The Lure Of The List

STORY LYNNE RICHARDSON | PHOTOGRAPHY ROBIN JOWETT

White-throated Magpie

“Everyone likes birds. What wild creature is more accessible to our eyes and ears, as close to us and everyone in the world, as universal as a bird?” –SIR DAVID ATTENBOROUGH

No matter where you are, at home, abroad or places in between, if you look outside, you’re almost always going to see a bird. No wonder birdwatching is such an accessible and popular pastime. It’s the easiest and most effortless way of connecting with nature

and the natural world. But not only is the appreciation of birds universal, a common connection amongst birders is their proclivity to record the birds they’ve seen. The act of recording and collecting scores, statistics, tallies and counts seems to accompany many hobbies, sports or recreations. They say that collecting and organizing things gives the brain’s pleasure centre a kick. Listing the birds you’ve seen on an organized checklist may do just that for you. So, let’s check out the checklists you may want to keep.

THE BIRD CHECKLIST

Most likely, the first thing a beginning birder will want to find is a local checklist where you can keep track of the birds most commonly seen around your usual haunts. This could be a list compiled by an area naturalists’ club or birding club. Alternatively, if you’re techie, you can download a list for your area from eBird. A checklist is not just a tool to keep track of your sightings; it subliminally educates you on several aspects of birding. As you check off – or “tick,” as birders call it – the birds you see on each outing, patterns will emerge: which birds are most common, which are found in forests or fields, in winter only or just during spring migration. You become quicker at identifying the common birds you see regularly. You become familiar with the locations where you see certain species, and thus learn their habitat requirements. You learn a lot by keeping a list of sightings each time you go birding. It’s the beginning of your evolution as a birder.

THE YARD LIST

Perhaps the easiest place to start a bird checklist is where you’re generally looking the most, watching bird feeders in your backyard. The feeder list is a starting point, but it can easily expand into a full yard list, which, by my own yard list rules at least, can include any birds seen in, flying over or visible from your yard. Bonus if you have a big tree-lined yard or property! You can count on counting the local chickadees, jays and juncos at your feeders, but every once in a while, something new will catch your eye, maybe at your feeder, maybe flying over. This will send you to your field guide or app on an ID quest, and once identified, you’ll have a new tick on your list. Spring migration periods are excellent times for new birds to arrive. Birds that lay low in their nesting season will readily come to your feeder in the spring, hungry for a free snack after a long migration. I’ve been lucky enough to spot a new species or two in or over my yard almost every year due to the magic of migration! It is simply amazing how many different species might arrive over Baltimore Oriole time and through the seasons. The annual surprise additions make my yard list one of my favourite lists.

PROVINCE LIST

Next up is an increasingly broader list as you expand your birding interests and destinations. You might now have found your flock – a birding buddy or two or a local birding group – and have been on outings offered by a naturalist club, park or conservation area. You may have even planned a trip further afield to known birding areas and hotspots throughout the province. Your various checklists will tell you what you’ve seen and, increasingly important, what you haven’t seen, and you’ll now be interested in exploring new locations and adding new species. Insidiously, the more you see, the more you want to see. Your list can only grow as you trip around your home province. Something always flies by and catches your eye!

TRIP LISTS

Winter vacation coming up? Next summer’s vacation being planned cross-country, to the coasts or even abroad? This is where it can get very interesting. Yes, there’s lots to pack in on our vacations, but it’s still so very easy to check out the birds wherever you may be. Just look up and around! With over 500 species in Canada and 10,000-plus worldwide, every destination holds an abundance of new birds for your growing interest and growing lists.

Atlantic Puffins

LIFE LIST

So, eventually it’s time to compile all your sightings into a life list – simply, a one-stop record of every bird species you’ve seen, anywhere and everywhere. You can pull together your life list the old-fashioned way – on a master paper checklist – or take advantage of various programs on the internet to do it for you. By entering your daily sightings into a universal database such as eBird, you build your life list while also contributing to biological research and conservation efforts. The abundance of data entered into this scientific record by thousands of birders like you is used to track bird populations, numbers, distributions and trends, and to inform conservation policy and action. You’ve combined the recording of your sightings with a scientific purpose and have become a citizen scientist! A bonus is that, if you enter all your sightings into eBird, your life list will be displayed, with accompanying pictures on Merlin, the very popular bird app. Just be sure to check your list twice when making it. You should ensure that you have a positive identification for each species – no guessing!

BUCKET LIST OF BIRDS

At some point in time, you realize you will never see all the birds you want to see, so it may be time to make a bucket list of birds. These will be the birds on your “most wanted” list, the various species that, for whatever reasons, have particularly grabbed your interest or your desire to see them. A bucket list of birds gives you something to look forward to, plan, dream about and GO! It may involve travel to exotic or remote destinations, or within your local county, city, province or country. Whatever it may be, the thrill of the pursuit, and ultimately the sighting when it finally arrives, is a birder’s moment of pure joy!


Lists document your progression from backyard birder to world lister or to wherever you most comfortably land in between. Your checklists will be an aide-mémoire for your adventures and will provide fond recollections of the birds you’ve seen and the places you’ve been. Check! OH

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