Showing posts with label birders birding resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birders birding resources. Show all posts

Friday, October 9, 2009

Thoughts for Beginning Birders




Barn Owl


Just thought I would post a few thoughts for the ever burgeoning group of people joining the ranks of birdwatching.

Malachite Kingfisher, Perching, Botswana




Malachite Kingfisher, Perching, Botswana Photographic Print

Robles Gil


24 in. x 18 in.

Buy at AllPosters.com

Framed   Mounted


The foundation for all modern birdwatching is the field mark system originally conceived by the "father of modern birding", Roger Tory Peterson. It revolves around the concept that each bird has unique features that can be used to identify it. Peterson also introduced the idea of shape as a good first indicator of species identity.In his initial version of Field Guide to the Birds of North America he put silhouettes of birds on the inside cover as a means of illustrating this idea. So in summary, field marks form the basis for the identification of birds. But there is more to the story.....


Male Painted Bunting, Everglades National Park, Florida, USA




Male Painted Bunting, Everglades National Park, Florida, USA Premium Photographic Print

Jones, Adam


40 in. x 30 in.

Buy at AllPosters.com

Framed


Once you establish your foundation with field marks, you can begin to add other elements, such as song and habitat to your identification arsenal. When I was a little kid I used to sit for long periods of time just looking through bird books at the pictures of birds. I enjoyed the beauty of birds at an early age and this is what ultimately fueled my identification skills. I wrote about my progress as a birder in a previous article entitled "The Layered Evolution of a Birder" (see 2008 Blog Archive below). Reading this article will give you some insight into the potential transformation to come as you evolve in your birdwatching life. One point I made in that article is that you need to realize that not every bird is a male in breeding plumage - there are females and juveniles as well.


With regard to the important area of birding binoculars, I recommend finding a lightweight, weatherproof 10 power pair. I have used a pair of compact, waterproof, Nikon 10 x 25 binoculars for more than 15 years now. I started with the classic 7 x 35 Bushnells, but the optical goods market has changed substantially since I was a kid. The 10 x 40 binoculars are probably ideal as they give you more light gathering capacity than the 10 x 25 (i.e. 25/10 = 2.5, whereas 40/10 = 4 which translates to more light gathering). So if you can afford it, look for 10 x 40.

The title of this blog embodies the essence of birding for me and hopefully for you as well - passion. Cultivate it and enjoy! Hopefully you will be thrilled and amazed by sights such as the one below of Whooping Cranes intermingling with Sandhill Cranes (Alaska). The beauty and grandeur of nature can take your breath away!


Thursday, March 27, 2008

Big Morongo - Hard to Find Desert Riparian Birding

I noticed recently that on my birding bookshelf I had a couple of copies of some old Birdwatcher's Digest (BWD) from the 1980s. The January/February issue contains a good article by Chuck Bernstein on a little known, but very cool, birding spot - Southern California's Big Morongo Reserve. The article inspired a visit to the place while on my spring break as a graduate student at Washington State University. It was the possibility of seeing a strikingly beautiful bird - the Vermilion Flycatcher - that lured me down there. Indeed Bernstein talks about making a pilgrimage there every year, if possible, to "get my symbolic blood transfusion" that keeps him going for another year.

Bernstein quotes the curator of natural history for the San Bernadino County museum, and conductor of a breeding bird survey for the area, as saying that "the desert riparian ecosystem has the highest density of breeding land birds in North America". Cardiff's survey records show an incredible 1400+ singing males per square kilometer. Unfortunately, very little of this habitat remains in the American West. Cardiff talks about how 95 percent of this habitat has already been wiped out.

Besides the spectacular Vermilion Flycatcher, other birds of note include:

I enjoyed my visit to this reserve and I was fortunate enough to see a male Vermilion Flycatcher - right after I entered the reserve, as I recall. I also remember seeing my life lister Lucy's Warbler and having to work to see and figure that one out (which I loved doing of course). I also saw the very handsome Gambel's Quail, also a life lister for me.
Big Morongo is a great place to bird - if you get the chance, by all means, check it out. Hopefully you will get to see the Vermilion Flycatcher and it will remind you, as it did for me, why you love to bird so much.






Amargosa River and its Riparian Habitat and Erosion Pattern, Mojave Desert, California, USA












A Vermillion Flycatcher Perches on a Tree Branch on Santa Cruz Island







Male Summer Tanager









Gambel's Quail, Callipepla Gambelii, Vocalizing









Gambel's Quail (Callipepla Gambelii) Female








Male Gambel's Quail Scratching for Food, Henderson Bird Viewing Preserve








Anna's Hummingbird

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