Crossword-Solution: BIRDERS
We have 12 clues for the answer “BIRDERS”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| Audubon Society members | 1 answer |
| Avid ones keep Life Lists | 1 answer |
| Cardinals' followers, say | 1 answer |
| Enthusiasts with binoculars | 1 answer |
| Ones really watching bills? | 1 answer |
| Ones who pay attention to bills | 1 answer |
| Some ecotourists | 1 answer |
| Swift followers, e.g. | 1 answer |
| Swift pursuers, perhaps | 1 answer |
| They're constantly trying to see tits | 1 answer |
| Tourists with spotting scopes | 1 answer |
| AUDUBON SOCIETY MEMBER | 10 answers |
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Dermatological complaint
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Hint 1 meaning
An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the
presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the
discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin
covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum.
Hint 2 anagram
CZMEAE
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
11 +1
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Sentences with BIRDERS (4)
Having been captured when young by Pacific black-birders, he talked excellent English, and from contact with the necessary restraints of civilization was, on the whole, extremely well behaved.
They were the real old beachcombers and “black-birders” who had made and were still making good incomes by stealing natives, and selling them to the stealthy slavers that called in Apia harbours presumably for cargoes of copra, but really for natives, whom they enticed on board by splendid promises of a glorious sea-trip.
But then he took to preaching against the black-birders, slavers, you know--so the traders ran him out.
The “black-birders” bartered their human cargoes for West Indian molasses, which, by a spirituous, if not a spiritual, process, became New England rum.
Quotes with BIRDERS (3)
But in the early 1970s, we were not birdwatching. We were birding, and that made all the difference. We were out to seek, to discover, to chase, to learn, to find as many different kinds of birds as possible — and, in friendly competition, to try to find more of them than the next birder. We became a community of birders, with the complications that human societies always have; and although it was the birds that had brought us together, our story became a human story after all.
The wild things and places belong to all of us. So while I can't fix the bigger problems of race in the United States - can't suggest a means by which I, and others like me, will always feel safe - I can prescribe a solution in my own small corner. Get more people of color "out there." Turn oddities into commonplace. The presence of more black birders, wildlife biologists, hunters, hikers, and fisher-folk will say to others that we, too, appreciate the warble of a summer tana…
We don't think much about climate change and rising sea levels here in the U.S. Beyond a few gardeners, birders and hikers who notice the changes in our own ecosystem, we live on, blissfully unaware of our changing Earth. Our storms - Katrina, Sandy - are dismissed as once-in-a-century events.
Where this answer appears
Appears in: LAT, Newsday, NYT, Universal, WSJ.
Used 10 times in crossword archives (2004–2024).