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What was your fasting blood glucose? (full on chat)
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<blockquote data-quote="lindisfel" data-source="post: 2359593" data-attributes="member: 57698"><p>True Krystyna, that is how a lot of birders find their birds. It takes time and field experience learning the songs first and then the calls.</p><p>I have been at it since my early teenage years so I hate to think how long.....perhaps coming up to 70 years.</p><p>It really helps in the Spring when the woods are full of newly arrived migrants.</p><p></p><p>I am fortunate, a lot of birders say how they can't hear warblers any more when they get in their mid 70's and a target specie for quantifying hearing loss is the Goldcrest. I can still hear them, but the sound is attunuated from when I was younger.</p><p></p><p>The duchess couldn't hear a middle distance Cuckoo last Spring because I think she has lost that section of her frequency response which her hearing aid does not supply the correction for.</p><p>My right ear has lost gain but my left is fine and I don't have an aid yet.</p><p>D.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lindisfel, post: 2359593, member: 57698"] True Krystyna, that is how a lot of birders find their birds. It takes time and field experience learning the songs first and then the calls. I have been at it since my early teenage years so I hate to think how long.....perhaps coming up to 70 years. It really helps in the Spring when the woods are full of newly arrived migrants. I am fortunate, a lot of birders say how they can't hear warblers any more when they get in their mid 70's and a target specie for quantifying hearing loss is the Goldcrest. I can still hear them, but the sound is attunuated from when I was younger. The duchess couldn't hear a middle distance Cuckoo last Spring because I think she has lost that section of her frequency response which her hearing aid does not supply the correction for. My right ear has lost gain but my left is fine and I don't have an aid yet. D. [/QUOTE]
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