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Monday, April 21, 2025

What can you do? Go birding.

Bob Dolgan looks for woodcocks at the Glenview Park District's Kent Fuller Air Station Prairie. 


     Usually, birds come to me. To my backyard feeder: robins, sparrows, wrens — little brown birds, mostly, with the occasional red cardinal, gray dove or blue warbler offering variety.
     I'm generally content with that setup, though chasing off squirrels is a constant challenge. They adapt.
     Extraordinary times require extraordinary measures, however. So when Bob Dolgan, publicist for the Newberry Library, said he is a regular birder and invited me along, I could not refuse the opportunity to seek out birds. Anything is better than sitting in the kitchen, staring gape-mouthed at the newspaper.
     We met in the parking lot of the Sheraton Northbrook and, to my amazement, took just a few steps and might as well have been on Egdon Heath. We were on a grassy bluff above a body of water carrying the lyrical name Techny 32B inline reservoir. A strong, steady wind ruffled our clothes. He carried with him a tripod and a 60x Bushnell spotter scope.
     A few dozen European starlings vectored past.
     "Europeans starlings — we kinda hate them, right?" I said, tucking myself into the fold of birders. An invasive species, introduced in Central Park by some fool who wanted every bird mentioned in Shakespeare to be found in America, crowding out native birds. A reminder of how much lasting damage one idiot can cause.
     "Today, I'm feeling very generous, so I'm not going to say that," Dolgan replied. "They were introduced more than a century ago. They just take up a lot of habitat from other species. They're not a great bird."
     Great birds came fast and furious. Three mallards on the water. A killdeer — a large plover on long legs.
     "You have a life list, right?" I asked.
     "I have been a little bit less focused on my list and more focused on the experience," he said, not offering the number of distinct species he's seen in the wild in his birding career. I deliberately didn't ask for the figure. Guys have a way of turning every pursuit into baseball, every activity into a batting average, a numbers game.
     "If you look at birds just to check a name off a list, a lot gets lost," Dolgan said. "There is less a connection to nature and joy of discovery. At the same time, I am keeping up with it. Looking at how many I've seen in Illinois, how many in Cook County. I report it on ebird.org."
     Ebird.org is an engaging, well-crafted website. There Dolgan listed the 22 birds we saw over the next hour — well, birds he saw. I sorta squinted in the direction he pointed, though the geese were my contribution; hard to miss geese.
     For those keeping score at home, in addition to my Canada geese, we noted examples of: blue-winged teal, northern shoveler, mallard, green-winged teal, killdeer, Wilson's snipe, lesser yellowlegs, greater yellowlegs, pectoral sandpiper, ring-billed gull, American herring gull, great egret, great blue heron, barn swallow, European starling, American robin, house finch, song sparrow, eastern meadowlark, red-winged blackbird and common grackle.

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Bob Dolgan spying a noteworthy bird on a watery mud flat in Northbrook.



23 comments:

  1. On a lark, I took birding classes through the Morton Arboretum.That opened a door to a whole new world for me. I am hyper aware of birds now, and when things are looking bleak in this world, I grab my gear and head out for some plumage....

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  2. I live too close to the arboretum not to consider doing the same thing. Thanks for the tip. I will try anything to get through the next three and 3/4 years! bmp!

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  3. Now you're talking my language! I'm glad you got out with Bob D, Mr S.
    Like Cullen, I find birding to be a comfort in times of turbulence. The cycles of nature unfold pretty much along the same timelines, regardless of what else may be going on in the world. The ducks and shorebirds you saw will move on and be replaced by smaller birds like vireos, orioles and warblers soon. Some birders go out EGD, and EGD is different. Nature is wonderful!

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  4. grey pigeons? in your yard? I live in the heart the city and have never had pigeons in my yard at my feeder

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    1. Whoops. I meant "dove." I'll fix it. I knew, with all these birds, I'd manage to fuck this up somehow.

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    2. Is gray dove another term for mourning dove?

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    3. I was quite impressed by your reference to "American Herring Gull" - that's a new name that came as the result of a species split last year. Its taking time for birders to adjust to it, but you got it right!

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    4. I did have some monk parakeets hanging around for a couple years. it was fabulous

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  5. I love it that you went out birding and featured the experience in today's article. If you were up for a natural history outing, maybe for birding or exploring a prairie remnant, please let me know. (Maybe Dale Bowman can join us.) I did mention that I have a book coming out next year, To Life: Jews Exploring Nature, and I would like to send you a copy, Can you provide me with a mailing address? Thanks so much for all you do.

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  6. I've had doves nesting on my porch for several years. They leave in the fall and return every spring. I like having them around. They never make a mess and they don't seem to mind sharing the porch with me.

    Yesterday I found a half dead baby dove laying on the floor under the nest. Looked like it had a broken leg. Later I noticed two house sparrows pulling the doves nest apart. Now I feel like I need to go to war against the sparrows. A fools mission, I'm sure. This morning the doves are back in their nest. I don't know where the baby is. I guess I'll just let it be.

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    1. on the odd bird story front, i have an acquaintance who has a condo in a 3 flat near illinois masonic hosp. about 2 weeks ago, a duck and her nest appeared on her back porch. 2 days later duck eggs appeared in the nest. no further reports yet, but definitely wonderfully weird.

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  7. CBS had a nice piece yesterday morning about feathers and women’s hats: https://www.cbsnews.com/video/how-hat-fashions-ruffled-feathers-spurring-a-conservation-movement/

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  8. "...might as well have been on Egdon Heath." I plowed through the last 3/4 of "The Return of the Native" in a memorable all-nighter when I was in high school, but it was evidently not memorable enough that I had any idea that it took place on Egdon Heath.

    We're not actually birders, in that we don't know what we're doing, but we enjoy encountering interesting birds when we see them. Alas, when we visit a place like Montrose Point, I just feel like "oh, there's another small brownish bird that will remain unidentified by me."

    I don't maintain a life list, but have taken to just making note of what fun birds we've managed to see on an outing. (Such as the osprey we saw at the Botanic Garden a week ago. We saw a few wood ducks, too, which are favorites of mine.)

    Among other resources, this Merlin Bird ID app, via which you use your phone to record a bird call and it identifies the bird for you is VERY helpful. Often, we hear a bird, but don't manage to spot it.

    https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/

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  9. According to a page called Birding Outdoors, birding and bird-watching are not one and the same. It’s a matter of commitment. Birders are more dedicated and intense, while bird watchers tend to be more casual. Birders have enhanced gear. And birders will get slightly offended when they are referred to as bird watchers.

    Birders may spend a lifetime growing their birding life list. On the other wing, bird watchers really take it down a notch. They are casual onlookers and observers of birds. Like maybe for five minutes. Birders tend to be highly competitive, rather like an elite sport. There is even “World Series of Birding”. And fundraisers called birdathons. Bird watchers take their time, and they are far less passionate..

    Birders engage actively. They will go to the bird’s location to find them and identify them. Conversely, bird watchers take on a more passive stance. Birders are often seen decked out in camouflage outdoor gear, boots, field glasses, a field guide, notebook, and with cameras. Bird watchers might just buy a decent pair of binoculars.

    And as if all this weren’t enough, a page called "Total Birding" lists a third category, an activity known as twitching. This involves searching for rare or unusual bird species. These birders became known as “twitchers”. which refers to the nervous or excited movements a person might make when finding a rare bird.

    So now you know. Me? I twitch and get extremely agitated whenever I see and hear a large noisy orange bird of prey...or read the word "Trump" in print.

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  10. I have a grand time watching birds around our feeder while enjoying weekend cocktail hour on the back deck with Mrs. St. Claire. Mourning Doves are ground feeders, of course. They never seem too bright to us. You won't see Mama Cardenal unless Papa Cardenal is somewhere close by. Blue Jays are thugs. They arrive as a flying street gang and chase away the Wrens. Redwing Blackbirds are not to be trusted, either. Ditto for the woodpeckers. Aggressive little bastards. We hear owls chatting among themselves in our woods after dark. I agree with Neil regarding the squirrels. Not much to do about them. This year we have a massive red squirrel named Big Boy that hangs with the Mourning Doves on the ground wolfing dropped seeds. They seem to get along famously. Happy as Larry one might say. The whole lot.

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  11. Hummingbird feeders are best. They don't go through them in a few hours like the other birds do with the seeds.

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  12. Mama and Papa Cardenal were very proud of their son, Jose.
    He played for nine MLB teams from 1963 to 1980.
    Including the Cubs...and before that, the Cardinals.

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  13. Thanks for these fine birding articles! While kayaking in the Chicago river in Ravenswood I have seen great blue herons, black-crowned night herons (I think they live in the Lincoln Park Zoo but some wander north during the day) Also there is at least one bald eagle, many hawks, ducks, and woodpeckers. As far as the smaller birds, I hear them but can't really identify but it is fun just being there.

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  14. Lots of birds featured on The Americas documentary series on NBC Sunday nights. While over a few episodes are still on the broadcast schedule and the rest online somewhere.

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  15. Random comments:
    The Americas documentary series is truly one of the finest programs on television that I have seen in decades. I am completely mesmerized by the photography and the featured birds. The resident feline who has zero interest in the abundance of birds through our windows chitters like mad at the television screen.
    My yard in Evanston routinely hosts pigeons at the feeder in addition to the mourning doves. Pepper flavored seed mixed with regular seed seems to be a deterrent to both the pigeons and squirrels while happily consumed by the rest.
    Another wonderful column -- thank you.

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  16. BTW my PCP's office is also across the street from the prairie and I too have neglected exploration. Hopefully, this will serve as an impetus -- thanks again.

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