Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Bird Watching Journals - Preserve Your Bird Watching Experiences

By: Nomad Rick Home | Recreation-and-Sports


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.



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Rick Chapo is with Nomad Journals - makers of diary and writing journals. Bird watching journals are great bird watching gifts for bird watching tours and vacations. Visit NomadJournalTrips.com for more bird watching articles.



Tags: , , , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Recreation-and-Sports Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Recreation-and-Sports

  • Wild Bird Food - Wild Bird Seed - Wild Bird Shop: Street End Feeds
    By: Chanchala Desuza | Apr 20th 2010
    Bird shop for bird food, bird feed and bird suppliers. A expert bird food suppliers & bird seed suppliers has been selling quality wild bird seed, seed mixes, bird gift service, black sunflower seeds, straights seeds, suet and fat foods, niger seed and many more bird related services. Read

  • Bird Netting, Bird Chaser, Auto Bird Repellents
    By: Jessica | Nov 8th 2010
    Bird Repellents
    Everywhere you look, there are birds. They are roosting on our house, in our garage, and around our gutters, around our apartment windows, they are just everywhere.
    Big Problems
    Some cities have such problems with birds that they employ people for cleaning up of the bird droppings around t ...
    Read

  • Bird Netting In Relation To Bird Proof Bird Control
    By: Ethen Smith | Feb 10th 2011
    Physical bird proof bird preventives include bird spikes, bird netting, bird slope, electrified track systems, bird wire, bird spiders, and more. These products are simply designed to repel birds from an area. Read

  • Bird Watching - A Brief Synopsis

    Bird watching is a hobby with a difference. Some anthropologists have suggested that it is a reflection of the primeval human bonding with nature. Some have even found a trace of the innate, male hunting instinct associated with this sport cum research activity. Read

  • The Rose Breasted Grosbeak Bird
    By: Margaret Mauldin | Jun 29th 2008
    The Rose Breasted Grosbeak is of the finch species. The male has a black head, back, bright red breast and white rump, sides and belly. The bird's wings are black with white patches above and red, white and black below.These beautiful birds are easily missed among the trees and shrubbery. Read

  • How Important Bird Proof Method Is To Get Rid Of Birds?
    By: Ethen Smith | Jan 25th 2011
    Bird Proof Repellent Sticky Gel deter birds away from ledges and beams.Stop birds from roosting on many surfaces using this sticky bird repellent liquid. Read

  • Bird Proof Pigeon Netting - Save Garden From Pigeons
    By: Ethen Smith | Feb 10th 2011
    Physical bird proof bird preventives include bird spikes, bird netting, bird slope, electrified track systems, bird wire, bird spiders, and more. These products are simply designed to repel birds from an area. Read

  • Bird Repeller In Different Forms
    By: Ethen Smith | Feb 18th 2011
    Physical bird proof bird preventives include bird spikes, bird netting, bird slope, electrified track systems, bird wire, bird spiders, and more. These products are simply designed to repel birds from an area. Read

  • Protecting Trees With Bird Netting
    By: Ethen Smith | Feb 18th 2011
    Physical bird proof bird preventives include bird spikes, bird netting, bird slope, electrified track systems, bird wire, bird spiders, and more. These products are simply designed to repel birds from an area. Read

  • Where Simple Bird Watching And Technology Meet
    By: John Edmond | Apr 15th 2007
    Bird watching hobbyists across the globe are enjoying the wealth of information that is now available to them on the internet. In the past, when trying to identify an unknown avian species, resources were limited to bird watching field guides and the written descriptions found in the travel journals of fellow bird lovers. Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy