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Where Are All the Birds? Ranch Hand Wonders Why So Many Have Simply Vanished from Chase County KS

J. Schafer/Kansas Public Radio

An avid birdwatcher who's lived in the Flint Hills for more than 40 years says something strange has been happening.

Bones Ownbey, a 71-year-old ranch hand at the Flying W, says small birds have almost completely disappeared from his neck of the woods, near Cottonwood Falls, in Chase County.

Impossible? Maybe. But listen to this report from KPR's J. Schafer then... decide for yourself.


KPR News will continue to track this story for future developments. If we learn more, we'll let you know. 

Billions of North American Birds Have Vanished, Science - September 20, 2019

Bones Ownbey's Facebook page, where he collects information on bird populations from fellow birdwatchers.

Copyright 2019 Kansas Public Radio. To see more, visit Kansas Public Radio.

J. Schafer is the News Director of Kansas Public Radio at the Univeristy of Kansas. He’s also the Managing Editor of the Kansas Public Radio Network, which provides news and information to other public radio stations in Kansas and Missouri. Before joining KPR in 1995, Schafer spent 10 years as a commercial radio and TV newsman. During his career, he's filed stories for nearly every major radio news network in the nation including ABC, NBC, CBS, AP, UPI, the Mutual Broadcasting System, NPR and the BBC. This seems to impress no one. At KPR, he produces feature stories, interviews and newscast items and edits the work of others. In the fall of 2000, he performed contract work for the U.S. State Department, traveling to central Asia to teach broadcast journalism at newly independent radio stations in the former Soviet Union. One of his passions is Kansas; learning about and promoting the state’s rich heritage, people and accomplishments. Schafer gives presentations about Kansas to various organizations around the state to remind residents about our awesome history and incredible people. A native of Great Bend, he studied journalism and mass communications at Barton County Community College and at the University of Kansas. He was also an exchange student to Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany. The “J.” in J. Schafer stands for Jeremy, but he doesn’t really care for that name. He also enjoys the pretentiousness of using just a single initial for a first name!