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Birders from quite far afield flock to Alaska

ST. PAUL ISLAND, Alaska - British birder Annie Andreae bristles at being called a "twitcher" - friendly slang in England for someone who will drop everything at the drop of a hat to get a glimpse at a must-see bird.

ST. PAUL ISLAND, Alaska - British birder Annie Andreae bristles at being called a "twitcher" - friendly slang in England for someone who will drop everything at the drop of a hat to get a glimpse at a must-see bird.

"I'm not a twitcher. I just like watching them," Andreae says. "They look lovely sitting there like that."

The evidence may speak for itself. Andreae flew about 5,000 miles to get to St. Paul Island to see birds. While she dislikes being known as a twitcher, she doesn't mind being called cuckoo.

"We're a mad lot," she says, as she and her fellow British birders stand close to the edge of 100-foot cliffs in gale-force winds, peering over the edge to see nesting seabirds.

Ask Steve Bird - yes, that's his real name - if he's brought twitchers to this remote island in the Bering Sea, and he says, yup, they're twitchers, willing to pay $16,000 or more for a 25-day birding trip to Alaska.

"We have a lot of rich clients that want to go around the world and see the wildlife," said Bird, 46, a wildlife artist from Plymouth, England. He is founder and director of Birdseekers, which offers birding tours at nearly 30 locations around the globe.

The British are the "ultimate twitchers," said Forrest Davis, owner of High Lonesome BirdTours of Sierra Vista, Ariz., another outfit that brings small groups of birders to the Pribilof Islands, about 300 miles from the Alaska mainland.

About 250 people, more than half the island's population, travel to St. Paul each year to get a look at some of the island's 284 species of birds, see the fur seals, and learn more about its rich history, said tour director Jolene Lekanof of St. Paul Island Tours. The agency works with 18 travel agencies in the Lower 48 and in Scotland, England, Japan and Canada to bring birders to St. Paul.

Cameron Cox, 28, one of the tour guides, had heard about St. Paul for years before having the opportunity to visit. St. Paul is special, he says. There was a recent sighting here of a gray wagtail, seen rarely in North America, he says.

"When you haven't been to any place similar, you can't imagine it until you've been here," Cox says, describing himself as from "Anywhere, U.S.A." - anywhere that has lots of birds. St. Paul is "pretty incredible," he says.

After St. Paul Island, the birders travel to Barrow, Dutch Harbor, Seward and Nome, with stops at Kenai Fjords National Park and Denali National Park.

The hoped-to-see list in Alaska includes the bristle-thighed curlew, McKay's bunting, Smith's longspur, red-legged kittiwake, emperor goose, Aleutian tern, snowy owl, and various auklets, murrelets, puffins and other seabirds.

Frank Andrews, 72, said he hoped to see the bristle-thighed curlew, a species that numbers fewer than 10,000. "We haven't seen it yet," he said. "There was one here the day before yesterday. We missed it by minutes."

Part of the appeal for hard-core birders is seeing a particular bird in an unusual location.

St. Paul is known for that, Lekanof says. The island is famous for its Asian vagrants - birds blown off-course and ending up on St. Paul because it is the only place around to rest.

The common cuckoo shows up on St. Paul every year but is otherwise rare in North America, Lekanof says. On June 6, the first black-tailed gull showed up in the Pribilofs, flying with a group of kittiwakes.

That was topped three days later when the first rufous-tailed robin was sighted in the islands. The bird is normally confined to northeast China and southeast Russia. It was only the second known sighting of the bird in North America. The other was June 2000 on Attu in Alaska's Aleutian Islands.

Lekanof says sightings like that give St. Paul its reputation. "It is called birders' paradise for the hard-core birder," she says.