Why?
Neil Randon has recently responded to my post ‘Then and now. Go figure’. This gave me further food for thought. If I really am asking where the originality and free thinking is in birding today, then I really have to ask myself (and any readers of this post) a simple question.
‘Why do you go birding?’
This question is easiest answered when you first start out
to take an interest in this fascinating subject. My answer would have been ‘to see
what’s there’, but it would also have included ‘to be able to put a name to
what I see.’ And why did I choose birds
and not stamps, planes, football or beer mats? The chances are because it got me
out of the house and gave me a sense of adventure – an afternoon wandering
around the alien environs of a sewage farm beat sticking hinges on a stamp in my
bedroom.
So, forty years after I started on this voyage of discovery,
why do I now need to get bogged down in ornithological mind games and when did
it start? In my case, it would have been in the late 1980s. I then found myself
questioning why I was going out birding. Until then, I just went and did it. I
picked up my optics and went out regardless, no questions. It was like an
unthinking knee-jerk reaction to spare time, a Tourette’s syndrome of leisure
activity. About this time I often wandered
around birding and returned home utterly unfulfilled. I carried on doing it
because that’s what I did. I knew that I still wanted to bird, that I hadn’t
fallen out of love with it, but I had to accept that I wasn’t being a good
partner to it.
My answer was to diversify my natural history interests. I
took up the study of moths (1986) and then plants (1998). I took to these new
interests with great enthusiasm and, at times, didn’t really bird for weeks on
end. I never stopped birding – if I were out looking at chalk downland flora I
would still keep an eye on the Hobby above me. Moth trapping was enlivened by
roding Woodcocks, and I never lost the sheer joy of hearing them as they flew
overhead.
But still I came back to birding. But whenever I did there
was a sea change, and that was, where as previously I had been a bit of a
twitcher, a faithful patch watcher and someone that found a few good birds, now
these statements were not true. My time was spread out amongst these other new
interests and I realised that I couldn’t compete (on a list or prowess rating)
with the active birders that I bumped into. So, I regrouped. I scaled down my expectations and birded
locally, often on my own and on a very local level indeed, a level that I hadn’t
visited since my early birding days. This I found fulfilling to a point. What I
hadn’t expected was to find that the birders had seemingly changed. In my short
‘exile’ the fun and joy in a high proportion of my fellow birders had apparently
been removed. Seriousness, po-faces and
poor communication had taken over. I was aware that this was a bold conclusion to
arrive at, but I kept an open mind and ‘watched the watchers’. I asked others
if they agreed. Many did. So, why was this?
New technology had a lot to do with it. Instant news,
precise directions and superb identification aids had allowed the uninitiated
and the ill-prepared to gain immediate access to a world that had, in the
past, needed a few years graft and a
network of hard-won contacts. A major burst in twitching popularity (4,000 plus
saw the Golden-winged Warbler in 1989) opened up this specialised section of
birding to a new demographic. Flush with money, mobile and - yes, one of my bug bears – middle-aged. The
new ‘kids’ on the block had top notch optics, time on their hands and were all
eyeing Stannah Stairlifts in the not too distant future. That’s got to affect
the dynamics of such a small group, hasn’t it? These new birders were not young
and impressionable, they didn’t need to exhibit social skills to obtain the
phone details of those in the know (they already had the 0898 number) and they
could stand silently in line whilst one of the old guard pointed out the bird.
Think I’m way off the mark? Ask any active birder who remembers the 1970s. This
had a knock-on effect in that the herd of active birders became less
communicative due to either a perceived inferiority when it came to identification
prowess and, on the flip side, a distrust of the ‘new boys’ who hadn’t paid their dues. It was no wonder that few young birders joined
this morose collective.
Bear with me, I’m getting there.
Over the past few years I’ve witnessed, first-hand several ornithological
meltdowns. People with years of experience who have
suddenly given it all up. There are often trigger points that make this happen –
a massive dip mainly. But the seeds were sown before that point. Could they
have been saved, or saved themselves from such drastic action, by analysing
what is was that they expected from birding? Have they found themselves ploughing that lonely furrow without questioning why? I’m sure it’s true of all hobbies and not just
birding, which we elevate to a psuedo-science but conducts itself by a moveable set of rules such as weather, chance and ability.
I’m going to stop soon, there’s plenty of fuel for further
posts, but before I do, let me ask you a further question:
'How many birders do you know who seem to go through the
motions and not really get much out of their birding?'
If someone feels this way, and have half an active mind,
they will start to question what they are doing. Those that survive will be the
ones that do something positive about it.
Sorry about the rambling, but posting this overflow from the mind is cheaper than professional therapy...
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