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Bird Watching

Bird Watching Journals - Preserve Your Bird Watching Experiences
By Richard Chapo

  Bird Watching is a great way to escape the rat race and be one with nature. Alas, your bird watching experiences can fade with time. The best way to prevent this is to keep a bird watching journal for your sightings and trips.

Bird Watching Journals

Take a minute to give some consideration to your most recent bird watching experience. What sticks out in your mind? Now think about the first time you ever went bird watching. Undoubtedly, you remember few things about the geography, people you went with, every bird sighted and so on. The experiences you’ve forgotten are lost to time. If you had kept a bird watching journal, this wouldn’t be the case.

There are famous instances of people keeping journals throughout time. Of course, Anne Frank’s Diary is the best example. In her diary, Anne kept a running commentary of the two years her family spent hiding from the Nazis. While your bird watching experiences better be more lighthearted, keeping a journal will let you remember them as the years pass.

A good bird watching journal combines a number of characteristics. First, it should be compact so you don’t have to take up unnecessary space for other things. Second, it should have a case to protect it from rain, spills and so on. Third, the journal should contain blank areas to write your notes. Fourth, the journal should contain cue spaces to remind you to keep notes on specific things. Cues should include:

1. Who you went birding with,

2. Where you stayed and if you enjoyed it,

3. Who you met and contact information for them,

4. The geographic and weather conditions, and

5. The birds you sighted and added to your life list.

At the end of the trip, you should be able to get the following from your journal:

1. Contact information for other bird watchers and people you met,

2. Enough detail to provide you or a friend with a guide if you travel to the location a second time.

3. Memories to reflect upon years later, and

4. Something to pass on to your children and grandchildren.

To get the most out of your bird watching journal, you should write in it during and immediately after birding. Every sighting brings new experiences even if you’re just sitting in your backyard.

Bird watching is a great way to commune with nature. Make sure to preserve the experience.

 

Rick Chapo is with NomadJournals.com makers of diary and writing journals for bird watching. Visit NomadJournalTrips.com to read more articles on bird watching and the great outdoors.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Richard_Chapo

 

 
 

        New video           Now Anyone Can Hand Feed Their Own Backyard Birds  This new video will guide you step-by-step through the quick, easy technique that will open up a whole new world of fun and excitement..... that the whole family can enjoy. 

  You will be having more fun than you could ever imagine.....and you won't even have to leave your own backyard !

The very first time I sat in my backyard to try this new technique......in a matter of minutes, I had Blue Jays swooping across the yard to take peanuts out of my hand!

Then as other birds such as Chickadees, Red-breasted Nuthatches, White-breasted Nuthatches and Downy Woodpeckers  started using the feeder, just as with the Blue Jays, in only a matter of minutes.....I was hand-feeding them as well.

click this Now Anyone Can Hand Feed Their Own Backyard Birds link for more information....

 

 

 

 

 

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