How to be a Birder part 2
Hint # 2: Listen
One of the things I enjoy doing when I wake early is to listen – around dawn – it doesn’t happen too often mind you. I enjoy listening to the dawn chorus of birds. I try to identify all the species by call alone. I also enjoy doing this while camping out bush. Then it is different because I am not always sure what I will hear. When visiting friends or relatives in other parts of the country I am frequently surprised by the different calls coming from the birds outside.
Train your ears to listen
Listening to the birds can be done anywhere, just like watching them. No special equipment is needed. After training your eyes to see the birds in your environment, it is also very important to listen to them. You need to train your ears to listen.
Bird call recordings
There are some helpful resources available that will improve your birding call identification skills. For many years tapes of bird calls have been available. These generally have a short recording of each species. Sometimes the bird names are printed on the cover insert. Sometimes there is a narrator telling the listener what bird call is being played. Now many of these are available on a CD. Far more species can be covered in this format. More recently, birders are turning to using an iPod to store all the bird calls. Some are even taking these into the field to help with identification.
Sheer delight
Whatever method one uses to learn about bird calls, listening to them can be a sheer delight. I few days before writing this I was with my wife having a picnic in the Mt Lofty Botanic Gardens in the Adelaide Hills. An Australian Magpie came and sat on our picnic basket and proceeded to entertain us with his beautiful carolling. And all this only a metre away! Magnificent. Click here to read about it.
How to be a Birder part 1
Hint # 1: Observe
Birds are everywhere. Even in the Sahara Desert, the busiest city or the cold Antarctic there are birds. Everyone knows what a bird is and generally what distinguishes a bird from other creatures. Although, I’ve seen a few birds that I am not so sure about.
The first rule of birding is:
Observe.
Use your eyes.
Look at the birds in your immediate environment. Look out the window. What birdlife do you see? What birds do you have in your garden or in the street? Did you see any birds on the way to school or work? Were there any birds near the shops when you went shopping? Did you see any birds while waiting at traffic lights, or at the bus stop or while on that train journey?
Keep your eyes open. When you start looking carefully, you will be amazed at the numbers of birds that daily surround your life. Not to mention the great variety of species that shares your part of the world. And watch their behaviour. Birds do some very interesting and quite bizarre things.
How to be a Birder
Tomorrow I start a series of 20 articles on how to be a birder. A birder is another name for a birdwatcher.
In these articles I have written hints about what to do, the equipment you will need and how to go about this fascinating hobby.
For readers who are experienced in this wonderful pastime called birding, I invite your comments on what I have written, along with any extra hints people might benefit from to enhance their enjoyment of birds.