Monday, October 26, 2020

Being Prepared - A How-To Guide for Advanced Birding

Birdingfor some enthusiasts it's a diversion, little more than grabbing a pair of binoculars and hitting the woods, fields, or back yard for some fresh air, exercise, and leisurely avian amusement. Nothing wrong with a casual approach to the hobby, but for the serious birder like myself, one intent on tracking down the rarest of rare species no matter the physical, emotional, or pecuniary toll, things can get a little more involved. With many of my birdwalks spanning days on end and hundreds of miles in some of the most adverse terrain and weather Michigan's lower peninsula has to offer, I felt I'd be doing my fellow birders an injustice not sharing what I've learned over the years.

The Gear

Binoculars - High-powered binocs are the difference between not being able to ID a bird with the naked eye and not being able to ID it through a pair of 10x42 lenses.

Camera - Capturing birds is a challenge made easier by the latest advances in film photography. For me, nothing less than the Holga 135 will suffice.

Field guide - It's worth doing a fair bit of research to find a book that is suitably comprehensive and compact. Don't forget a writing tool to tick off those species one by one!

Cellphone - Aside from providing access to a number of birding apps, any smartphone worth a salt features a compass, satellite map technology, and the option of making a good old-fashioned emergency telephone call when the ability to read a compass or a map fails.

Charger - I rarely remember to charge my phone before setting off on a birding adventure. Unfortunately, this rarely-charged charger rarely comes in handy.

Hydration - A canteen filled with 100% liquid bourbon is just the thing to slake that thirst.

Fuel - A sudden crash in energy is dangerous and the last thing you want in the field. Protein-rich snacks are a must!

Bedding - Mother Nature is merciless and unpredictable, and as such protection against the elements is essential. The ideal sleeping bag provides plenty of warmth and the perfect camouflage to help blend into the environs when at our most vulnerable.

Protection - Michigan's open carry laws protect our right to dismember Sith lords, rock hounds, Cub Scouts, and any other natural enemies we encounter in our travels.

The Look 

Birding is the most dignified of pursuits, and the attire of the serious birder should reflect that sense of dignity.


Many generations and decades of personal experience were mined in the compiling of this post. I hope it will prove a trusty roadmap to anyone ready to spit out their pacifier, shed the mantle of novice, and take their birdwatching to the next level.

nwb

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

BillBow's Bird Journal - Milestone Edition

On the afternoon of September 25, I spotted a Philadelphia vireo in the Towar Woods Preserve in Meridian Township, Michigan. The sighting was a big one in that it marked the 200th bird species I've recorded since I began keeping track in April of 1993. 

Except it didn't.

After combing through the notes in my field guides one more time this morning, my life list suddenly jumped to 203. It seems some ancient recordkeeping inconsistencies had come back to haunt me as I realized I had been neglecting to count the black-tailed gnatcatcher and pair of goldfinches, Lawrence's and lesser, I had seen in Texas in 1994. That means my 200th life bird was not the Philadelphia but the red-eyed vireo I saw and photographed in the back yard on September 5. Behold, in all its blurry glory:



My apologies to BOTH vireos vying for that coveted slot. Philadelphia, La La Land of birds, I know you're crestfallen today, but if you ask me 203 is a pretty neat number too. Your heroic yet failed attempt to be 200 will not be forgotten, and I do hope you gleaned some satisfaction from 12 days of not-so-everlasting triumph. Red-eyed, this is a big day for you. Enjoy it, but remember to stay humble. This is 2020 after all, when nothing is certain and things are apt to change in a hurry. Just ask your cousin from Philly.

What will certainly not change is that a yellow-bellied sapsucker I saw out back on September 29 was the 56th species I've seen at our East Lansing home, surpassing the 55 sighted at our previous home in West Lafayette, Indiana, where we resided from 2008-13. I feel lucky to have captured a fair-to-middling photo of the young pecker as it made its way up the old pear tree:






Congratulations, young sapsucker, a worthy representative of #56. May you suck the sap for years to come!

In other news...

Bird log, 10/07/2020

Canada goose
Black-capped chickadee
Northern harrier
American crow
White-breasted nuthatch
Blue jay
House finch
American goldfinch
Sharp-shinned hawk
Mourning dove
Red-bellied woodpecker
Eastern bluebird
Downy woodpecker
Hairy woodpecker
Nashville warbler
Turkey vulture
Mallard
Northern cardinal
American robin
Tufted titmouse

nwb