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Anyone who is interested in birds eventually reaches the point when he — Birdwatching

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"Anyone who is interested in birds eventually reaches the point when he or she joins the , or loses enthusiasm. The Trust has after its first 50 years involved itself in every aspect of ornithology, simply because as the supreme shepherd of this pervasive occupation it has enabled the birdwatcher to expand his or her enjoyment. It has done this by supplying him or her with the motivation and methodology to keep records, and by applying those records in enlightened ways to reveal trends and changes in the status of birds in Britain."
Birdwatching
Birdwatching
Birdwatching
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Birdwatching, or birding, is the observing of birds, either as a recreational activity or as a form of citizen science. A birdwatcher may observe by using their naked eye, by using a visual enhancement device such as binoculars or a telescope, by listening for bird sounds, watching public webcams, or by viewing smart bird feeder cameras.

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"We ardent birders share not only a skill and craft but also a state of mind—more, a state of heart, one akin to love. All the usual explanations of why such an improbable pastime as birdwatching should be so profoundly rewarding—the thrill of the chase, days of companionship outdoors, enigmatic identifications solved, competition and even scorekeeping, witnessing nature in action, times and places of great beauty—all these sorts of reason fall short unless they acknowledge those extraordinary moments when, as once put it, "Life touches life." Honoring these moments, I think, is the largely unspoken bond among ardent birds. When we do talk about why we go birding, time and again these private experiences are what we birders recall as "when lightning struck."
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"s have been a constant presence in my life, from to field guides via fiction and non-fiction with one thing in common. I can sit down with the Handbook of British Birds by Peter Holden and Tim Cleeves and soon find myself as engrossed as I would be by, say, Elizabeth Stott’s uncanny avian tale The Rhododendron Canopy. Many elements cross over between fiction and guide book: character and identification, habitat/setting, voice, movement/migration, even narrative arc in the form of a quest. I might be reminded of the time I went looking for s and got lucky, watching them for 20 minutes while lying on my stomach by a cliff edge, or I might wonder how many times I will have to go looking for s before I actually see one rather than just hear their ghostly clicking."
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