tips for birding with kids (part 3 of 3)
Amy Simso Dean, birder for over 25 years, runs MYBirdClub, an after school bird-watching club for kids in south Minneapolis. In this series, Amy provides tips for birding with the young ones.
Field Etiquette
Respect: Ourselves, each other, nature.
Always carry: binoculars or a field bag with pen and paper to sketch or take notes
You can have a clipboard or a smart phone and have 1 kid track what you see. This leads nicely into citizen science projects (ebird, feederWatch, NestWatch, CBC etc).
You do not rush ahead of the leader or running screaming to the bird you see (yes, you need to explain this).
You do not jump in front of someone using their binoculars or a scope… Yes, this happens all the time.
A few other tips.
Use the term Grown-ups rather than Mom and Dad to be sensitive to all situations.
Every robin is interesting. With little kids, focus on the big birds and not something small like warblers that move around a lot. You’re there to guide not bird.
Listen to all their bird stories.
Ask what their favorite bird is. Or have them whisper this to each other.
Work in gross facts or cool bird facts that grown-ups don’t know: vultures poop on their legs to stay cool, there’s no bird named “seagull.”
Universe Bird: Good for older groups or groups you bird with more than once. This is something my mom and I started. It’s a bird you really want to see (doesn’t have to be a new bird, just something you want to see) and toss that name out to the universe. You do not get a new Universe bird until you’ve seen your current one. Best practice: don’t say penguin unless you’re heading to Antarctica soon.
I work in conservation ideas: don’t feed bread to ducks, pick up 3 pieces of trash a day (being safe of course).
I’m not strict about anyone birding. If they are with us and respectful they can just enjoy being in nature. We stop to look at cool bugs and plants.
Talk about life lists, year lists, yard lists. Bird in a place with a playground (reward before and/or after).
Don’t bird too long: If they’re done be done.
Create games if you're around a kid a lot: My kids get a quarter for every red-tailed hawk they ID before I do.
I read about one guy who paid a dime for each new species found on a road trip.
Like life list: American Birding Association has life list pins for sale.