By Jenn McKeogh, senior manager, GM News
What do painted buntings, battery technology, and data dumps have in common? They’re all passions of Paul Messing: General Motors battery engineer and avid birdwatcher.
During the day, Messing works as a battery systems engineer at GM’s Warren, Michigan, Technical Center. When he’s off the clock, he’s scanning the skies for feathered friends.
Taking off
Messing says his fascination with wildlife began with a well-thumbed copy of the “Reader’s Digest Guide to North American Wildlife”.
"My family often camped in the Michigan thumb” - an eastern section of the state that protrudes into Lake Huron - “and vacationed at different national parks,” he said. “We were always identifying our bird and wildlife sightings - of course, using Reader’s Digest.”
Messing’s passion for birdwatching in particular began in 2009, when he sighted what he calls calls his “spark bird” – a cedar waxwing. Today, Paul serves as the president of the Macomb County Audubon Society – a territory that includes Warren. He’s seen more than 250 bird species to date.
While Messing says it’s impossible to pick a favorite sighting, one of his top picks was a painted bunting, a bird in the cardinal family with brightly colored plumage, which he spotted on a trip to Florida.
“I probably have a favorite bird in each habitat. I love pileated woodpeckers in the woods, and belted kingfishers when I’m kayaking.”