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Help on choosing a site name
You should enter an appropriate
name in the site-name box on the site registration form. Please specify the location
in words (avoid codes or numbers) using a maximum of 40 characters. You should
use names that will allow you to distinguish your own sites clearly and easily.
Where a site has a readily understood name that can be found on Ordnance Survey
maps or is in wide use by birdwatchers then please use it. Sometimes you may need
to qualify such names to indicate the part of the area where you do your bird
watching. Different Migration Watch users can use the same site names (you must
enter them under your own user id) and we encourage you to do this where appropriate.
Migration Watch analyses will be based on grid references rather than site names.
However, it will help the Migration Watch team to follow up interesting and unusual
records if you use site names that we can understand without having to refer back
to you.
When you register a site
you must give it a name that is different from the ones that you have already
registered. However, you can have different sites with the same grid-reference
or postcode. For example, three different walks from your house, all assigned
to your postcode, could be registered as different sites if you wanted to keep
the records from them separate.
| Examples of good site names: |
Ludham Bridge |
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Barnham Common |
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Loch Rannoch |
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| Examples of poor site names: |
My garden |
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Compartment five |
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Main CES site |
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