The Xerces Society, one of the leading worldwide insect conservation organizations, put on a four-hour Bumble Bee Atlas webinar a couple of weeks back. Right in the middle of it, the presenter, Professor Rich Hatfield, paused in his recitation on bumblebees and placed the illustration at right of the Asian giant wasp on the screen, […]
Jim Anderson
They’re Baaaack!
When I rolled into Bend on my Harley in 1951, I didn’t know a Pandora moth from a monarch butterfly. It wasn’t until 1986 that they both entered my life, but the first to arrive was the moth; the monarchs came later when my wife, Sue, started monitoring the butterflies at Lava Beds National Monument […]
Boxing Up Owls
One of the things I enjoy about growing older is that I still have the get-up-and-go to join old friends who not only share what I love to do, but never miss the opportunity to do so. Like when Dick Tipton sent me an email about a saw-whet owl using one of his kestrel nesting […]
Building a Nesting Box with Jim Anderson โถ (with video)
Around these parts, he’s known to spin a yarn that wraps around the block. Now, Naturalist Jim Anderson and longtime Source Weekly contributor sits down with us to talk about one of his favorite subjects: Birdsโand how to help care for them. Source videographer Darris Hurst met with Anderson at his homeโsocial-distancing-approved styleโto walk through […]
An Eagle Obituary
I have a friend, Lynn Tompkins, who, with her husband, Bob, operate a wildlife facility that does wildlife rehab work near Pendleton. At the moment she and her irreplaceable Volunteers (Capitalized because they are so faithful and hard-working), headed by Michele Canon, are currently handling over 30 orphaned barn owls that have come to her attention […]
Bats and COVID-19
The COVID-19 virus has come home to roost with concern for our native bats. As an Oregon wildlife researcher with duties that include banding birds and bats, I’m required to purchase an expensive permit from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to do my work. As such, I received a letter from the ODFW […]
Insect Apocalypse
“Apocalypse” is a Greek word meaning revelationโan unveiling or unfolding of things not previously known, and which could not be known, apart from the unveiling. “As a genre, apocalyptic literature details the authors’ visions of the end times as revealed by an angel or other heavenly messenger,” Wikipedia posits. Sorry, good peopleโI am neither an […]
The Barred Owl is Here—to Stay!
First it was rumors: “The barred owls are coming, the barred owls are coming…” Next, it was the dire warnings that the barred owls were going to either chase all the Northern Spotted Owls out of the Northwest, or breed with them and bring forth a whole new sub-species called, “Sparred Owls.” Then the warning […]
Putting Porcupines on a Pedestal
In our part of the country, where trees were once thought of as a cash crop, porcupines were not thought of as heroes, or worthy of a pedestal. I can recall back in the ’50s, when signs nailed to trees and poles all over the forest around Bend read, “Please Kill Porcupines!” Porcupine poison stations […]
Homes for Birds and Bats
OK, good people, now’s the time! Head out to the nearest housing construction project, and if they’re using plywood (not particle board), ask the builders to put leftovers aside. Bring a box of donuts, give it to the builders and bring the plywood home to build bird house nesting boxes. I’ve been building nesting boxes […]

