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elleng

(134,765 posts)
Sun Mar 31, 2024, 03:00 AM Mar 2024

When I Became a Birder, Almost Everything Else Fell Into Place.

(Haven't read this yet, birding has added hugely to my appreciation of Nature, so HAPPY EASTER!)

By Ed Yong

Mr. Yong is a science writer whose most recent book, “An Immense World,” investigates animal perception.

'Last September, I drove to a protected wetland near my home in Oakland, Calif., walked to the end of a pier and started looking at birds. Throughout the summer, I had been breaking in my first pair of binoculars, a Sibley field guide and the Merlin song-identification app, but always while hiking or walking the dog. On that pier, for the first time, I had gone somewhere solely to watch birds.

In some birding circles, people say that anyone who looks at birds is a birder — a kind, inclusive sentiment that also overlooks the forces that create and shape subcultures. Anyone can dance, but not everyone would identify as a dancer because the latter suggests if not skill then at least effort and intent. Similarly, I’ve cared about birds and other animals for my entire life, and I’ve written about them throughout my two decades as a science writer, but I mark the moment when I specifically chose to devote time and energy to them as the moment I became a birder.

Since then, my Birder Derangement Syndrome has progressed at an alarming pace. Seven months ago, I was still seeing very common birds for the first time. Since then, I’ve seen 452 species, including 337 in the United States, and 307 this year alone. I can reliably identify a few dozen species by ear. I can tell apart greater and lesser yellowlegs, house and purple finches, Cooper’s and sharp-shinned hawks. (Don’t talk to me about gulls; I’m working on the gulls.) I keep abreast of eBird’s rare bird alerts and have spent many days — some glorious, others frustrating — looking for said rare birds. I know what it means to dip, to twitch, to pish. I’ve gone owling.

I didn’t start from scratch. A career spent writing about nature gave me enough avian biology and taxonomy to roughly know the habitats and silhouettes of the major groups. Journalism taught me how to familiarize myself with unfamiliar territory very quickly. I crowdsourced tips on the social media platform Bluesky. I went out with experienced birders to learn how they move through a landscape and what cues they attend to.'>>>

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/30/opinion/birding-spring-merlin-ebird.html

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When I Became a Birder, Almost Everything Else Fell Into Place. (Original Post) elleng Mar 2024 OP
🥚🌺🥚🌺🥚 Donkees Mar 2024 #1
OH DONKEES!!! elleng Mar 2024 #4
i imitate birds . some of the best " catches " were 2 redtail hawks orbiting . AllaN01Bear Mar 2024 #2
Piedmont Bird Callers on Johnny Carson 1986 Donkees Mar 2024 #3
WOW! elleng Mar 2024 #5
paywalled Layzeebeaver Mar 2024 #6
Birding can be very addictive... Elysium Apr 2024 #7

AllaN01Bear

(22,402 posts)
2. i imitate birds . some of the best " catches " were 2 redtail hawks orbiting .
Sun Mar 31, 2024, 09:09 AM
Mar 2024

i also the little bushtits , so animated . they come to my feet.

Elysium

(41 posts)
7. Birding can be very addictive...
Tue Apr 2, 2024, 09:42 AM
Apr 2024

First you start with a backyard feeder...
Then you bird your local county parks...
Then you bird neighboring counties in your state...
Then you work on seeing all the species your state has to offer...
Next you want to see what birds are in neighboring states and eventually the entire US...
Next you want to see what birds in other countries...

It is a lifelong passion that is constantly expanding.

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