iNatting from Airports and Airplanes!

Hello Fellow iNatters!

Many of you are like me and absolutely nuts with iNaturalist, as I have noted from your many observations! I don't know about you, but my mind is almost always on what organisms can be noted and were, regardless of where I find myself - even when nature is hard to come by. At the mall with the family, at the theme park, at the baseball game, the office, and so on, but what about the airport and from INSIDE the airplane?

Recently I have started documenting these observations, almost as a game, to see what I can see from the various airports across the country and internationally. It is some fun! On that layover between your home and final destination, you may be able to see things you won't see in either place. Why not document them? Most airports are well-equipped with large windows allowing you to see whatever exists outside from a 360 degree vantage point. I like to take advantage when possible. Of course, on nighttime or tight layovers or when there just isn't much to see outside, those can be tough.

A selection of my airport/airplane observations are included in this post. Some of the more interesting observations include Bat Falcon and a Jumping Spider in Panama's Tocumen International, Florida Royal Palm and Beach She-oak in Miami International, the rare Purple Desert Lupine and Ives' Phacelia on Borrego Valley Airport property, the Amazon River from the plane, etc. I have even started photographing aerial shots from the plane window mid-flight and submitting them as "Plants". With those international flights, you can photo the image shown on the onboard TV monitor that shows your current position and then later match your specific position using Google Earth. Those "Plants" observations have much less value than shots from the ground since they are not species specific, but are fun nonetheless. I'll try to review my various other observations and photos from the past and add them here in time. Some additional older airport observations:

Bat Falcon, Tocumen International, Panama
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/1172706
Jumping Spider, Tocumen International, Panama
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/490456
Surf Scoter, San Diego International
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2557385
Common Loon, San Diego International
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2557382

Before I carried a camera, I recall so many interesting airport observations I wish I had documented. Years ago on one layover on my way to South America at Panama's Tocumen International Airport, I saw two species of parrots, Magnificent Frigatebirds, other assorted bird species and most amazingly, a migration kettle of hundreds of Swainson's and Broad-winged Hawks circling overhead. On another layover in Buenos Aires, Argentina, multiple Fork-tailed Flycatchers on the wires. If only I had photographed all of those...

To me, photographing observations from airports and airplanes is just one more way to contribute to the iNaturalist database and citizen science in general. I hope you agree and give it a shot. Have fun!

Jay

Publicado el martes, 03 de octubre de 2017 a las 01:02 AM por jaykeller jaykeller

Observaciones

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Febrero 25, 2017 a las 11:08 AM PST

Descripción

Tom Chester @tchester and Keir Morse @keirmorse found representatives on 2/19/17 at/near this location, which were the first observed locally in 110 years! We returned to this location for a broader search today and found MANY specimens, which I'll enter in the coming days.

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Febrero 25, 2017 a las 11:24 AM PST

Descripción

Tom Chester @tchester and Keir Morse @keirmorse found representatives on 2/19/17 at/near this location, which were the first observed locally in 78 years! We returned to this location for a broader search today and found MANY specimens, which I'll enter in the coming days.

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Febrero 25, 2017 a las 11:18 AM PST

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Amarantos (Género Amaranthus)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Febrero 25, 2017 a las 11:11 AM PST

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Febrero 25, 2017 a las 11:13 AM PST

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Casuarina Australiana (Casuarina equisetifolia)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 07:31 AM PDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Casuarina Australiana (Casuarina equisetifolia)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 07:42 AM PDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Palma Botella (Roystonea regia)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 07:27 AM PDT
Plants

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Plantas (Reino Plantae)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 11:22 AM PDT

Descripción

Primary photo from the plane window overflying Tuburon, Haiti (noting plants) and secondary photo showing the location of the plane from the onboard TV monitor.

Plants

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Plantas (Reino Plantae)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 12:20 PM PDT

Descripción

Primary photo from the plane window overflying Tacuato, Venezuela (noting plants) and secondary photo showing the location of the plane from the onboard TV monitor.

Plants

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Plantas (Reino Plantae)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 04:07 PM PDT

Descripción

Primary photo from the plane window overflying Parque do Xingu, Brazil (noting plants) and secondary photo showing the location of the plane from the onboard TV monitor.

Plants

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Plantas (Reino Plantae)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Marzo 22, 2017 a las 04:21 PM PDT
Plants

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Plantas (Reino Plantae)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Abril 2, 2017 a las 08:13 AM PDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Palmas o Palmeras (Familia Arecaceae)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Abril 2, 2017 a las 09:00 AM PDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Eucalipto Azul (Eucalyptus globulus)

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Abril 2, 2017 a las 09:07 AM PDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

jaykeller

Fecha

Abril 2, 2017 a las 08:56 AM PDT

Comentarios

There is no like button for this post. So let me just publicly say I love this. Airports just got a whole lot more fun. Also, nice Falcon find!

Anotado por gantproductions hace mas de 6 años

Thanks Andrew! It sure helps pass the time during long layovers. Photo quality typically suffers due to the windows and distance, but no big deal.

Anotado por jaykeller hace mas de 6 años

Hah, I thought I was the only one playing this game. I should have known better. Great post. I would only add that it's a good way to get a bit of exercise in, too. I find myself covering a decent amount of ground going from window to window these days, esp. on layovers. It beats sitting in a chair looking at a screen.

Anotado por jmaughn hace mas de 5 años

I identified myself with your post,

related to observations in an airport I got one, from inside the airplane:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/8947248
(Belem Airport, Amazon, Brazil)

I extend to other places when moving on, like on the road (I already stoped, more than once, to get a photo), railroad stations (one cannot ask to stop a train to take photos),

or a trip in the Amazon river, by boat:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/6513796
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/8947018
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/6513876
(sailing downstream in the Amazon river)

best regards
Nelson

Anotado por nelson_wisnik hace mas de 5 años

Excellent Nelson! That's a nice one for the airport.

I hate to admit how many things I have seen at cemeteries, which tend to be good places for birds and butterflies. ;-)

Anotado por jaykeller hace mas de 5 años

Cemeteries? Sounds like a good Halloween Project for the community :)

Anotado por gantproductions hace mas de 5 años

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