BIRDING
I first discovered birding when I was about nine years old and
have since discovered that it's a hobby that can be pursued just
about anywhere (except in Croydon, where there don't seem to be
any birds at all). Most of my birding has been done in Thanet,
mainly because that's where I live. Thanet is the extreme
south-eastern corner of Britain, in the county of Kent. It's
normally associated with the bucket'n'spade seaside resorts of
Margate, Ramsgate and Broadstairs, but it's also very well-placed
for migrating birds.
This particular page is more or less dedicated to explaining
the mysteries of birding to those unacquainted with it, but you
can link from here to:
- birding in Thanet
- my own personal life list.
Pathetically short but I have no shame.
- A glossary of birders names
for the birds. Occasionally creative, though more often
tersely functional, crude, or downright pointless.
- birding in Porlock - notes on
what you might see around this Somerset village on the
edge of Exmoor. Not a lot, to be honest, but the
scenery's nice.
Why Be a Birder?
Most people I've met have shown at least some interest in
birds and a wish to put a name to them. Birds are, after all,
pretty visible, rather mobile, and noticeably vocal - three
things that pull attention. Some of them are even quite
colourful. There seems to be considerable satisfaction to be
gained not only from seeing a bird, but knowing what it is you're
looking at. This is what birding's all about.
One of the great things about birding is that you can pursue
it in your own way to suit your time and level of interest. Of
course, as with any pursuit, there are some idiots out there who
will have you believe that there is only One True Way to go about
it (which funnily enough just happens to be their way),
but you needn't listen to them. There are only two cardinal rules
which you really ought to follow:
- The welfare of the birds always comes first. Chances are
the bird won't give you much choice, since most of them
fly away the minute you start harassing them, but you do
have to be careful sometimes, especially in the breeding
season. This respect should also extend to other
wildlife; if you really care about birds, you care about
wildlife in general, so don't go stomping across fragile
habitats just to add a tick to your list.
- Respect private property. If you don't, you'll get
birders a bad name, which is counter-productive for the
hobby and sometimes actively works against conservation.
How To Go Birding
Pretty straightforward, really; you just go out and look at
the birds. Obviously there is something to be said for going to
places where there are birds (eg; not Croydon), at a
time of year and in weather when birds are likely to be around,
otherwise you might not see very much. Going out in daylight
helps enormously. If your lounge/kitchen window is suitably
positioned, though, you needn't even venture out the door. Apart
from these basics, there are a number of strategies to choose
from.
- Chase after every rarity you hear about in the
never-ending expansion of your life list, year list,
county list etc. This is known as 'twitching' (US:
'listing'). If this is your chosen modus operandi
then you're a twitcher (but whilst all twitchers are
birders by default, not all birders are twitchers).
There's nothing intrinsically wrong with twitching so
long as you don't mind being labelled an obsessive.
- Claim a promising area close to home as your local patch
and flog it every day whatever the weather. Something
good is bound to turn up eventually. Still pretty
obsessive, though.
- Pursue birding as a hobby by going out at weekends etc
with the express intention of seeing birds. This means
you get to derive your aesthetic pleasure from seeing the
birds themselves, but not necessarily the places where
they congregate. Many birds have no scenic taste
whatsoever and actually prefer concrete reservoirs,
rubbish tips, sewage farms etc. 'Pretty' places are
frequently next to birdless, especially if the weather is
nice.
- As above, but only going to nice places in congenial
weather. People who do this are known as 'dudes'; this is
a derogatory term invented by twitchers, but as far as
I'm concerned there's nothing inherently wrong with being
a dude and all the more power to them. They might not see
that many birds, but they enjoy them all the more when
they do.
- Develop birding as an adjunct to the primary business of
pleasant weekend picnics in the countryside (weather
permitting), walking the dog, summer holidays etc. The
birds are largely incidental, but you can still get your
fun from knowing what they are, admiring their plumage
etc. Not the best way to rack up a huge life list, but if
this is your approach then listing is hardly your
priority.
- Stick a peanut feeder up outside your kitchen window and
enjoy the blue tits. (NB: Do not put out food in the
breeding season - parent birds are stupid enough to
force-feed their chicks on bread and peanuts and choke
them.)
Equipment
You can blow enormous sums of money on birding, or you can do
it on the cheap. By and large, birding represents excellent value
for money - one pair of binoculars and a couple of books can set
you back as little as fifty quid whilst setting you up for a
lifetime's enjoyment.
- Binoculars - strictly speaking, not absolutely
essential, but not having a pair of bins puts you at a
severe disadvantage. You can blow hundreds on a
top-of-the-range brand, but if you're just starting and
not sure how keen you're going to be it makes more sense
to buy cheap. I got my current pair for twenty quid in a
high street store; they're not optically perfect, but
they do the job. Anything in the 8x30 to 10x50 range is
perfectly adequate, but always try before you buy
to make sure you can see through them and there's no
colour-fringing, double-imaging etc.
- Telescope - very useful for seabirds,
wildfowl, waders and anything that's not too mobile and a
long way off. 20x to 50x is the optimum magnification
range, but higher mags let in less light. A zoom lens is
useful for scanning flocks and then homing in on
something interesting. Scopes are a bit pricey so it goes
without saying that you shouldn't buy one until you're
sure you're keen enough to warrant the investment. Also,
if you get a scope you really need a tripod to go with
it, which means more weight to lug around; a serious
consideration if your itinerary involves a ten-mile hike
through cloying mud.
- Field Guide - A book that tells you what
birds you're looking at. Absolutely indispensible,
especially if you're just starting out. Make sure it
includes all the birds you're likely to see in your
chosen birding area, in all the common plumages. Avoid
photo-guides that give you one fuzzy photo per species;
paintings do a surprisingly better job of capturing the
overall 'feel' of a bird. For British birds I
particularly recommend The Shell Guide to the Birds
of Britain and Ireland, if you can find it, for the
huge amount of info it packs into a small space. It also
puts all the rarities into a special section at the back
so you're less tempted to think you've found something
special. (Sad fact of birding life: If you're down to a
choice between two species, and one is described as
'extremely common' and the other as 'very rare vagrant',
then chances are you're looking at the common one. And if
there's two thousand of the critters wheeling overhead
then, sorry, but it really is the common one.)
- Notebook - Use this to make a note of
what you've seen, take descriptions of birds you couldn't
identify in the field, along with date, place, weather
etc. Proper Birders diligently keep their notebook up to
date. I never have done.
Birding Slang
As with almost any hobby, birding has developed its own
peculiar argot which can mystify the uninitiated. Hopefully this
section will make things clearer. (Not that you absolutely have
to know any of it.)
- Tick - a species new to any of the
various lists you might keep, as in 'year tick' (new for
the year; you get lots of these in January), 'British
tick' (you've seen it abroad, but not in Britain), trip
tick (new for whatever excursion you're currently
undertaking), garden tick, shed roof tick etc. Not that
you have to keep any lists at all, but most birders do.
- Lifer - a species that you have never
seen before in your life anywhere in the world ever. In
other words, a tick for your life list.
- Megatick - an extremely good tick, by
virtue of the bird being rare and probably either very
colourful or awesomely huge to boot. A good tick not just
for you, but for any birder, even the most jaded of
veterans.
- Crippler - a megatick, which leaves you
emotionally crippled by its beauty/size/whatever as well
as its extreme rarity. (Not all megaticks are cripplers,
since a lot of very rare birds are actually small and
grotty with no potential to cripple whatsoever).
- Sibe - a bird that normally lives in
Siberia but has got lost somewhere along the way and
pitched down in some grotty housing estate. Usually small
and uncolourful, but rare.
- Sum plum - summer plumage. A lot of rare
(and not-so-rare) birds are only likely to be seen in
Britain on their autumn migration, by which time they're
normally in their dowdy winter plumage, so getting one in
sum plum is a bonus.
- LBJ - a Little Brown Job. An amazing
number of birds are small and brown or some other
unexciting colour, even in sum plum, and they all look
almost exactly like at least a dozen other species.
Female or immature birds are quite likely to be LBJs, and
identification can be tricky even for the experts.
- BOP - Bird of Prey. Although many BOPs
are big and impressive, they aren't always readily
identifiable, so this generic acronym can come in handy.
Many BOPs never get identified at all.
- Twitcher - obsessive list-keeping birder
who goes after rare birds found by other people.
Twitchers might cross half the country overnight to see
one tatty brown thing sitting half a mile away on a bleak
expanse of mud. Twitchers invariably have huge lists that
only impress other twitchers. Surprisingly, they are not
always good at identifying birds, because they
leave all that tedious business to other birders. From
twitcher you also get the verb to twitch,
to go out with the deliberate intent of seeing one
particular rarity you've been told about, and you don't
need to be a dedicated twitcher to do this.
- Dude - a casual birder who prefers
pleasant surroundings and nice weather. Usually satisfied
with quite common birds that would drive a twitcher
insane with boredom. Dudes tend not to be too hot on
identification either, but on the plus side they keenly
enjoy the birds they do see and not just as ticks on a
list. Nothing to be ashamed of. (However, there are some
irritating dudes who think they know far more than they
do and run up lots of stringy records (see 'stringy')).
- Birder - anyone inbetween obvious
twitcher and obvious dude. Keen but not obsessive, well
genned up on identification and stuff, and well
acquainted with the local hot birding sites. Birders find
the rarities for twitchers, and are generally happy to
help dudes with the LBJs (qv).
- Dip out on - fail to see a particular
bird, usually one you've gone out to twitch. It was
there, but you dipped out on it. The bird in question may
then be referred to as a dip.
- Grip someone off - if you dip out on a
bird and someone else doesn't, then he or she has gripped
you off. This usually happens through the vagaries of
chance (you turned up too late, went to the wrong turnip
field, whatever) but the intense rivalry of twitchers can
lead to them intentionally gripping each other off,
through deliberate misinformation, suppression of
information, or even scaring the bird away before anyone
else can see it. Petty, maybe, but it has been known to
happen. (Though knowledge of some rarities is suppressed
for more practical reasons, such as to keep armies of
twitchers away from private land or the breeding sites of
vulnerable species.)
- Stringy - suspect identification. A
claimed rarity that turns out be something common.
Birders that do this on a regular basis get tagged as stringers.
Sometimes this derogative label is justified, other times
it isn't.
- Seawatching - sitting for hours and
hours on a windswept clifftop, beach or harbour wall,
eyes glued to the sea in the hope that something
interesting will fly by eventually. Usually tedious
beyond description, but the only way to see some of the
more ocean-bound species away from their inaccessible
breeding grounds. It helps to have a good telescope,
since the birds might be miles away (literally,
sometimes), and someone to talk to is a good idea unless
you really want to go mad. The only rule of thumb with
seawatching is that it only stands to be worthwhile if
the weather is truly foul (but foul weather doesn't
necessarily mean productive seawatching). Strictly for
the dedicated.
- Vis mig - visible migration. Most birds
migrate to some extent, and it's one of the most
attractive things about birding that almost anything can
turn up almost anywhere. Migrants are often found after
they've pitched down overnight, but you can also see them
actually on the move. There's something rather exciting
about this overtly purposeful movement, even when the
birds in question are really quite common. It's not every
day you see a woodpecker bounding over the waves or a big
BOP (qv) flapping over the local shopping centre.