Streak Update: 225

My eBird streak continues at 225. Although we are still constrained by the coronavirus, it has been good to have the impetus to go birding, just for a little while, every day.

keep on keepin’ on

I always carry bins and usually carry a camera, but find I rarely use either on my morning course. Birding my neighborhood in July reminds me of how important birding by ear (no matter how bad I am at it) has become to me. Probably 2/3 of the species I observe are heard-only, and bird vocalizations in the summer are rich with communicative chips and chirps, a colorful and diverse cacophony of juvenile chatter and begging calls, but very few actual songs. Song Sparrows seem to be the exception to the rule.

Caution is in order, though. Some mornings a Carolina Wren sounds an awful lot like an Eastern Towhee, or maybe even an Ovenbird (especially if I haven’t had a cup of coffee yet.) Blue Jays are accomplished mimics, and an occasional starling gets into the act as well. My neighborhood rarely has a mockingbird, but makes up for it with a healthy population of Gray Catbirds. At least they usually throw in a nasally “mew” to give away their doppelgänger songs.

Birding-by-ear skills not only open up a leafed-out world, they are particularly useful to people with PD. Shaky hands don’t get in the way of your ears, and sharp listening can help locate interesting birds when you do want to try to get them in sight. Just as in visual birding, a good strategy is to familiarize yourself with the usual suspects before going afield, not trying to figure out a call after the fact. One good place to start your study is the Macaulay Library.

Of course, in addition to keen—or at least attentive—ears, it helps immensely to have the support of others. I am tremendously fortunate my son is here for me, seeing what I overlook and cheering me on in my streak. I get the joy of seeing him experience new birds, and he repays me with a fresh look—or listen—of the familiar.

The Inner Desperation of the Checklist Streak

It finally happened—I’ve taken up streaking.  No, no, not the kind that would get my wrinkled old 50+ body thrown in jail, but checklist streaking: recording at least one bird checklist every day. Which means, among other things, birding each day. It’s an obsession, albeit a mostly benign and low-impact one, that started accidentally around Thanksgiving.  Maybe it was the tryptophan, maybe the general stress of the holidays, or maybe just how the shortening of the daylight hours subliminally foretold the waning of my years. Regardless of how it started, it’s taken on a life of its own now, this streaking.  Luckily it seems benign, even potentially beneficial.  Because I am streaking:

  • I am forced outside daily to breathe fresh air;
  • I carve out at least fifteen minutes birding every day, and among other things that pause helps reset my attitude when needed;
  • I have to actively plan to go birding, which leads to planning other goals and activities as well;
  • I feel more disciplined (it’s unclear if this is a reflection or a reinforcement of the discipline I have been forced into by PD–pill regimens, biking, boxing, etc.);
  • I can escape if I want—while I am birding I don’t have to talk, I don’t have to be self-conscious about tremoring or shuffling, I don’t have to interact with others at all if I like; and
  • I often must survey suboptimal habitat, and as a result I appreciate even the very common bird species.

Of course, as with any borderline obsessive behavior, there are some stresses associated with it: When will I have time to bird today? Did I remember my binoculars? Will my coworkers (weekdays) / family (weekends) think I am nuts? Will I get enough species so I don’t have to explain a low count to eBird? Will this rain ever stop?

How long will I be able to keep the streak going?