logo
Birding is the most exciting scavenger hunt nature has to offer

Birding is the most exciting scavenger hunt nature has to offer

Globe and Mail2 days ago
First Person is a daily personal piece submitted by readers. Have a story to tell? See our guidelines at tgam.ca/essayguide.
I have Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson to thank for my love of birding.
The three of them acted together in The Big Year, a 2011 comedy drama that flew surprisingly under the radar considering the star power attached. Martin, Black and Wilson are cast as three obsessive birders, all competing to see the highest number of species in a calendar year in North America.
I saw the film in high school and was immediately intrigued by how they identified birds from just a glance or a few notes of birdsong. I was always a kid who liked being outside, having spent a lot of time hiking and camping while growing up. I had a basic interest in birds and could tell a cardinal from a chickadee, a red-tailed hawk from a turkey vulture. But this was something entirely different – almost a gamification of birding.
My mom and two aunts also watched the movie, and we began our own 'big year,' communicating our sightings through a private Facebook group, and keeping a shared Excel sheet to track our individual bird counts.
Over the next year, I learned more about birds than I ever knew there was to learn. Ontario has hundreds of species, many of which were viewable on a short walk from my house. Others required travelling farther to see. I grew up in Mississauga and started frequenting the parks along the lakeshore, where I found grebes, loons and diving ducks.
First Person: In search of the scarlet tanager: birding has brought me closer to Dad
My family and I often birded together, spending days or entire weekends in nature with our binoculars (or 'bins,' as birders call them) in hand. We travelled to Point Pelee National Park and Rondeau Provincial Park to see the spring influx of warblers – a group of brightly coloured birds in yellows, blues and reds that weigh half an ounce and fly back from Central America each year. One of my aunts, who lives near Algonquin Provincial Park, took us there in search of chestnut-backed chickadees, the elusive spruce grouse, and Canada jays, who associate people with food and will swoop down if you call for them.
By the end of the year, we had so much fun that we decided to do it again. Our lists grew with our knowledge, and this time around we were able to identify many birds by sight, and even some by sound. We joined Discord groups and discovered birding communities across the province, mostly made up of retirees and passionate science students. We knew where to go – or who to ask – to find certain birds. It's like realizing a scavenger hunt has been sitting there waiting for you, and there's hundreds of dazzling clues to be found in the forest.
Birding opens the door to the diversity that exists in the natural world. Most of these birds are fundamentally the same, made up of hollow bones, wings and talons. And yet, they've found seemingly endless ways to survive through specialized wings, migration routes and feeding patterns.
There are birds that eat tiny crustaceans and others that feast on tree sap. Burrowing owls live underground in holes dug by other animals, while vireos weave bark fibres and grass to build orb-shaped nests. The loggerhead shrike, a songbird, will hunt small birds and mammals and skewer its prey on barbed wire (or anything pointy, really). The red knot, a bird only a little bigger than a robin, flies up to 30,000 kilometres each year during its two trips from South America where it winters, to the Canadian Arctic where they nest and hatch their chicks.
First Person: Am I still a birdwatcher if I don't care about what they are called?
At the end of The Big Year, Martin and Black's characters lose to Wilson, whose ruthless strategies ultimately lead him to victory. He's willing to do anything to be the best birder – including abandoning his wife during fertility treatments to look for a snowy owl – and this eventually costs him his marriage. Martin and Black, meanwhile, are pulled away from their birding journeys by the occasional sacrifices required for the people you care about. Martin's character takes a few days off to meet a new grandbaby, and Black does the same to care for his aging father.
As for me, nearly a decade after I first saw the movie, I'm no longer in what I consider my 'big year' era. I don't keep rigorous lists or fixate on my yearly total the way I did in my first few years of birding.
Much like Jack Black at the end of the film, I still go birding through forests, wetlands and urban parks on the weekends. More often than not, I keep a pair of binoculars in my car just in case I spot something spectacular. But I don't worry so much about counting them any more.
Instead, I focus on the aspects of birding that I truly love: the way it pushes me to get outdoors more, travel to gorgeous parts of Ontario I wouldn't normally see, and remember that patience reaps rewards. Most of all, I love the optimism inherent in birding. Beauty is all around us, and you never know what you might find unless you pick up a pair of binoculars and look.
Caelan Beard lives in Brantford, Ont.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

38th Winnipeg Fringe Festival hopes to lure in audiences with eclectic mix of local, international performers
38th Winnipeg Fringe Festival hopes to lure in audiences with eclectic mix of local, international performers

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

38th Winnipeg Fringe Festival hopes to lure in audiences with eclectic mix of local, international performers

An annual citywide theatre showcase is back and promises to make Winnipeg audiences laugh, cry, groove and everything in between. The 38th annual Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival kicked off Wednesday with this year's theme being "Choose Your Own Fringe Adventure." "We always say, 'Take a risk,' see something that you think you might be interested [in] but you haven't heard too much about," said festival manager Tori Popp. "Fringe is an adventure. It's an adventure about having fun and seeing something new and experiencing the festival and Winnipeg in the summer." Every year, hundreds of performing artists from across Canada and abroad take over stages at venues throughout Winnipeg's downtown core for the 12-day event. Festival-goers can enjoy a bevvy of drink and food vendors before and after taking in shows. In addition to the eclectic mix of plays and performances happening for paying audiences, there are also free street performances including fire breathing, circus and gymnastics shows. Old Market Square in the Exchange District will host a range of free performances. "You can come down and enjoy bands on the stage or acts or hosts or folks plugging their shows, maybe hear about something you're interested in," said Popp. "If you're new to the city, and you haven't been around too much, come on down to Old Market Square and this will be like your foray in the Fringe." What's commonly known now as "Fringe Fest" was founded by the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre in 1988. It is the second-largest fringe festival on the continent, according to the festival. online. All proceeds from ticket sales go directly to performers, said Popp. "That's what Fringe is all about," said Popp.

Over 600 trombonists converge at Western for the International Trombone Festival
Over 600 trombonists converge at Western for the International Trombone Festival

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

Over 600 trombonists converge at Western for the International Trombone Festival

The 2025 International Trombone Festival is being hosted by Western University and began its four day run on Wednesday. This marks the first time the event has ever been held in Canada. More than 600 trombonists from throughout the world and from a variety of different musical backgrounds travelled to London for the festival. 071625 Over 100 of the performers took to Alumni Hall stage on Wednesday evening to commemorate the first day of the event. The festival is open to the public with a purchase of a pass, with events including performances, lectures and masterclasses. It will also make its way downtown for a street party on Friday night.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store