Thursday 29 October 2015

Can't change, it's old age.

It has gradually become clear to me this last couple of years that modern bird watching has left me behind. There was a time that I kept up, I swapped my £10 RSPB binoculars for a better pair and then swapped again for some expensive Leica ones. I bought a posh Kowa scope and tripod and then bought a more expensive Opticron one, I was flying - if I couldn't identify every bird that I saw, I'd at least look the part as I staggered round under their weight. I'd been a member of the Kent Ornithological Society (KOS) since around 1959, which was a respectable stat. to quote some fifty years later, and I still go to the KOS AGM's but it's now clear that both the KOS and I have dropped into the old-fashioned category. Few members attend the KOS meetings, even fewer use it's Forum or Latest Sightings facility, it's creaking with old age just as I am.
It seems that the modern and youthful birdwatcher rarely attends meetings any more, it's doubtful that they even physically talk to each other that much, except of course when they herd together on a twitch. No, they tweet, facebook or page each other, technology has left the note book, pencil and us old codgers behind.

For some, even going out looking to find your own rare bird is old-fashioned - much better to sit dozing indoors with a pager on the arm of the chair. The pager beeps, makes you spill your wine, a rare bird is in bushes in your area, the location is given to the nearest bush, this is easy. Check your tick list, no, ain't got that one, grab your gear and off you rush. Join the mass crowd at the site, get seen by all the regulars and therefore acknowledged as one of the "top notch" in-crowd birders - just a matter then of trying to get the best photograph of the bird, even more recognition!
That's probably an unfair description of how most birders go about their bird watching but it's easy to come to that conclusion some times when you read some of their blogs. It's extraordinary the lengths that some of these twitchers will go to in order to get another bird on their list and what a pain in the arse that their behaviour can be while they're doing it.

So yes, bird watching, like life itself, has continued to evolve and this old curmudgeon at 68 has been left behind, unable to evolve with it - no facebook, no twitter, no pager, just my daily patch watching. I've always been an opinionated, anti-social old bastard, can't change now!

9 comments:

  1. Very well said my 'young' friend. I must confess to going on twitches to see rare or scarce birds but the Dusky Thrush was really the end of this for me with the behaviour seen. I will still go to see birds but get just as much pleasure nowadays at seeing common birds around. So much so that I may consider a new patch next year where I said I would do the owners a favour and let them know what's on their land throughout the year. Mostly common birds I expect but that's fine with me.

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  2. Well, that's nice, refreshing comment Marc. I'm always amazed that some people can ignore common birds so much. Mind you, having discovered Reculver this year for the first time and thoroughly enjoyed the Sand Martins and the pub food there, Id love near to it, minus the twitchers.

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  3. I have always been too antisocial and crowd averse to join groups; blogging is my only "social networking" activity. I started birdwatching to get away from people, not to be around them!

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    1. Wilma,
      Nothing wrong with being anti-social in my book. Your move to Belieze certainly achieved that big time.

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  4. Derek - welcome to the world of "The Non-conformist" The problem with the KOS (and all other "Bird Clubs/Ornithological Societies) is the inability/unwillingness to change. Technology has outgrown the requirement for committees and bird reports. Everything today is instant gratification - why wait for a 2012 Bird Report - it's 2015 for God's sake!
    " I've always been an opinionated, anti-social old bastard, can't change now! " I have no problem aligning myself to that sentiment - Dylan

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    1. Thanks Dylan, I always enjoy the "attitude" that you produce in your blog.
      As for the Kent Bird Report, well there will always be some delay because birding reports have to waited on till well past a current year and then written up. The writers are also unpaid volunteers in short supply and so it is unfair in my book to criticize them if I don't volunteer myself.

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  6. Never a truer word spoken in jest Derek. Your blog gets more comments on it than the KOS Forum !! Unlike you I have at last succumbed and now have joined the Twitter and Facebook community, purely because there is more discussion on those than KOS. I do agree that those that volunteer for the unpaid work do indeed deserve praise .

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  7. Good to hear from you Mike, can't blame you for moving with the times, the Forum is pretty much defunct and with many blogs now becoming un-used I guess they'll soon go the same way.

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