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Ovenbird |
I have been intrigued with the idea of Big Years since first reading and then seeing the movie The Big Year, starring Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson way back. A big year is a personal challenge among birders to identify as many species of birds by sight or sound in a single calendar year and a certain geographic area. It is on the honour system so many birders try to capture a picture of all the birds they see for irrefutable proof. I'm naturally competitive and it has a crazy kind of appeal BUT I know trying to break records would not be good for my mental and physical health. The stress I would put myself under would no doubt end in someone's death LOL and not necessarily my own! Still many birders choose not to try for the records and to just compete against themselves with arbitrary rules. So, early this year I came up with an idea, three consecutive Big Years of 200, 300 and 400. Two hundred species seen in Brant County in year 1, three hundred species seen in Ontario in year 2 and four hundred species seen in Canada in year 3. Crazy huh? But cool, right? They say when you are retired you need to have goals!
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Eastern Screech Owl |
You would think that if I can get 300 in Ontario then 400 across all of Canada should be easy but the larger the geographic area the harder to physically get to the birds. Plus, the birds you need, inevitably, are seen in the other provinces at the same time so you have to make decisions about when to hit spring migration in BC without missing too much of spring migration in Ontario. I'm also not planning on getting on planes to chase a rare bird in BC only to hear of another out in Newfoundland so 400 will be a real challenge with just driving across Canada to the east and west. In Canada, 530 species are usually seen and in most years only 1-4 people manage to cross the 400 mark. Currently an astonishing new record is being set by Bruce DiLabio with 480 species seen this year and he is the only birder over 400. The previous record was 457! It's a vast territory to cover and will be the most challenging year for sure.
My previous best numbers for these three locations happened in 2022 because we travelled out west and birded along the way.
Brant County 199 species
Ontario 285 species
Canada 370 species
See, I've been close, 200,300,400 are completely doable with lots of planning and good birding karma coming back to us.
Stay tuned...we start January 1!
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