Fast forward 30+ years and many birds later, and I was pleased to recently find a first edition copy of Adventures in Birding (were there actually other printings?) at a used bookstore. I scooped it up, and after getting it home I got a big surprise. Unbeknownst to me, all these years later, I had actually moved to within just a few miles of where Jean Piatt started birding!
Piatt mentions three local birding sites where he got his start here in Delaware County, Pennsylvania--Furness Upper Bank Nursery in Media, Springton Reservoir, and Tinicum wildlife refuge. Tinicum is now the Heinz National Wildlife Refuge--a large wetland area near the Philadelphia airport that I've birded many times since moving to Pennsylvania in 2004.
The Upper Bank Nursery was more of a puzzle, a couple local birders I asked about it didn't know where it was. Some Googling led me to find it just south of Media, less than three miles from my home. This is where Piatt first started birding--in his first chapter, he describes seeing an Eastern Towhee there as the spark bird that got him first interested in listing the birds he found, and the desire to find more. What used to be a local nursery well known for growing many types of bamboo, is now private property, but I was able to find it and take a few pictures.
Site of the former Furness Upper Bank Nursery on South Ridley Creek Rd in Media, PA |
Site of the former Furness Upper Bank Nursery in Media, PA less than 3 miles from my home. |
Springton Reservoir just 5.5 miles straight down the road from my home. |
So 700 became my goal over the next decade as we moved to Texas and eventually back out to Pennsylvania. Working for Audubon, I was able to see more and more birds in my work travels around the country, putting me closer and closer to 700 as the club moved on and the top listers started shooting for 800+ species. Then when my Audubon job evaporated in 2009, my travel schedule changed and my North American listing started slow-walking, even as the top listers started hitting 900+ species for the continent. This past year, I finally saw my 700th species in North America, just before the American Birding Association officially added Hawaii to the North American listing region, making 1000+ the new benchmark for top North American bird listers.
Sitting here now, with Adventures in Birding in hand, and looking back over my own adventures, I am happy for all the birds and places that I've seen over the years, and the wonderful people that I've met. But my own listing goals have come smaller--county and yard listing have become more of my passion the last few years. I can't imagine spending the money required for the multiple Alaska trips necessary to get to 800, let alone 900 or 1000 species for North America. So I don't have a North American listing goal to motivate me beyond the occasional chase for a new bird near me, or perhaps trips to see some of the scattered other species I haven't seen so far.
Over the past decade I've enjoyed more and more foreign research and conference trips--and the birds I've been able to see outside of North America. I've only seen about 14% of the bird species in the world, so there are many more to enjoy--but I currently don't have a listing goal for my world list either, but I do expect to make many more trips and see more birds, countries, and cultures. The world is a very big place for hopefully many more adventures in birding!
2 comments:
A marvelous little history, Rob; thanks for sharing it!
Great to see this in print. Glad you were able to find that book. Synchranicities still make life more enjoyable.
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