Spying the First Bird

Noah Strycker rings in 2015 with his first bird species of a hopeful 5,000 this year.

This morning, at the strike of 2015, I was in a hot tub with five friends 鈥╝nd a bottle of champagne, with a pair of binoculars around my neck. We were 鈥╫n top of a Russian ship, the Akademik Ioffe, which was sailing along the鈥╳estern Antarctic Peninsula at midnight. What a way to start the year!

鈥ㄢ↖ hoped to spot my first bird of 2015 from the hot tub. But after the 鈥╰raditional countdown and while someone sprayed champagne everywhere (to鈥 cries of 鈥淲hat, is this a NASCAR awards ceremony?鈥), it became apparent that 鈥╪o birds were in sight. Even in Antarctica, there are almost always some 鈥╞irds around鈥攕kuas, penguins, terns, gulls, maybe a shag or two. But as I 鈥╨ooked around with excitement during the first minutes of 2015, nothing 鈥╩oved. The midnight sun hung low behind a layer of clouds, and the Ioffe鈥 sailed on a calm sea dotted by iceberg castles.鈥ㄢ

The freezing air sucked the heat out of the hot tub in a hurry, and, after a鈥 few minutes, my friends started joking around: 鈥淒o goosebumps count as a 鈥╞ird?鈥 I desperately scanned the landscape, but saw nothing but water, rock,鈥╝nd ice. Eventually we couldn鈥檛 stand the cold anymore and retreated to an 鈥╥ndoor sauna to warm up (no birds there, either).

鈥ㄢˋ while later, after everyone else had gone to bed, I wandered out alone on 鈥╠eck, keyed up by the start of . Antarctica stretched 鈥╥nto the distance, glacier faces and ice cliffs dominating the horizon. My鈥 thoughts drifted. Then, out of the twilight, a shape glided toward the stern鈥╫f the ship鈥攁 Cape Petrel! I watched it tack neatly back and forth across鈥 the ship鈥檚 wake, flashing a pretty pattern of black and white on its 鈥╱pperwings, and smiled. One down, 4,999 to go!鈥ㄢ

Antarctica might seem a funny place to kick things off this year, as it is 鈥╢ar less diverse than any other part of the world. But The Ice is a special 鈥╬lace for me; I鈥檝e taken 10 trips to the frozen continent in the past three鈥 years. I鈥檓 working as an on-board ornithologist for this Antarctic voyage,鈥╝nd it鈥檚 nice to launch my big year among familiar places and faces (one 鈥▂ear ago, I celebrated New Year鈥檚 on this same ship in Antarctica, with many 鈥╫f the same people). 鈥ㄢ

Just getting here required quite a journey. On Christmas Day, after presents 鈥╝nd Christmas dinner at home in Oregon, my parents drove me to the airport鈥 in Eugene. I spent the next 50 hours taking seven separate flights to 鈥╮each Ushuaia, Argentina, at the southern tip of South America. There I鈥╰ransferred to the Akademik Ioffe and we set sail on December 28. It took鈥 two sea days to cross the Drake Passage; December 31 was spent visiting the 鈥⊿outh Shetland Islands; and we arrived at the Antarctic Peninsula, my鈥 jumping-off point for 2015, just in time for New Year.鈥ㄢ

I will be in Antarctica for the next four days, adventuring among icebergs, 鈥╣laciers, whales, seals, and penguins. If I鈥檓 super lucky, Emperor Penguin鈥╳ill be one of my first birds this year! After that, I head north, through 鈥╰he Drake Passage and back to Argentina, with a quick stop at the Falkland鈥↖slands en route. I expect that my year list will stand at 60-70 species by鈥╰he time I step off the ship at Ushuaia on January 9th鈥攁 slow start, 鈥╪umbers-wise, but most of those will be birds I don鈥檛 see anywhere else.鈥 Then I hit South America, and this world big year will kick into overdrive.

鈥ㄢ↖t鈥檚 very exciting to begin this project today! In the next year, I will 鈥╰ravel through 35 countries on all seven continents, see thousands of birds,鈥 and meet a lot of interesting folks. Along the way, I鈥檒l post daily updates 鈥╤ere (uploaded when Internet allows). Here we go! Best wishes to everyone 鈥╢or a wonderful 2015.

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