Oregon Magazine   Traveling the West?  Stay at  Shilo Inns
   Cover  |  Table of Contents


 
Calling all bird watchers!
by Stephen Shunk of Paradise Birding

More than 50,000 bird watchers from across the Western Hemisphere will count every bird they see and hear in a 24-hour period this holiday season as part of the one hundred and second annual Christmas Bird Count (CBC). Feeder watchers and traveling birders alike will join teams of volunteers in more than 1,880 count circles from Alaska to Chile. Individual counts will occur between December 14 and January 5, 2002.

What makes all these folks stand out in the cold to count birds each winter? Some would say it’s the camaraderie, and others would say they just like counting birds. But perhaps the most significant reason for participating in the CBC is the chance to contribute to the longest running ornithological database in history and its use as a vital tool in bird species and habitat conservation.


The CBC tradition began on Christmas Day in 1900 when 27 conservationists diverged from another long-standing holiday practice of the era, the “side hunt.” In the hunt, teams competed to see who could shoot the most birds and small mammals. Ornithologist Frank Chapman proposed instead to count the birds they saw, and hence was born one of the most important citizen-based conservation efforts in history.

The data collected from more than 100 years of CBCs reveal important information about the winter distribution of various bird species as well as population trends among resident and migratory birds. The CBC provides a key tool for governments and other organizations who are responsible for habitat management and conservation.

CBC teams cover 15-mile-diameter count circles, each enclosing approximately 177 square miles. Oregon alone will host 48 different counts for the 103rd CBC. Counting occurs from midnight to midnight, with the most eccentric birders counting owls in winter’s brisk wee hours. 

Birders of all skill and ability levels are encouraged to join in the festivities. Most teams have expert birders to help identify all the different species, so participants only have to know how to count. Backyard feeder-watchers also provide important contributions to each count circle, so folks with limited mobility or other restrictions can still contribute.

Get out and count some birds this holiday season. Join the circle in your area or visit some place in our beautiful state that you have never seen. Make a difference in supporting wildlife conservation. Oregon has some great birds, and you can help keep it that way.

For a complete listing of the CBC circles in Oregon and the contact information for each circle, click here

Oregon Important Bird Areas www.audubonportland.org
Oregon Cascades Birding Trail  www.oregonbirdingtrails.org

© 2002 Stephen Shunk of Paradise Birding  Photo provided by the author. 


 
      Around Oregon News Digest  |  Arts&Lettres  |  Business  |  Editorial  |  Events  | Life&Styles
      Natural History  |  Outdoor   |  SciTech  |   Sports  |  TravelPeg's Bottom Gazette  |  Contact