckii Temminck’s Stint.
Calidris subminuta Long-toed Stint.
Calidris pygmea Spoon-billed Sandpiper.
Calidris ruficollis Red-necked Stint.
Calidris alba Sanderling.
Calidris alpina Dunlin.
Calidris ptilocnemis Rock Sandpiper.
Calidris maritima Purple Sandpiper.
Calidris bairdii Baird’s Sandpiper.
Calidris minuta Little Stint.
Calidris minutilla Least Sandpiper.
Calidris fuscicollis White-rumped Sandpiper.
Calidris subruficollis Buff-breasted Sandpiper.
Calidris melanotos Pectoral Sandpiper.
Calidris pusilla Semipalmated Sandpiper.
Calidris mauri Western Sandpiper.
(4) Subfamily Scolopacinae
Limnodromus griseus Short-billed Dowitcher.
Limnodromus scolopaceus Long-billed Dowitcher.
Lymnocryptes minimus Jack Snipe.
Scolopax rusticola Eurasian Woodcock.
Scolopax minor American Woodcock.
Gallinago solitaria Solitary Snipe.
Gallinago stenura Pin-tailed Snipe.
Gallinago megala Swinhoe’s Snipe.
Gallinago gallinago Common Snipe.
Gallinago delicata Wilson’s Snipe.
(5) Subfamily Tringinae
Xenus cinereus Terek Sandpiper.
Actitis hypoleucos Common Sandpiper.
Actitis macularius Spotted Sandpiper.
Tringa ochropus Green Sandpiper.
Tringa solitaria Solitary Sandpiper.
Tringa brevipes Gray-tailed Tattler.
Tringa incana Wandering Tattler.
Tringa flavipes Lesser Yellowlegs.
Tringa semipalmata Willet.
Tringa erythropus Spotted Redshank.
Tringa nebularia Common Greenshank.
Tringa guttifer Nordmann’s Greenshank.
Tringa melanoleuca Greater Yellowlegs.
Tringa totanus Common Redshank.
Tringa glareola Wood Sandpiper.
Tringa stagnatilis Marsh Sandpiper.
Phalaropus tricolor Wilson’s Phalarope.
Phalaropus lobatus Red-necked Phalarope.
Phalaropus fulicarius Red Phalarope.
(F) Family Stercorariidae
Stercorarius skua Great Skua.
Stercorarius maccormicki South Polar Skua.
Stercorarius pomarinus Pomarine Jaeger.
Stercorarius parasiticus Parasitic Jaeger.
Stercorarius longicaudus Long-tailed Jaeger.
(G) Family Alcidae
Alle alle Dovekie.
Uria aalge Common Murre.
Uria lomvia Thick-billed Murre.
Alca torda Razorbill.
Cepphus grylle Black Guillemot.
Cepphus columba Pigeon Guillemot.
Brachyramphus perdix Long-billed Murrelet.
Brachyramphus marmoratus Marbled Murrelet
Brachyramphus brevirostris Kittlitz’s Murrelet.
Synthliboramphus scrippsi Scripps’s Murrelet.
Synthliboramphus hypoleucus Guadalupe Murrelet.
Synthliboramphus craveri Craveri’s Murrelet.
Synthliboramphus antiquus Ancient Murrelet.
Ptychoramphus aleuticus Cassin’s Auklet.
Aethia psittacula Parakeet Auklet.
Aethia pusilla Least Auklet.
Aethia pygmaea Whiskered Auklet.
Aethia cristatella Crested Auklet.
Cerorhinca monocerata Rhinoceros Auklet.
Fratercula arctica Atlantic Puffin.
Fratercula corniculata Horned Puffin.
Fratercula cirrhata Tufted Puffin.
(H) Family Laridae
(1) Subfamily Larinae
Creagrus furcatus Swallow-tailed Gull.
Rissa tridactyla Black-legged Kittiwake.
Rissa brevirostris Red-legged Kittiwake.
Pagophila eburnea Ivory Gull.
Xema sabini Sabine’s Gull.
Chroicocephalus philadelphia Bonaparte’s Gull.
Chroicocephalus cirrocephalus Gray-hooded Gull.
Chroicocephalus ridibundus Black-headed Gull.
Hydrocoloeus minutus Little Gull.
Rhodostethia rosea Ross’s Gull.
Leucophaeus atricilla Laughing Gull.
Leucophaeus pipixcan Franklin’s Gull.
Ichthyaetus ichthyaetus Pallas’s Gull.
Larus belcheri Belcher’s Gull.
Larus crassirostris Black-tailed Gull.
Larus heermanni Heermann’s Gull.
Larus canus Common Gull.
Larus brachyrhynchus Short-billed Gull.
Larus delawarensis Ring-billed Gull.
Larus occidentalis Western Gull.
Larus livens Yellow-footed Gull.
Larus californicus California Gull.
Larus argentatus Herring Gull.
Larus michahellis Yellow-legged Gull.
Larus glaucoides Iceland Gull.
Larus fuscus Lesser Black-backed Gull.
Larus schistisagus Slaty-backed Gull.
Larus glaucescens Glaucous-winged Gull.
Larus hyperboreus Glaucous Gull.
Larus marinus Great Black-backed Gull.
Larus dominicanus Kelp Gull.
(2) Subfamily Sterninae
Anous stolidus Brown Noddy.
Anous minutus Black Noddy.
Anous ceruleus Blue-gray Noddy.
Gygis alba White Tern.
Onychoprion fuscatus Sooty Tern.
Onychoprion lunatus Gray-backed Tern.
Onychoprion anaethetus Bridled Tern.
Onychoprion aleuticus Aleutian Tern.
Sternula albifrons Little Tern.
Sternula antillarum Least Tern.
Phaetusa simplex Large-billed Tern.
Gelochelidon nilotica Gull-billed Tern.
Hydroprogne caspia Caspian Tern.
Larosterna inca Inca Tern.
Chlidonias niger Black Tern.
Chlidonias leucopterus White-winged Tern.
Chlidonias hybrida Whiskered Tern.
Sterna dougallii Roseate Tern.
Sterna sumatrana Black-naped Tern.
Sterna hirundo Common Tern.
Sterna paradisaea Arctic Tern.
Sterna forsteri Forster’s Tern.
Thalasseus maximus Royal Tern.
Thalasseus bergii Great Crested Tern.
Thalasseus sandvicensis Sandwich Tern.
Thalasseus elegans Elegant Tern.
(3) Subfamily Rynchopinae
Rynchops niger Black Skimmer.
(x) Order Phaethontiformes
Family Phaethontidae
Phaethon lepturus White-tailed Tropicbird.
Phaethon aethereus Red-billed Tropicbird.
Phaethon rubricauda Red-tailed Tropicbird.
(xi) Order Gaviiformes
Family Gaviidae
Gavia stellata Red-throated Loon.
Gavia arctica Arctic Loon.
Gavia pacifica Pacific Loon.
Gavia immer Common Loon.
Gavia adamsii Yellow-billed Loon.
(xii) Order Procellariiformes
(A) Family Diomedeidae
Thalassarche chlororhynchos Yellow-nosed Albatross.
Thalassarche cauta White-capped Albatross.
Thalassarche eremita Chatham Albatross.
Thalassarche salvini Salvin’s Albatross.
Thalassarche melanophris Black-browed Albatross.
Phoebetria palpebrata Light-mantled Albatross.
Diomedea exulans Wandering Albatross.
Phoebastria immutabilis Laysan Albatross.
Phoebastria nigripes Black-footed Albatross.
Phoebastria albatrus Short-tailed Albatross.
(B) Family Oceanitidae
Family Phaethontidae
Oceanites oceanicus Wilson’s Storm-Petrel.
Pelagodroma marina White-faced Storm-Petrel.
Fregetta grallaria White-bellied Storm-Petrel.
Fregetta tropica Black-bellied Storm-Petrel.
Nesofregetta fuliginosa Polynesian Storm-Petrel.
(C) Family Hydrobatidae
Hydrobates pelagicus European Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates furcatus Fork-tailed Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates hornbyi Ringed Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates monorhis Swinhoe’s Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates leucorhous Leach’s Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates socorroensis Townsend’s Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates homochroa Ashy Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates castro Band-rumped Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates tethys Wedge-rumped Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates melania Black Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates matsudairae Matsudaira’s Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates tristrami Tristram’s Storm-Petrel.
Hydrobates microsoma Least Storm-Petrel.
(D) Family Procellariidae
Macronectes halli Northern Giant-Petrel.
Fulmarus glacialis Northern Fulmar.
Pterodroma gouldi Gray-faced Petrel.
Pterodroma solandri Providence Petrel.
Pterodroma neglecta Kermadec Petrel.
Pterodroma arminjoniana Trindade Petrel.
Pterodroma heraldica Herald Petrel.
Pterodroma ultima Murphy’s Petrel.
Pterodroma inexpectata Mottled Petrel.
Pterodroma cahow Bermuda Petrel.
Pterodroma hasitata Black-capped Petrel.
Pterodroma externa Juan Fernandez Petrel.
Pterodroma sandwichensis Hawaiian Petrel.
Pterodroma cervicalis White-necked Petrel.
Pterodroma hypoleuca Bonin Petrel.
Pterodroma nigripennis Black-winged Petrel.
Pterodroma feae Fea’s Petrel.
Pterodroma madeira Zino’s Petrel.
Pterodroma cookii Cook’s Petrel.
Pterodroma leucoptera Gould’s Petrel.
Pterodroma longirostris Stejneger’s Petrel.
Pterodroma alba Phoenix Petrel.
Pseudobulweria rostrata Tahiti Petrel.
Bulweria bulwerii Bulwer’s Petrel.
Bulweria fallax Jouanin’s Petrel.
Procellaria aequinoctialis White-chinned Petrel.
Procellaria parkinsoni Parkinson’s Petrel.
Calonectris leucomelas Streaked Shearwater.
Calonectris diomedea Cory’s Shearwater.
Calonectris edwardsii Cape Verde Shearwater.
Ardenna pacifica Wedge-tailed Shearwater.
Ardenna bulleri Buller’s Shearwater.
Ardenna tenuirostris Short-tailed Shearwater.
Ardenna grisea Sooty Shearwater.
Ardenna gravis Great Shearwater.
Ardenna creatopus Pink-footed Shearwater.
Ardenna carneipes Flesh-footed Shearwater.
Puffinus nativitatis Christmas Shearwater.
Puffinus puffinus Manx Shearwater.
Puffinus newelli Newell’s Shearwater.
Puffinus bryani Bryan’s Shearwater.
Puffinus opisthomelas Black-vented Shearwater.
Puffinus lherminieri Audubon’s Shearwater.
Puffinus baroli Barolo Shearwater.
(xiii) Order Ciconiiformes
Family Ciconiidae
Jabiru mycteria Jabiru.
Mycteria americana Wood Stork.
(xiv) Order Suliformes
(A) Family Fregatidae
Fregata ariel Lesser Frigatebird.
Fregata magnificens Magnificent Frigatebird.
Fregata minor Great Frigatebird.
(B) Family Sulidae
Sula dactylatra Masked Booby.
Sula granti Nazca Booby.
Sula nebouxii Blue-footed Booby.
Sula leucogaster Brown Booby.
Sula sula Red-footed Booby.
Papasula abbotti Abbott’s Booby.
Morus bassanus Northern Gannet.
(C) Family Anhingidae
Anhinga anhinga Anhinga.
(D) Family Phalacrocoracidae
Microcarbo melanoleucos Little Pied Cormorant.
Urile penicillatus Brandt’s Cormorant.
Urile urile Red-faced Cormorant.
Urile pelagicus Pelagic Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax carbo Great Cormorant.
Nannopterum auritum Double-crested Cormorant.
Nannopterum brasilianum Neotropic Cormorant.
(xv) Order Pelecaniformes
(A) Family Pelecanidae
Pelecanus erythrorhynchos American White Pelican.
Pelecanus occidentalis Brown Pelican.
(B) Family Ardeidae
Botaurus lentiginosus American Bittern.
Ixobrychus sinensis Yellow Bittern.
Ixobrychus exilis Least Bittern.
Ixobrychus eurhythmus Schrenck’s Bittern.
Ixobrychus flavicollis Black Bittern.
Tigrisoma mexicanum Bare-throated Tiger-Heron.
Ardea herodias Great Blue Heron.
Ardea cinerea Gray Heron.
Ardea alba Great Egret.
Ardea intermedia Intermediate Egret.
Egretta eulophotes Chinese Egret.
Egretta garzetta Little Egret.
Egretta sacra Pacific Reef-Heron.
Egretta gularis Western Reef-Heron.
Egretta thula Snowy Egret.
Egretta caerulea Little Blue Heron.
Egretta tricolor Tricolored Heron.
Egretta rufescens Reddish Egret.
Bubulcus ibis Cattle Egret.
Ardeola bacchus Chinese Pond-Heron.
Butorides virescens Green Heron.
Nycticorax nycticorax Black-crowned Night-Heron.
Nycticorax caledonicus Nankeen Night-Heron.
Nyctanassa violacea Yellow-crowned Night-Heron.
Gorsachius goisagi Japanese Night-Heron.
Gorsachius melanolophus Malayan Night-Heron.
(C) Family Threskiornithidae
(1) Subfamily Threskiornithinae
Eudocimus albus White Ibis.
Eudocimus ruber Scarlet Ibis.
Plegadis falcinellus Glossy Ibis.
Plegadis chihi White-faced Ibis.
(2) Subfamily Plataleinae
Platalea ajaja Roseate Spoonbill.
(xvi) Order Carthartiformes
Family Cathartidae
Gymnogyps californianus California Condor.
Coragyps atratus Black Vulture.
Cathartes aura Turkey Vulture.
(xvii) Order Accipitriformes
(A) Family Pandionidae
Pandion haliaetus Osprey.
(B) Family Accipitridae
(1) Subfamily Elaninae
Elanus leucurus White-tailed Kite.
(2) Subfamily Gypaetinae
Chondrohierax uncinatus Hook-billed Kite.
Elanoides forficatus Swallow-tailed Kite.
(3) Subfamily Accipitrinae
Aquila chrysaetos Golden Eagle.
Harpagus bidentatus Double-toothed Kite.
Circus hudsonius Northern Harrier.
Circus spilonotus Eastern Marsh-Harrier.
Accipiter soloensis Chinese Sparrowhawk.
Accipiter gularis Japanese Sparrowhawk.
Accipiter striatus Sharp-shinned Hawk.
Accipiter cooperii Cooper’s Hawk.
Accipiter gentilis Northern Goshawk.
Milvus migrans Black Kite.
Haliaeetus leucocephalus Bald Eagle.
Haliaeetus albicilla White-tailed Eagle.
Haliaeetus pelagicus Steller’s Sea-Eagle.
Ictinia mississippiensis Mississippi Kite.
Butastur indicus Gray-faced Buzzard.
Geranospiza caerulescens Crane Hawk.
Rostrhamus sociabilis Snail Kite.
Buteogallus anthracinus Common Black Hawk.
Buteogallus urubitinga Great Black Hawk.
Rupornis magnirostris Roadside Hawk.
Parabuteo unicinctus Harris’s Hawk.
Geranoaetus albicaudatus White-tailed Hawk.
Buteo plagiatus Gray Hawk.
Buteo lineatus Red-shouldered Hawk.
Buteo platypterus Broad-winged Hawk.
Buteo solitarius Hawaiian Hawk.
Buteo brachyurus Short-tailed Hawk.
Buteo swainsoni Swainson’s Hawk.
Buteo albonotatus Zone-tailed Hawk.
Buteo jamaicensis Red-tailed Hawk.
Buteo lagopus Rough-legged Hawk.
Buteo regalis Ferruginous Hawk.
Buteo rufinus Long-legged Buzzard.
(xviii) Order Strigiformes
(A) Family Tytonidae
Tyto alba Barn Owl.
(B) Family Strigidae
Otus sunia Oriental Scops-Owl.
Psiloscops flammeolus Flammulated Owl.
Gymnasio nudipes Puerto Rican Owl.
Megascops trichopsis Whiskered Screech-Owl.
Megascops kennicottii Western Screech-Owl.
Megascops asio Eastern Screech-Owl.
Bubo virginianus Great Horned Owl.
Bubo scandiacus Snowy Owl.
Surnia ulula Northern Hawk Owl.
Glaucidium gnoma Northern Pygmy-Owl.
Glaucidium brasilianum Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl.
Micrathene whitneyi Elf Owl.
Athene cunicularia Burrowing Owl.
Strix occidentalis Spotted Owl.
Strix varia Barred Owl.
Strix virgata Mottled Owl.
Strix nebulosa Great Gray Owl.
Asio otus Long-eared Owl.
Asio stygius Stygian Owl.
Asio flammeus Short-eared Owl.
Aegolius funereus Boreal Owl.
Aegolius acadicus Northern Saw-whet Owl.
Ninox japonica Northern Boobook.
(xix) Order Trogoniformes
Family Trogonidae
Subfamily Trogoninae
Trogon elegans Elegant Trogon.
Euptilotis neoxenus Eared Quetzal.
(xx) Order Upupiformes
Family Upupidae
Upupa epops Eurasian Hoopoe.
(xxi) Order Coraciiformes
Family Alcedinidae
(1) Subfamily Alcedininae
Alcedo atthis Common Kingfisher.
(2) Subfamily Halcyoninae
Todiramphus sacer Pacific Kingfisher.
Todiramphus cinnamominus Guam Kingfisher.
Todiramphus albicilla Mariana Kingfisher.
(3) Subfamily Cerylinae
Megaceryle torquata Ringed Kingfisher.
Megaceryle alcyon Belted Kingfisher.
Chloroceryle amazona Amazon Kingfisher.
Chloroceryle americana Green Kingfisher.
(xxii) Order Piciformes
Family Picidae
(1) Subfamily Jynginae
Jynx torquilla Eurasian Wryneck.
(2) Subfamily Picinae
Melanerpes lewis Lewis’s Woodpecker.
Melanerpes portoricensis Puerto Rican Woodpecker.
Melanerpes erythrocephalus Red-headed Woodpecker.
Melanerpes formicivorus Acorn Woodpecker.
Melanerpes uropygialis Gila Woodpecker.
Melanerpes aurifrons Golden-fronted Woodpecker.
Melanerpes carolinus Red-bellied Woodpecker.
Sphyrapicus thyroideus Williamson’s Sapsucker.
Sphyrapicus varius Yellow-bellied Sapsucker.
Sphyrapicus nuchalis Red-naped Sapsucker.
Sphyrapicus ruber Red-breasted Sapsucker.
Picoides dorsalis American Three-toed Woodpecker.
Picoides arcticus Black-backed Woodpecker.
Dendrocopos major Great Spotted Woodpecker.
Dryobates pubescens Downy Woodpecker.
Dryobates nuttallii Nuttall’s Woodpecker.
Dryobates scalaris Ladder-backed Woodpecker.
Dryobates borealis Red-cockaded Woodpecker.
Dryobates villosus Hairy Woodpecker.
Dryobates albolarvatus White-headed Woodpecker.
Dryobates arizonae Arizona Woodpecker.
Colaptes auratus Northern Flicker.
Colaptes chrysoides Gilded Flicker.
Dryocopus pileatus Pileated Woodpecker.
Campephilus principalis Ivory-billed Woodpecker.
(xxiii) Order Falconiformes
Family Falconidae
(1) Subfamily Herpetotherinae
Micrastur semitorquatus Collared Forest-Falcon.
(2) Subfamily Falconinae
Caracara plancus Crested Caracara.
Falco tinnunculus Eurasian Kestrel.
Falco sparverius American Kestrel.
Falco vespertinus Red-footed Falcon.
Falco amurensis Amur Falcon.
Falco columbarius Merlin.
Falco subbuteo Eurasian Hobby.
Falco femoralis Aplomado Falcon.
Falco rusticolus Gyrfalcon.
Falco peregrinus Peregrine Falcon.
Falco mexicanus Prairie Falcon.
(xxiv) Order Passeriformes
(A) Family Tityridae
Tityra semifasciata Masked Tityra.
Pachyramphus major Gray-collared Becard.
Pachyramphus aglaiae Rose-throated Becard.
(B) Family Tyrannidae
(1) Subfamily Elaeniinae
Camptostoma imberbe Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet.
Myiopagis viridicata Greenish Elaenia.
Elaenia martinica Caribbean Elaenia.
Elaenia albiceps White-crested Elaenia.
Elaenia parvirostris Small-billed Elaenia.
(2) Subfamily Tyranninae
Myiarchus tuberculifer Dusky-capped Flycatcher.
Myiarchus cinerascens Ash-throated Flycatcher.
Myiarchus nuttingi Nutting’s Flycatcher.
Myiarchus crinitus Great Crested Flycatcher.
Myiarchus tyrannulus Brown-crested Flycatcher.
Myiarchus sagrae La Sagra’s Flycatcher.
Myiarchus antillarum Puerto Rican Flycatcher.
Pitangus sulphuratus Great Kiskadee.
Myiozetetes similis Social Flycatcher.
Myiodynastes luteiventris Sulphur-bellied Flycatcher.
Legatus leucophaius Piratic Flycatcher.
Empidonomus varius Variegated Flycatcher.
Empidonomus aurantioatrocristatus Crowned Slaty Flycatcher.
Tyrannus melancholicus Tropical Kingbird.
Tyrannus couchii Couch’s Kingbird.
Tyrannus vociferans Cassin’s Kingbird.
Tyrannus crassirostris Thick-billed Kingbird.
Tyrannus verticalis Western Kingbird.
Tyrannus tyrannus Eastern Kingbird.
Tyrannus dominicensis Gray Kingbird.
Tyrannus caudifasciatus Loggerhead Kingbird.
Tyrannus forficatus Scissor-tailed Flycatcher.
Tyrannus savana Fork-tailed Flycatcher.
(3) Subfamily Fluvicolinae
Mitrephanes phaeocercus Tufted Flycatcher.
Contopus cooperi Olive-sided Flycatcher.
Contopus pertinax Greater Pewee.
Contopus sordidulus Western Wood-Pewee.
Contopus virens Eastern Wood-Pewee.
Contopus caribaeus Cuban Pewee.
Contopus hispaniolensis Hispaniolan Pewee.
Contopus latirostris Lesser Antillean Pewee.
Empidonax flaviventris Yellow-bellied Flycatcher.
Empidonax virescens Acadian Flycatcher.
Empidonax alnorum Alder Flycatcher.
Empidonax traillii Willow Flycatcher.
Empidonax minimus Least Flycatcher.
Empidonax hammondii Hammond’s Flycatcher.
Empidonax wrightii Gray Flycatcher.
Empidonax oberholseri Dusky Flycatcher.
Empidonax affinis Pine Flycatcher.
Empidonax difficilis Pacific-slope Flycatcher.
Empidonax occidentalis Cordilleran Flycatcher.
Empidonax fulvifrons Buff-breasted Flycatcher.
Sayornis nigricans Black Phoebe.
Sayornis phoebe Eastern Phoebe.
Sayornis saya Say’s Phoebe.
Pyrocephalus rubinus Vermilion Flycatcher.
(C) Family Vireonidae
Vireo atricapilla Black-capped Vireo.
Vireo griseus White-eyed Vireo.
Vireo crassirostris Thick-billed Vireo.
Vireo gundlachii Cuban Vireo.
Vireo latimeri Puerto Rican Vireo.
Vireo bellii Bell’s Vireo.
Vireo vicinior Gray Vireo.
Vireo huttoni Hutton’s Vireo.
Vireo flavifrons Yellow-throated Vireo.
Vireo cassinii Cassin’s Vireo.
Vireo solitarius Blue-headed Vireo.
Vireo plumbeus Plumbeous Vireo.
Vireo philadelphicus Philadelphia Vireo.
Vireo gilvus Warbling Vireo.
Vireo olivaceus Red-eyed Vireo.
Vireo flavoviridis Yellow-green Vireo.
Vireo altiloquus Black-whiskered Vireo.
Vireo magister Yucatan Vireo.
(D) Family Laniidae
Lanius cristatus Brown Shrike.
Lanius ludovicianus Loggerhead Shrike.
Lanius borealis Northern Shrike.
(E) Family Corvidae
Perisoreus canadensis Canada Jay.
Psilorhinus morio Brown Jay.
Cyanocorax yncas Green Jay.
Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus Pinyon Jay.
Cyanocitta stelleri Steller’s Jay.
Cyanocitta cristata Blue Jay.
Aphelocoma coerulescens Florida Scrub-Jay.
Aphelocoma insularis Island Scrub-Jay.
Aphelocoma californica California Scrub-Jay.
Aphelocoma woodhouseii Woodhouse’s Scrub-Jay.
Aphelocoma wollweberi Mexican Jay.
Nucifraga columbiana Clark’s Nutcracker.
Pica hudsonia Black-billed Magpie.
Pica nuttalli Yellow-billed Magpie.
Corvus monedula Eurasian Jackdaw.
Corvus kubaryi Mariana Crow.
Corvus brachyrhynchos American Crow.
Corvus leucognaphalus White-necked Crow.
Corvus imparatus Tamaulipas Crow.
Corvus ossifragus Fish Crow.
Corvus hawaiiensis Hawaiian Crow.
Corvus cryptoleucus Chihuahuan Raven.
Corvus corax Common Raven.
(F) Family Remizidae
Auriparus flaviceps Verdin.
(G) Family Paridae
Poecile carolinensis Carolina Chickadee.
Poecile atricapillus Black-capped Chickadee.
Poecile gambeli Mountain Chickadee.
Poecile sclateri Mexican Chickadee.
Poecile rufescens Chestnut-backed Chickadee.
Poecile hudsonicus Boreal Chickadee.
Poecile cinctus Gray-headed Chickadee.
Baeolophus wollweberi Bridled Titmouse.
Baeolophus inornatus Oak Titmouse.
Baeolophus ridgwayi Juniper Titmouse.
Baeolophus bicolor Tufted Titmouse.
Baeolophus atricristatus Black-crested Titmouse.
(H) Family Alaudidae
Alauda arvensis Eurasian Skylark.
Eremophila alpestris Horned Lark.
(I) Family Acrocephalidae
Arundinax aedon Thick-billed Warbler.
Acrocephalus luscinius Nightingale Reed Warbler.
Acrocephalus hiwae Saipan Reed Warbler.
Acrocephalus nijoi Aguiguan Reed Warbler.
Acrocephalus yamashinae Pagan Reed Warbler.
Acrocephalus familiaris Millerbird.
Acrocephalus schoenobaenus Sedge Warbler.
Acrocephalus dumetorum Blyth’s Reed Warbler.
(J) Family Locustellidae
Helopsaltes certhiola Pallas’s Grasshopper Warbler.
Helopsaltes ochotensis Middendorff’s Grasshopper Warbler.
Locustella lanceolata Lanceolated Warbler.
Locustella fluviatilis River Warbler.
(K) Family Hirundinidae
Subfamily Hirundininae
Riparia riparia Bank Swallow.
Tachycineta bicolor Tree Swallow.
Tachycineta cyaneoviridis Bahama Swallow.
Tachycineta thalassina Violet-green Swallow.
Tachycineta albilinea Mangrove Swallow.
Pygochelidon cyanoleuca Blue-and-white Swallow.
Stelgidopteryx serripennis Northern Rough-winged Swallow.
Progne tapera Brown-chested Martin.
Progne subis Purple Martin.
Progne elegans Southern Martin.
Progne chalybea Gray-breasted Martin.
Progne cryptoleuca Cuban Martin.
Progne dominicensis Caribbean Martin.
Hirundo rustica Barn Swallow.
Delichon urbicum Common House-Martin.
Petrochelidon pyrrhonota Cliff Swallow.
Petrochelidon fulva Cave Swallow.
(L) Family Aegithalidae
Psaltriparus minimus Bushtit.
(M) Family Phylloscopidae
Phylloscopus trochilus Willow Warbler.
Phylloscopus collybita Common Chiffchaff.
Phylloscopus sibilatrix Wood Warbler.
Phylloscopus fuscatus Dusky Warbler.
Phylloscopus proregulus Pallas’s Leaf Warbler.
Phylloscopus inornatus Yellow-browed Warbler.
Phylloscopus borealis Arctic Warbler.
Phylloscopus examinandus Kamchatka Leaf Warbler.
(N) Family Sylviidae
Sylvia curruca Lesser Whitethroat.
Chamaea fasciata Wrentit.
(O) Family Regulidae
Corthylio calendula Ruby-crowned Kinglet.
Regulus satrapa Golden-crowned Kinglet.
(P) Family Bombycillidae
Bombycilla garrulus Bohemian Waxwing.
Bombycilla cedrorum Cedar Waxwing.
(Q) Family Ptiliogonatidae
Ptiliogonys cinereus Gray Silky-flycatcher.
Phainopepla nitens Phainopepla.
(R) Family Sittidae
Subfamily Sittinae
Sitta canadensis Red-breasted Nuthatch.
Sitta carolinensis White-breasted Nuthatch.
Sitta pygmaea Pygmy Nuthatch.
Sitta pusilla Brown-headed Nuthatch.
(S) Family Certhiidae
Subfamily Certhiinae
Certhia americana Brown Creeper.
(T) Family Polioptilidae
Polioptila caerulea Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher.
Polioptila melanura Black-tailed Gnatcatcher.
Polioptila californica California Gnatcatcher.
Polioptila nigriceps Black-capped Gnatcatcher.
(U) Family Troglodytidae
Salpinctes obsoletus Rock Wren.
Catherpes mexicanus Canyon Wren.
Thryophilus sinaloa Sinaloa Wren.
Campylorhynchus brunneicapillus Cactus Wren.
Thryomanes bewickii Bewick’s Wren.
Thryothorus ludovicianus Carolina Wren.
Troglodytes aedon House Wren.
Troglodytes pacificus Pacific Wren.
Troglodytes hiemalis Winter Wren.
Cistothorus stellaris Sedge Wren.
Cistothorus palustris Marsh Wren.
(V) Family Mimidae
Melanotis caerulescens Blue Mockingbird.
Melanoptila glabrirostris Black Catbird.
Dumetella carolinensis Gray Catbird.
Margarops fuscatus Pearly-eyed Thrasher.
Toxostoma curvirostre Curve-billed Thrasher.
Toxostoma rufum Brown Thrasher.
Toxostoma longirostre Long-billed Thrasher.
Toxostoma bendirei Bendire’s Thrasher.
Toxostoma redivivum California Thrasher.
Toxostoma lecontei LeConte’s Thrasher.
Toxostoma crissale Crissal Thrasher.
Oreoscoptes montanus Sage Thrasher.
Mimus gundlachii Bahama Mockingbird.
Mimus polyglottos Northern Mockingbird.
(W) Family Sturnidae
Agropsar philippensis Chestnut-cheeked Starling.
Spodiopsar cineraceus White-cheeked Starling.
(X) Family Cinclidae
Cinclus mexicanus American Dipper.
(Y) Family Turdidae
Sialia sialis Eastern Bluebird.
Sialia mexicana Western Bluebird.
Sialia currucoides Mountain Bluebird.
Myadestes townsendi Townsend’s Solitaire.
Myadestes occidentalis Brown-backed Solitaire.
Myadestes myadestinus Kāma’o.
Myadestes lanaiensis Oloma’o.
Myadestes obscurus ‘Ōma’o.
Myadestes palmeri Puaiohi.
Catharus aurantiirostris Orange-billed Nightingale-Thrush.
Catharus mexicanus Black-headed Nightingale-Thrush.
Catharus fuscescens Veery.
Catharus minimus Gray-cheeked Thrush.
Catharus bicknelli Bicknell’s Thrush.
Catharus ustulatus Swainson’s Thrush.
Catharus guttatus Hermit Thrush.
Hylocichla mustelina Wood Thrush.
Turdus obscurus Eyebrowed Thrush.
Turdus eunomus Dusky Thrush.
Turdus naumanni Naumann’s Thrush.
Turdus pilaris Fieldfare.
Turdus iliacus Redwing.
Turdus grayi Clay-colored Thrush.
Turdus assimilis White-throated Thrush.
Turdus rufopalliatus Rufous-backed Robin.
Turdus migratorius American Robin.
Turdus plumbeus Red-legged Thrush.
Ixoreus naevius Varied Thrush.
Ridgwayia pinicola Aztec Thrush.
(Z) Family Muscicapidae
Muscicapa griseisticta Gray-streaked Flycatcher.
Muscicapa dauurica Asian Brown Flycatcher.
Muscicapa striata Spotted Flycatcher.
Muscicapa sibirica Dark-sided Flycatcher.
Erithacus rubecula European Robin.
Larvivora cyane Siberian Blue Robin.
Larvivora sibilans Rufous-tailed Robin.
Cyanecula svecica Bluethroat.
Calliope calliope Siberian Rubythroat.
Tarsiger cyanurus Red-flanked Bluetail.
Ficedula narcissina Narcissus Flycatcher.
Ficedula mugimaki Mugimaki Flycatcher.
Ficedula albicilla Taiga Flycatcher.
Phoenicurus phoenicurus Common Redstart.
Saxicola maurus Asian Stonechat.
Oenanthe oenanthe Northern Wheatear.
Oenanthe pleschanka Pied Wheatear.
Monticola solitarius Blue Rock-Thrush.
(AA) Family Peucedramidae
Peucedramus taeniatus Olive Warbler.
(BB) Family Prunellidae
Prunella montanella Siberian Accentor.
(CC) Family Motacillidae
Motacilla tschutschensis Eastern Yellow Wagtail.
Motacilla citreola Citrine Wagtail.
Motacilla cinerea Gray Wagtail.
Motacilla alba White Wagtail.
Anthus trivialis Tree Pipit.
Anthus hodgsoni Olive-backed Pipit.
Anthus gustavi Pechora Pipit.
Anthus cervinus Red-throated Pipit.
Anthus rubescens American Pipit.
Anthus spragueii Sprague’s Pipit.
(DD) Family Fringillidae
(1) Subfamily Fringillinae
Fringilla coelebs Common Chaffinch.
Fringilla montifringilla Brambling.
(2) Subfamily Euphoniinae
Chlorophonia musica Antillean Euphonia.
(3) Subfamily Carduelinae
Coccothraustes vespertinus Evening Grosbeak.
Coccothraustes coccothraustes Hawfinch.
Carpodacus erythrinus Common Rosefinch.
Carpodacus roseus Pallas’s Rosefinch.
Melamprosops phaeosoma Po’ouli.
Oreomystis bairdi ‘Akikiki.
Paroreomyza maculata O’ahu ‘Alauahio.
Paroreomyza flammea Kākāwahie.
Paroreomyza montana Maui ‘Alauahio.
Loxioides bailleui Palila.
Telespiza cantans Laysan Finch.
Telespiza ultima Nihoa Finch.
Palmeria dolei ‘Akohekohe.
Himatione fraithii Laysan Honeycreeper.
Himatione sanguinea ‘Apapane.
Drepanis coccinea ‘I’iwi.
Psittirostra psittacea ‘Ō’ū.
Pseudonestor xanthophrys Maui Parrotbill.
Hemignathus hanapepe Kauai Nukupu’u.
Hemignathus lucidus O’ahu Nukupu’u.
Hemignathus affinis Maui Nukupu’u.
Hemignathus wilsoni ‘Akiapola’au.
Akialoa stejnegeri Kauai ‘Akialoa.
Akialoa ellisiana O’ahu ‘Akialoa.
Akialoa lanaiensis Maui Nui ‘Akialoa.
Magumma parva ‘Anianiau.
Chlorodrepanis virens Hawaii ‘Amakihi.
Chlorodrepanis flava O’ahu ‘Amakihi.
Chlorodrepanis stejnegeri Kaua’i ‘Amakihi.
Loxops mana Hawaii Creeper.
Loxops caeruleirostris ‘Akeke’e.
Loxops wolstenholmei O’ahu ‘Akepa.
Loxops ochraceus Maui ‘Akepa.
Loxops coccineus Hawaii ‘Akepa.
Pinicola enucleator Pine Grosbeak.
Pyrrhula pyrrhula Eurasian Bullfinch.
Leucosticte arctoa Asian Rosy-Finch.
Leucosticte tephrocotis Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch.
Leucosticte atrata Black Rosy-Finch.
Leucosticte australis Brown-capped Rosy-Finch.
Haemorhous mexicanus House Finch.
Haemorhous purpureus Purple Finch.
Haemorhous cassinii Cassin’s Finch.
Chloris sinica Oriental Greenfinch.
Acanthis flammea Common Redpoll.
Acanthis hornemanni Hoary Redpoll.
Loxia curvirostra Red Crossbill.
Loxia sinesciuris Cassia Crossbill.
Loxia leucoptera White-winged Crossbill.
Spinus spinus Eurasian Siskin.
Spinus pinus Pine Siskin.
Spinus psaltria Lesser Goldfinch.
Spinus lawrencei Lawrence’s Goldfinch.
Spinus tristis American Goldfinch.
(EE) Family Calcariidae
Calcarius lapponicus Lapland Longspur.
Calcarius ornatus Chestnut-collared Longspur.
Calcarius pictus Smith’s Longspur.
Rhynchophanes mccownii Thick-billed Longspur.
Plectrophenax nivalis Snow Bunting.
Plectrophenax hyperboreus McKay’s Bunting.
(FF) Family Emberizidae
Emberiza leucocephalos Pine Bunting.
Emberiza chrysophrys Yellow-browed Bunting.
Emberiza pusilla Little Bunting.
Emberiza rustica Rustic Bunting.
Emberiza elegans Yellow-throated Bunting.
Emberiza aureola Yellow-breasted Bunting.
Emberiza variabilis Gray Bunting.
Emberiza pallasi Pallas’s Bunting.
Emberiza schoeniclus Reed Bunting.
(GG) Family Passerellidae
Peucaea carpalis Rufous-winged Sparrow.
Peucaea botterii Botteri’s Sparrow.
Peucaea cassinii Cassin’s Sparrow.
Peucaea aestivalis Bachman’s Sparrow.
Ammodramus savannarum Grasshopper Sparrow.
Arremonops rufivirgatus Olive Sparrow.
Amphispizopsis quinquestriata Five-striped Sparrow.
Amphispiza bilineata Black-throated Sparrow.
Chondestes grammacus Lark Sparrow.
Calamospiza melanocorys Lark Bunting.
Spizella passerina Chipping Sparrow.
Spizella pallida Clay-colored Sparrow.
Spizella atrogularis Black-chinned Sparrow.
Spizella pusilla Field Sparrow.
Spizella breweri Brewer’s Sparrow.
Spizella wortheni Worthen’s Sparrow.
Passerella iliaca Fox Sparrow.
Spizelloides arborea American Tree Sparrow.
Junco hyemalis Dark-eyed Junco.
Junco phaeonotus Yellow-eyed Junco.
Zonotrichia leucophrys White-crowned Sparrow.
Zonotrichia atricapilla Golden-crowned Sparrow.
Zonotrichia querula Harris’s Sparrow.
Zonotrichia albicollis White-throated Sparrow.
Artemisiospiza nevadensis Sagebrush Sparrow.
Artemisiospiza belli Bell’s Sparrow.
Pooecetes gramineus Vesper Sparrow.
Ammospiza leconteii LeConte’s Sparrow.
Ammospiza maritima Seaside Sparrow.
Ammospiza nelsoni Nelson’s Sparrow.
Ammospiza caudacuta Saltmarsh Sparrow.
Centronyx bairdii Baird’s Sparrow.
Centronyx henslowii Henslow’s Sparrow.
Passerculus sandwichensis Savannah Sparrow.
Melospiza melodia Song Sparrow.
Melospiza lincolnii Lincoln’s Sparrow.
Melospiza georgiana Swamp Sparrow.
Melozone fusca Canyon Towhee.
Melozone aberti Abert’s Towhee.
Melozone crissalis California Towhee.
Aimophila ruficeps Rufous-crowned Sparrow.
Pipilo chlorurus Green-tailed Towhee.
Pipilo maculatus Spotted Towhee.
Pipilo erythrophthalmus Eastern Towhee.
(HH) Family Nesospingidae
Nesospingus speculiferus Puerto Rican Tanager.
(II) Family Spindalidae
Spindalis zena Western Spindalis.
Spindalis portoricensis Puerto Rican Spindalis.
(JJ) Family Icteridae
Icteria virens Yellow-breasted Chat.
(1) Subfamily Xanthocephalinae
Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus Yellow-headed Blackbird.
(2) Subfamily Dolichonychinae
Dolichonyx oryzivorus Bobolink.
(3) Subfamily Sturnellinae
Sturnella lilianae Chihuahuan Meadowlark.
Sturnella magna Eastern Meadowlark.
Sturnella neglecta Western Meadowlark.
(4) Subfamily Icterinae
Icterus portoricensis Puerto Rican Oriole.
Icterus wagleri Black-vented Oriole.
Icterus spurius Orchard Oriole.
Icterus cucullatus Hooded Oriole.
Icterus pustulatus Streak-backed Oriole.
Icterus bullockii Bullock’s Oriole.
Icterus gularis Altamira Oriole.
Icterus graduacauda Audubon’s Oriole.
Icterus galbula Baltimore Oriole.
Icterus abeillei Black-backed Oriole.
Icterus parisorum Scott’s Oriole.
(5) Subfamily Agelaiinae
Agelaius phoeniceus Red-winged Blackbird.
Agelaius tricolor Tricolored Blackbird.
Agelaius humeralis Tawny-shouldered Blackbird.
Agelaius xanthomus Yellow-shouldered Blackbird.
Molothrus bonariensis Shiny Cowbird.
Molothrus aeneus Bronzed Cowbird.
Molothrus ater Brown-headed Cowbird.
Euphagus carolinus Rusty Blackbird.
Euphagus cyanocephalus Brewer’s Blackbird.
Quiscalus quiscula Common Grackle.
Quiscalus major Boat-tailed Grackle.
Quiscalus mexicanus Great-tailed Grackle.
Quiscalus niger Greater Antillean Grackle.
(KK) Family Parulidae
Seiurus aurocapilla Ovenbird.
Helmitheros vermivorum Worm-eating Warbler.
Parkesia motacilla Louisiana Waterthrush.
Parkesia noveboracensis Northern Waterthrush.
Vermivora bachmanii Bachman’s Warbler.
Vermivora chrysoptera Golden-winged Warbler.
Vermivora cyanoptera Blue-winged Warbler.
Mniotilta varia Black-and-white Warbler.
Protonotaria citrea Prothonotary Warbler.
Limnothlypis swainsonii Swainson’s Warbler.
Oreothlypis superciliosa Crescent-chested Warbler.
Leiothlypis peregrina Tennessee Warbler.
Leiothlypis celata Orange-crowned Warbler.
Leiothlypis crissalis Colima Warbler.
Leiothlypis luciae Lucy’s Warbler.
Leiothlypis ruficapilla Nashville Warbler.
Leiothlypis virginiae Virginia’s Warbler.
Oporornis agilis Connecticut Warbler.
Geothlypis poliocephala Gray-crowned Yellowthroat.
Geothlypis tolmiei MacGillivray’s Warbler.
Geothlypis philadelphia Mourning Warbler.
Geothlypis formosa Kentucky Warbler.
Geothlypis trichas Common Yellowthroat.
Setophaga angelae Elfin-woods Warbler.
Setophaga citrina Hooded Warbler.
Setophaga ruticilla American Redstart.
Setophaga kirtlandii Kirtland’s Warbler.
Setophaga tigrina Cape May Warbler.
Setophaga cerulea Cerulean Warbler.
Setophaga americana Northern Parula.
Setophaga pitiayumi Tropical Parula.
Setophaga magnolia Magnolia Warbler.
Setophaga castanea Bay-breasted Warbler.
Setophaga fusca Blackburnian Warbler.
Setophaga petechia Yellow Warbler.
Setophaga pensylvanica Chestnut-sided Warbler.
Setophaga striata Blackpoll Warbler.
Setophaga caerulescens Black-throated Blue Warbler.
Setophaga palmarum Palm Warbler.
Setophaga pinus Pine Warbler.
Setophaga coronata Yellow-rumped Warbler.
Setophaga dominica Yellow-throated Warbler.
Setophaga discolor Prairie Warbler.
Setophaga adelaidae Adelaide’s Warbler.
Setophaga graciae Grace’s Warbler.
Setophaga nigrescens Black-throated Gray Warbler.
Setophaga townsendi Townsend’s Warbler.
Setophaga occidentalis Hermit Warbler.
Setophaga chrysoparia Golden-cheeked Warbler.
Setophaga virens Black-throated Green Warbler.
Basileuterus lachrymosus Fan-tailed Warbler.
Basileuterus rufifrons Rufous-capped Warbler.
Basileuterus culicivorus Golden-crowned Warbler.
Cardellina canadensis Canada Warbler.
Cardellina pusilla Wilson’s Warbler.
Cardellina rubrifrons Red-faced Warbler.
Myioborus pictus Painted Redstart.
Myioborus miniatus Slate-throated Redstart.
(LL) Family Cardinalidae
Piranga flava Hepatic Tanager.
Piranga rubra Summer Tanager.
Piranga olivacea Scarlet Tanager.
Piranga ludoviciana Western Tanager.
Piranga bidentata Flame-colored Tanager.
Rhodothraupis celaeno Crimson-collared Grosbeak.
Cardinalis cardinalis Northern Cardinal.
Cardinalis sinuatus Pyrrhuloxia.
Pheucticus chrysopeplus Yellow Grosbeak.
Pheucticus ludovicianus Rose-breasted Grosbeak.
Pheucticus melanocephalus Black-headed Grosbeak.
Cyanocompsa parellina Blue Bunting.
Passerina caerulea Blue Grosbeak.
Passerina amoena Lazuli Bunting.
Passerina cyanea Indigo Bunting.
Passerina versicolor Varied Bunting.
Passerina ciris Painted Bunting.
Spiza americana Dickcissel.
(MM) Family Thraupidae
(1) Subfamily Dacninae
Cyanerpes cyaneus Red-legged Honeycreeper.
(2) Subfamily Coerebinae
Coereba flaveola Bananaquit.
Tiaris olivaceus Yellow-faced Grassquit.
Melopyrrha portoricensis Puerto Rican Bullfinch.
Melanospiza bicolor Black-faced Grassquit.
(3) Subfamily Sporophilinae
Sporophila morelleti Morelet’s Seedeater.”

[78 FR 65850, Nov. 1, 2013, as amended at 85 FR 21290, Apr. 16, 2020; 88 FR 49317, July 31, 2023]

–from https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-50/chapter-I/subchapter-B/part-10/subpart-B/section-10.13

If you find a bird on the above list, then the penalties mentioned earlier apply.

There are other laws to which these penalties apply, so even though you don’t find the bird you are searching for on the list, it is possible that your quarry may still net you a hefty fine or prison sentence.

. . . . .

It is a regular land mine out there in our back yards. Better to make a peace offering than to wage war, I feel. For instance, I put up a bird feeder with birdseed in it on the back porch. Seems to work wonderfully well.

Then I tried a hummingbird feeder. That is also a huge success; hummingbirds everywhere!

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Written and published on 1 June 2024; revised on 7 September 2025

Previous title of this blog: What If I Just Nuke All the Ravens and Songbirds! Will that Solve the Problem?

 

Music by Bohdan Kuzmin from Pixabay
“Wings of Your Freedom” – Pixabay Content License

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crime and crime prevention, law, law enforcement, Los Angeles, birds, Ravens, Songbirds, interspecies communication, my favorites, my favorites, miscellanea,

How to Assuage Hostile Birds . by Alice B. Clagett *

How to Assuage Hostile Birds

Image: “Raven Talk,” by Colin, 30 April 2016, in Wikimedia Commons … https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jubilee_and_Munin,_Ravens,_Tower_of_London_2016-04-30.jpg … CC BY-SA 4.0 International … DESCRIPTION: “Jubilee and Munin, Ravens of the Tower of London. Jubilee was hatched in Somerset in 2012 and wears a gold band. He was given to the Queen on her Diamond Jubilee. Munin was hatched in North Uist in 1995 and wears a light green band. She is the oldest raven at the tower. Identification confirmed with Chris Skaife, Ravenmaster at the Tower.”

Image: “Raven Talk,” by Colin, 30 April 2016, in Wikimedia Commons … https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jubilee_and_Munin,_Ravens,_Tower_of_London_2016-04-30.jpg … CC BY-SA 4.0 International … DESCRIPTION: “Jubilee and Munin, Ravens of the Tower of London. Jubilee was hatched in Somerset in 2012 and wears a gold band. He was given to the Queen on her Diamond Jubilee. Munin was hatched in North Uist in 1995 and wears a light green band. She is the oldest raven at the tower. Identification confirmed with Chris Skaife, Ravenmaster at the Tower.”

  • INTRODUCTION
  • VIDEO BY ALICE
  • SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
  • VIDEO CREDITS
  • CONCLUSION

INTRODUCTION

Dear Ones,

Here is a nighttime talk on a number of animal topics: The upshot of a raven congress (bad for me!); how baby hawks have been teasing and tricking me; what the grown-up hawks explained about how owls hunt mice; my ideas about how mice and rabbits talk; and my ideas about how we might be able to talk with insects.

There is a Summary after the video …

VIDEO BY ALICE

SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO

[Music]

Hello, Dear Ones, It’s Alice. I Am of the Stars.

I ran into an interesting workaround for Bird animosity towards human beings yesterday. The prior day I noticed a similarity between the way that a Baby Nanday intones “I LOVE you-u-u” with its parent and the way that a Mother Dolphin intones “I LOVE  you-u-u” to its babies.

And I thought, “Could be this is a universal language for the birds and the humans, since love makes the world go ’round  … Love is the nature of God … Love is the nature of Lightworkers.

And so I went back to the place where the Nandays were. They came on with animosity again …  just a couple of them this time.

So, telepathically I said to them, in the same tone as as the Baby Nandays have towards their Mother … in the same tone as the Mother Dolphin has towards its Babies … I said to them, “I LOVE you-u-u! I LOVE you-u-u!”

And the Nandays said,”No you don’t. (That was vocalizing.) And I said on the telepathic plane, “Yes I do.” And then they weren’t mean to me anymore.

I saw two. I asked them where everybody was that day. I was speaking telepathically and they were responding by vocalizing. They said that everybody was at a banjo concert that was on the same property.

I said, “Oh, how is it?” … because they could hear it even from where I was and I could only hear the deep tones.

They said, “It’s really quite good.” That’s why I missed out on most of the Nandays.

Then I went down near the ocean where I could hear the Pelicans talking, and the Seagulls.

I asked the Pelicans how everything was for them that day.

In a deep, gruff voice, one of the Pelicans complained that the Fish very much disliked being eaten.

The Pelicans thought the Fish ought to have a more positive attitude towards being eaten.

I was not sure what to say about that, so I didn’t say anything at all.

There where I was at the Fish restaurant by the ocean there were two very mean Ravens and they were doing that thing …. that thing that I was scared of from the other place where they bullied around with me and, you know, for all I know might have attacked me … pecked out my eyes or something or tried to … and so I was immediately on the alert.

I’m now a little bit leery of the Ravens.

Since there was the sound of the surf and so forth, I tried vocalizing (I think it was vocally … maybe it was telepathically): “I LOVE you-u-u” … like that.

I can’t say it really high like the Mother Dolphin does. “I LOVE you-u-u.”

First the Ravens were vocalizing their anger … as was the case in the other video that I made. When one of the Ravens heard that “I LOVE you-u-u”: it said: “Humph!” … like that .. “Humph!” … out loud. 

Then the Ravens went off and stopped bothering the people who were sitting outside eating at the restaurant.

I think the Ravens were after the food initially, but then all the time that I was they didn’t bother the people anymore.

So this is what I’m getting at: I think if we can speak on the telepathic plane (if we’re Lightworkers) or else vocalize with our vocal cords “I LOVE you-u-u” when we approach an avian species, then I think we may be getting off on the right track with them. Then we could observe what they say to each other and so forth.

We might be able to talk right along with them then, instead of encountering this extreme antagonism.

I think the antagonism has to do with their species being hunted and killed by human beings.

I’m going to attach a clip or two that shows other species’ vocalization of words ‘I LOVE you-u-u’. and you can compare that to what I’m saying right now. Okay?

First, here’s the Baby Nanday saying to its Mother: “I LOVE you-u-u.” You can hear the strong wind that was blowing as well. 

Baby Nanday: “I LOVE you-u-u.”

So now, here is the Mother Dolphin saying to its Babies “I LOVE you-u-u” …

Mother Dolphin: soothingly says to its babies: “I LOVE you-u-u-u-u!”

Baby Dolphins say: “Momma, I’m SCARED right now!”

Momma Dolphin says in a soothing voice: “I know that you’re scared.”

Baby Dolphin interrupts with: “I’m SCARED, Momma!”

[Music]

So now here is what I came up with. It depends on your own vocal cords … how you would pronounce this, what tone you would use, and what scale you would use … but here’s my attempt at something similar to waht the Mother Dolphin said … “I LOVE you-u-u-u-u!”

You have to say it with an open, clear heart. You can’t say it with anger in your heart.

“I LOVE you-u-u-u-u!”  … “I LOVE you-u-u-u-u!”

“I LOVE you-u-u-u-u!” [in a lower register]

Any of those would do, I think. You can come up with something.

that’s all for now.

God bless you all,
And keep you safe,
And be with you
Through all your days.

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Come and visit me at my world class A1 WordPress website “Awakening with Planet Earth” … https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com

[Music]

Filmed and published on 19 May 2024; transcribed and youtube transcription edited on 6 January 2026

VIDEO CREDITS

“How to Assuage Hostile Birds”
by Alice B. Clagett

Filmed and produced on 19 May 2024

Location: San Fernando Valley, CA

CC BY-SA 4.0 International
AUDIO CREDITS

Excerpt from Audio clip: “2024-05-05 Soundtrack for Nanday Parakeets – I Love You Momma Keetie – Goddamit,” by Alice B. Clagett, CC BY-SA 4.0 International

Excerpt from Music by beetpro from Pixabay “Deep Sea Connect Dolphins Gaia Lemuria Pachamama Spiritual Frequency 16” – Pixabay License

Image: “Nanday Parakeets,” by Gareth Rasberry, 26 March 2017, in English Wikipedia … https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nanday_Parakeets6.jpg ..

Image: “Nanday Parakeets,” by Gareth Rasberry, 26 March 2017, in English Wikipedia … https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nanday_Parakeets6.jpg ..

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birds, ravens, parakeets, Nanday parakeets, dolphins, interspecies and extraterrestrial communication, my favorites, miscellanea,

Runes . by Alice B. Clagett *

Runes

Dear Ones,

Runes are sacred symbols that embody the power of creation.

There are various runic alphabets. For instance …

  1. There are Germanic runes, including Elder Futhark, Anglo-Saxon Futhorc, and Younger Futhark
  2. the Elven and Dwarven runes channeled by Tolkien;
  3. the runes or hieroglyphs of ancient Egypt;
  4. the Old Testament and Kabbalah names of God, which have magical and psychical qualities [that must be used for the good of all beings, or else!];
  5. the Tongue of Angels, which is the ‘Enochian’ language channeled by Dr. John Dee;
  6. the healing runes of Reiki, which are written in the air;
  7. the glowing red, cobalt blue, or black runes that some of the Lightworkers have seen on Christed space ships;
  8. the healing languages of Light and sound, which are electromagnetically sculpted or intoned;
  9. bird language of Blue Avian Starseeds which I term Blue Avian Star Beings. These include occasional whistles and clicks, as well as other sounds;
  10. and the yet-to-be-discovered runes through which will unfold our vision of New Life on New Earth.

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Written and published on 7 February 2024; revised on 6 July 2025

This image has been added here: Link: “Tiny Anthologies: Image Markups 13,” by Alice B. Clagett, compiled and published on 21 December 2025 … https://wp.me/p2Rkym-FqA ..

MORE INFORMATION

The numbers below refer to the enumerated list above.

1. Link: “Runes,” in English Wikipedia … https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runes ..

2. Link: “Languages Constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien,” in Simple Wikipedia … https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_constructed_by_J._R._R._Tolkien ..

3. Link: “Egyptian Hieroglyphs, in English Wikipedia …  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_hieroglyphs ..

4a. Video: “Names of God,” by Qaiser Ilyas, 3 June 2020 …https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wV-woQ7F_Nw ... and …

4b. Video: “Kabbalah Names – 72 Names of God Pronounced,” by Kabbalah Names, 12 May 2012 … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAH9wrudFn4 ..

5. Link: “The Tongue of Angels: An Introduction to the ‘Enochian’ Language of Dr. John Dee, by Aaron Leitch, in Quest: Journal of the Theosophical Society in America, Winter 2017 … https://www.theosophical.org/publications/quest-magazine/the-tongue-of-angels ..

6a. Link: “The Reiki Symbols Explained,” by Professional Wellness Alliance, 24 June 2020 … https://blog.pwai.us/pwa/reiki-symbols ..

6b. Link: “What Is Reiki,” by the International Center for Reiki Training … https://www.reiki.org/faqs/what-reiki ..

7a. Citation: “Sunshine Before the Dawn,” a book by Judy Satori, 1 January 2011, ISBN 9780985673000 (ISBN10: 0985673001)  … and … 

7b. Link: “The Arcturian Anthology” by Tom Kenyon and Judy Sion, available at the website Tom Kenyon … https://tomkenyon.com/ ..

8a. Link: “Blogroll: Ascension Resources,” referrals by Alice B. Clagett, updated from time to time … https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com/blogroll-ascension-resources/ ..

8b. Link: “Light Sculpting,” by Alice B. Clagett, filmed on 21 February 2021; published on 22 February 2021; revised on 27 September 2023 and on 17 November 2023  … https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com/light-sculpting-by-alice-b-clagett/ ..

9. Blue Avian Starseed Language

I cannot find bird language of Blue Avian Starseeds online yet, but I heard it spoken by a visitor recording during one of Judy Satori’s online events. Here is something about Blue Avian Starseeds … be careful regarding the author, who may be a psychologist or psychiatrist, as people in these professions often speak from a stance of psychology of lack and limitation. When this occurs they are prone to damping down Lightworker and Ascensioneer gifts with pharmaceuticals and physical ‘lockdowns’. You can see cause for concern in this video because of the sketch of a person who appears to be mentally unbalanced. Here is the reference in question, which has to do with Blue Avian Starseed personality … Video: “Unveiling the Enigmatic Blue Avian Starseeds: Galactic Guardians of Awakening,” by Russ Curtis, Ph.D., Professor of Counseling, 7 June 2023  …https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5ZYmEr8ksI ..

I am drawn to this video with Blue Avian Starseed language even though it sounds very different from what I heard from the visitor to Judy Satori’s online event … Video: “Blue Avians Light Language Activation – Remember Who You ARE | Starseeds,” by J. Zoltan, 16 November 2020 … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RDge1TvtV8 I note the use of bright aqua symbols and Egyptian bas-reliefs in the video.

Here is another compelling video with hybrid Blue Avian Starseed language being spoken. This one includes a whistle and is intoned a little like Judy Satori’s language of Light … Video: “Blue Avian Light Language Activation,” by Chamera Chan Jong Chu, 3 December 2021 … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSo19TctBu4 ..

Tik Tok has quite a few channelings of Blue Avian Starseed language; for example …

Zahara Celestial, on TikTok … https://www.tiktok.com/@zaharacelestial/video/7233019836396227867 ..

Mysticheartspace, on TikTok … https://www.tiktok.com/@mysticheartspace/video/7120719670641954090 ..

Also on TikTok by Mysticheartspace … on Tiktok … Totally intriguing – samples of languages of Light from Pleiadian, Sirian, Andromedan, Fairy [!] [aka faeries], dragon [yikes!], Lyran, Elven [!], Arcturian [with clicks], Blue Avian, and Lemurian … https://www.tiktok.com/@mysticheartspace/video/7067790052985867567 ..

10.  To be discovered one day soon!

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