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A team of dedicated board members, volunteers, and student interns has published every page in Volume 9. This volume includes 360 images of paintings and lyrical descriptions of birds, now available online for everyone to enjoy anywhere in the world. This is a monumental task. Each volume requires approximately 400 hours to photograph, edit, transcribe, catalog, and publish online. We need your support to complete this work.
If you're tech-savvy, have a good eye, are meticulous with details, and love structured data, please consider volunteering by emailing us at hello@rexbrasher.org.
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Even more confiding than the Piping Plover, this western relative follows the same scheme of life.
While walking on the beach, Florence Bailey says, bits of sand would take legs ahead of her, the brown forms having been entirely overlooked. When she saw them before they got up and stopped to talk, the confiding little fellows flatteringly sat still or went on fixing their feathers, looking very comfortable in the warm sand. When they ran it was in a comical crouching way as tho they knew their backs were sand color and trying to hide their black legs and plump white bodies. They are exceptionately quiet birds except when the vicinity of the nest is invaded.
Western United States. North to Washington, west to Kansas. Permanent resident in southern part of its range.