Happy New Year!! 🎉 We hope you all had a wonderful Christmas and had a chance to get out and look for some birds.
We spent the last 6 nights glamping in the New Year at the Pedder Bay RV Resort & Marina. Glamping is an annual thing for us to do and a great way to unwind after our hectic Christmas volunteering schedule with CFAX Santas Anonymous. January 1st is also our 3rd birding anniversary although we really didn't kick birding into high gear until the fall of 2018.
I don't believe in New Year's resolutions because a) why wait until January 1st each year to make a change in your life and b) most resolutions are unreachable because the change is too drastic or unrealistic. If I said "I'm going to learn how to identify seagulls in 2019" I have already created a problem .... because there are no seagulls to identify!
Goals are much better because they can be adjusted due to a number of factors like procrastination, laziness, not liking the goal after really thinking about it or if the goal involves great financial hardship which would require getting a second job and that is not going to happen because we are trying to retire!
For the past couple of months we have been thinking of what birding activity goals (adjustable whenever we like) that we would like to accomplish in 2019 so here are a few:
The first one starts January 1st and we're calling it our "First 200 Big Year", which simply is to record 200 species which on paper sounds easy but can we do it? We finished 2018 with 148 species observed (over 3 years) which means that we'll have to find at least 52 new "lifers" throughout the new year and all the ones we've seen before again. At this time we have no plans to bird outside British Columbia so we'll have to find approximately 38% of the 524 species typically found in the province to reach 200. We have no idea if we can reach this goal but we have a couple of trips planned that might help in the count. In any case, we'll have fun during the year trying.
We are planning on attending a 3-day Introductory Bird Monitoring and Banding workshop coordinated by the Rocky Point Bird Observatory and held at the Royal Roads University in early spring if the course is being offered again for 2019. Completion of this course would be an asset to some of our long term birding goals and increase our bird "nerd" factor.
In late spring we're planning a birding / car camping trip into the Okanagan region of the province for about 10 days which will definitely help in our big year count and of course allow us to visit many wineries along the way!
Starting in late July we'll be volunteering at the Rocky Point Bird Observatory with their Fall Migration Program which runs through the end of October. We've done this the past two years primarily focusing on the Northern Saw-whet Owl program but this year we'd also like to help more with the daylight hours passerine migration monitoring program.
Sometime in August we hope to be heading to the beautiful Tatlayoko Valley in BC's West Chilcotin to volunteer at the Tatlayoko Lake Bird Observatory for a couple of weeks. Not only are we excited about the possibility of working at the site to see and handle the species (some new to us ... keeping the 200 in mind) that are studied there but maybe also the opportunity to see other amazing creatures such as grizzly bears and other mammals that we don't have on Vancouver Island. Sidebar, Robyn works for the Raincoast Conservation Foundation which has numerous amazing conservation programs including protecting grizzly bears in the Great Bear Rainforest. This is a trip that we really are excited about for so many reasons.
At some point in 2019 we also will start planning our first out of the country birding trip to Central America in 2020 or early 2021. We've heard (podcasts) and read about so many amazing birding destinations in Costa Rica, Honduras, Panama that we definitely want to include a big trip in the near future.
Okay 🙄..... one New Year's resolution that both of us are going to attempt. We are going to see how long into 2019 that each of us can complete the eBird “Checklist a Day” challenge. Sounds simple enough - submit an average of at least one complete eBird checklist per day in 2019. Or to push ourselves we can also try the eBird “Checklist Streak” for 365 consecutive days.
Monday, December 31, 2018
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Bad Weather, We Still Found Birds!
Storm after storm after storm!
That’s been the trend for the past couple of weeks on the south coast of
British Columbia after a relatively mild and dry fall. Not only is it raining
cats and dogs but the near hurricane force winds offshore and the fact that we
work full time has dampened our birding opportunities. We really should just
quit our jobs and go on a global big year!!
We did manage to spend most of last
Saturday on a big birding walk (20 km) around the Victoria, BC inner harbour
and waterfront even though the winds were blowing pretty good. Our expectations
weren’t very high but to our surprise we managed to see 25 species including a
Common Murre which was our #146 lifer in the lee of the wind behind the
Ogden Point breakwater. Several species like small flocks of Buffleheads,
Harlequin Ducks and Double-crested Cormorants were seen several hundred feet
offshore bobbing up and down in the cresting waves.
| Say Cheese!! |
Of course, there were lots of gulls
trying to just stay airborne in the turbulent wind currents and many were just
hanging out for tourists like us to take their pictures.
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| Glaucous-winged Gull? What do you think? |
Speaking of gulls …. They make our
minds hurt with so many species, juvenile, 1st winter, 2nd winter, adult nonbreeding, adult breeding etc. etc. We might just start calling
them BWGJ’s (Big White Grey Job’s) from now on. Or maybe it's time that we invested in a copy of the book Gulls Simplified by Pete Dunne and Kevin Karlson? At least we’ve stopped calling
them seagulls!
The 2018 Bird Studies Canada
Christmas Bird Count for Kids took place on the weekend at our “patch” which is
just over the backyard fence. We made sure our feeders were well stocked for
the usual “crew” of birds that visit our yard many times a day and completed an
eBird checklist of the patch earlier in the morning seeing or hearing 22
species including a Merlin which was our lifer #145! Having only used eBird for
the past month our species total in our patch (Beckwith Park) is now at 34 with
the top eBirder having recorded 68 species. The bar is set high but it sure
would be nice to get that top spot in our local patch.
I finished reading Noah Strycker's Birding Without Borders last week and found it truly inspiring. Noah's account of birding for 365 days straight in 2015 with the sole purpose of breaking the birding "Big Year" world record was amazing. All the planning, the miles upon miles of travel, the never ending getting up before dark only after a few hours of sleep and not knowing what the day would bring made for an exciting adventure that I couldn't stop reading. If you haven't read this book, do yourself a favour and pick up a copy. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Christmas Day is now less than a week away which also means that we're getting closer to spending Boxing Day through to New Year's Day at the Pedder Bay RV Resort & Marina. Pedder Bay is also one of the sites that the Rocky Point Bird Observatory uses for its migration program which we volunteer at during the summer and fall months. Hopefully the weather will cooperate and we'll get some great birding days while we're there.
Merry Christmas and happy birding!!
I finished reading Noah Strycker's Birding Without Borders last week and found it truly inspiring. Noah's account of birding for 365 days straight in 2015 with the sole purpose of breaking the birding "Big Year" world record was amazing. All the planning, the miles upon miles of travel, the never ending getting up before dark only after a few hours of sleep and not knowing what the day would bring made for an exciting adventure that I couldn't stop reading. If you haven't read this book, do yourself a favour and pick up a copy. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Christmas Day is now less than a week away which also means that we're getting closer to spending Boxing Day through to New Year's Day at the Pedder Bay RV Resort & Marina. Pedder Bay is also one of the sites that the Rocky Point Bird Observatory uses for its migration program which we volunteer at during the summer and fall months. Hopefully the weather will cooperate and we'll get some great birding days while we're there.
Merry Christmas and happy birding!!
Mark & Robyn
Friday, December 7, 2018
How Many Birds Is That? - eBird
Until about a month ago we never kept track of the birds that we have seen or heard. We knew that we had seen and photographed a lot of birds but there was never a reason or desire to keep a list, and then we watched a movie called “The Big Year” starring Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson .
Curious, I wondered exactly how many birds we had seen since becoming official bird nerds on January 1, 2016 so I went about spending numerous hours creating an Excel spreadsheet with sighting dates from my photographs metadata and included the 4-letter alpha code for every bird using an Institute for Bird Populations publication by Peter Pye and David F. DeSante. Further tweaking of our list included the location of many of the birds first sighting and gave them “lifer” designations for the ones that we could confirm by date. I then started to amend the list by adding future sighting dates so that we could track species migration patterns of “our crew” that visit the feeders in the yard. I was so proud of what we had accomplished thinking that we were on to something by keeping a list of birds like this. This must be what being a true birder was all about!
On our recent birding excursion to the George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary in Delta, BC we used Rite in the Rain notebooks to record the species including the number seen and I updated the Excel spreadsheet (that I had pre-loaded into the cloud) on my iPhone while on the ferry back home. After finishing our third excursion to the buffet and while Googling for bird checklists we happened to stumble on a free app called eBird. Quickly we downloaded the app and fumbled through the mobile interface trying to understand how to use it and even more, why we would want to use it!
Over the next couple of days, we both completed the free on-line Cornell Lab eBird Essentials course, but I still had one concern. Would we spend more time looking at our iPhone's in the field than looking for birds? The eBird app looked great but would it be practical in the field?
Our first field testing of eBird included using notepads to record our sightings and then we entered the data into eBird once back in the car or leaving a habitat. I timed this process and found on average it took less than 3 minutes to complete a checklist, but could the whole process be streamlined further? The last few weeks we have recorded our sightings in eBird as they were discovered, and we noticed that we are now seeing more species than we normally would have because how we bird has also changed. Now we find ourselves stopping in a habitat for a few minutes to observe the “what’s that?” and are seeing other species that in the past we would have missed.
Not only have we found that the mobile eBird app is very easy to use after completing the eBird Essentials course, but the free Merlin Bird ID app can also be directly accessed while using eBird, eliminating the need to carry printed field guides. It gets even better because the app checklists sync with the eBird website and this is where the data is shared with other eBird users all around the world. There are so many great features and reasons to use eBird and if you haven’t it might be worth looking at for yourself.
Not that we are interested birding by numbers however currently there are 10,417 species worldwide in the eBird database and Robyn and I have 142 and 143 lifers respectively (I’ve seen a Barn Owl) which works out that we have seen 1.37% of all worldwide species. This only means one thing …. Time to get birding!!!
Curious, I wondered exactly how many birds we had seen since becoming official bird nerds on January 1, 2016 so I went about spending numerous hours creating an Excel spreadsheet with sighting dates from my photographs metadata and included the 4-letter alpha code for every bird using an Institute for Bird Populations publication by Peter Pye and David F. DeSante. Further tweaking of our list included the location of many of the birds first sighting and gave them “lifer” designations for the ones that we could confirm by date. I then started to amend the list by adding future sighting dates so that we could track species migration patterns of “our crew” that visit the feeders in the yard. I was so proud of what we had accomplished thinking that we were on to something by keeping a list of birds like this. This must be what being a true birder was all about!
On our recent birding excursion to the George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary in Delta, BC we used Rite in the Rain notebooks to record the species including the number seen and I updated the Excel spreadsheet (that I had pre-loaded into the cloud) on my iPhone while on the ferry back home. After finishing our third excursion to the buffet and while Googling for bird checklists we happened to stumble on a free app called eBird. Quickly we downloaded the app and fumbled through the mobile interface trying to understand how to use it and even more, why we would want to use it!
Over the next couple of days, we both completed the free on-line Cornell Lab eBird Essentials course, but I still had one concern. Would we spend more time looking at our iPhone's in the field than looking for birds? The eBird app looked great but would it be practical in the field?
Our first field testing of eBird included using notepads to record our sightings and then we entered the data into eBird once back in the car or leaving a habitat. I timed this process and found on average it took less than 3 minutes to complete a checklist, but could the whole process be streamlined further? The last few weeks we have recorded our sightings in eBird as they were discovered, and we noticed that we are now seeing more species than we normally would have because how we bird has also changed. Now we find ourselves stopping in a habitat for a few minutes to observe the “what’s that?” and are seeing other species that in the past we would have missed.
Not only have we found that the mobile eBird app is very easy to use after completing the eBird Essentials course, but the free Merlin Bird ID app can also be directly accessed while using eBird, eliminating the need to carry printed field guides. It gets even better because the app checklists sync with the eBird website and this is where the data is shared with other eBird users all around the world. There are so many great features and reasons to use eBird and if you haven’t it might be worth looking at for yourself.
Not that we are interested birding by numbers however currently there are 10,417 species worldwide in the eBird database and Robyn and I have 142 and 143 lifers respectively (I’ve seen a Barn Owl) which works out that we have seen 1.37% of all worldwide species. This only means one thing …. Time to get birding!!!
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