No one likes to think about bad things happening while you鈥檙e out birding, but it鈥檚 the world and bad things happen. If you鈥檙e me, bad things happen because you鈥檙e a bonehead. Not necessarily any more boneheaded than a regular, run-of-the-hill bonehead (maybe?), but boneheaded just the same. What I鈥檓 trying to say is: I鈥檝e learned a lot of things from making mistakes while birding, and I want to impart those lessons onto you.
These tips aren鈥檛 really for birding safely. There are other, smarter people who can help you with that. This from Jesse Greenspan has lots of helpful tips to avoid physical disaster. The seminal 鈥溾 from J. Drew Lanham is a lighthearted but eye-opening guide to how birding is more dangerous and inaccessible for African Americans.
My tips are dumber and less important than those, but I鈥檝e found that they鈥檙e not less useful. I鈥檝e learned each and every one of these lessons firsthand, and so I can promise that they are grounded in truth, misery, and boneheadedness. I hope they help.
Check the car roof for equipment before driving off.
You know that thing where you go out to your car and you have a bunch of stuff in your hand and so you put some of that stuff on top of the car while you put other stuff inside the car, but then you forget about the stuff on top of the car and drive away with it still sitting there? Don鈥檛 do that. Especially don鈥檛 do that in the parking lot of a hotel in Tennessee with your first expensive camera, and then drive all the way to the coast of Alabama before you discover it missing. If you鈥檙e putting stuff in the car, put it in the car.
Don鈥檛 lock your dang keys in the car.
There鈥檚 a certain feeling when you finally park at your destination birding spot, an excited sensation that the birding has already begun and you鈥檙e already out of the car. You鈥檙e sick of the car鈥攜ou want to bird! Well, before you do, make sure you've done the important things, like putting your car in Park or, say, making sure you have your keys. You need to pay attention to those final details, or else you鈥檒l do something stupid like lock your keys in your car. I did it most recently at Lake Balmorhea, Texas, which is a long way from most anything, especially tow truck companies. It took more than two hours (and a bunch of money) for a guy to come out and help me. The silver lining was that I got my lifer Black-throated Sparrow, though, so it wasn鈥檛 all bad.
Keep a paper map with you.
Sometimes you lose cell service, you know? Resist the urge to panic like a tech-spoiled millennial without a GPS voice leading the way. I remember the time before GPS! I was there! We used maps! And maps are still useful, because they work no matter where you are. I almost wore out the DeLorme atlas I had in Mississippi, which had weak cell service in the Delta and a ton of back roads to explore. Keep one in your car and you鈥檒l thank yourself later.
Double-check those tripod legs.
Tripod legs are usually adjustable, allowing you to keep them short for travel and extended when you use your scope. When you do extend them, make sure the legs are locked into place. Otherwise, one of the legs could just collapse when you try to stand the thing up, and your entire scope can terrifyingly topple onto some rocks. If you鈥檙e lucky, like I was, the scope will hit on its side and somehow be totally fine. If you鈥檙e unlucky, it could fall glass first into a complete nightmare. Lock those babies up.
OH MY GOD don't forget your memory card.
Birds almost never sit still for photos. Then, the one time they do, that glorious moment when the bird poses there in perfect light, you slowly raise your camera, press the shutter button . . . and nothing happens. You look down at the screen to see 鈥淢issing CF card.鈥 You start swearing loudly and the bird flies away, probably never to perch for a photo again. This has happened to me a number of times, including most recently when, after like six tries, I finally saw the Prairie Falcon that had been hanging out on the Virginia/D.C. border. Make sure you鈥檝e got a dang CF card in your DSLR and keep one in your pocket as a backup. This goes for charged batteries, too.
Go to the bathroom when you have the chance.
There鈥檚 frequently a brief moment before you leave the house to go birding when you do a mental bathroom-need assessment. 鈥淒o I need to go now?鈥 You might think that you don鈥檛 need to, that you鈥檒l be fine. No. Go now. Go while you can, always. If you don鈥檛, as a rule, that sensation will strike at the least convenient time鈥攚hen you鈥檙e stuck in traffic or way out in the woods. Go whenever you can.
But just in case, always carry some toilet paper with you.
Look, it doesn鈥檛 do you any service if I'm anything less than totally honest with you, so here it goes: I鈥檝e gone number two in the woods. Like, a bunch of times. In at least six states. I鈥檝e gotten one lifer in the process (Boreal Chickadee) and very nearly missed another (LeConte鈥檚 Thrasher). It鈥檚 unpleasant, but while birding you frequently find yourself out before the bathrooms are open or in bathroom-less places altogether. Leaves will do in a pinch, but a few sheets of toilet paper in the jacket pocket or backpack are a whole world better.
Buy a bug-proof tent.
I've talked about my battles with bugs in the past, but the two nights my wife and I spent in the Everglades National Park鈥檚 Flamingo Campground were the worst of our lives. No-see-ums could get through the mesh of our tent, and it was too hot to cover up in the sleeping bag. So any exposed flesh was feasted upon by a billion bloodthirsty flies. It was pure torture. If I knew any national security secrets I would have yelled them to anyone who asked. Before you buy a tent make sure the mesh is fine enough to keep bugs out. Believe me.
Don鈥檛 get defensive.
I鈥檝e also , but it bears repeating: You can鈥檛 get all worked up or defensive or embarrassed when you screw up an ID. You just can鈥檛. I misidentify birds all the time. We all do. I misidentified a bunch of birds last month at the 2017 探花精选 convention in front of lots of people, including Kenn Kaufman and my 探花精选 editors, who literally pay me to know what I鈥檓 talking about. But what am I going to do, cry about it? Nah. Birding is hard, and people misidentify things (well, maybe not Kenn). If you want to be a bonehead, make a stink about how correct you are. No one remembers if you make a mistake, but everyone will remember a jerk!
Okay, some those are some of my hard-earned birding lessons. A little knowledge and grace can pull you out of any boneheaded situation with your dignity (relatively) intact. Any lessons of your own out there, boneheaded friends?
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