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KNOWING NATURE
By Bill Church
11/07 - Identifying
Birds
Learning to identify birds is easy if you
become familiar with the birds in your yard. As you get
better, you can expand to birds in your home town.
A field guide will help you attach a name
to the birds you see. Field guides are books with
pictures and descriptions of birds. Field guides
typically show birds of just one country or even one
part of a country.
Here are some tips to make identifying
birds easier. First, how big is the bird? Is it as big
as a sparrow, a robin, a pigeon, a chicken or an
ostrich? Is the bird fat or skinny, long or short?
Look at each part of the bird. Is its
bill short or long, thick or thin, curved or straight?
How about the tail? What shape is it? Is it forked? Are
the bird's wings pointed or curved, long or short?
Next, notice the main colors. This sounds
crazy, but it works. If you do not believe it, turn to
the Roadside silhouettes inside the front cover of your
Peterson Field Guide to Eastern Birds. With practice,
you will recognize all these birds just by their
silhouette. (If you don't have a Peterson Field Guide
yet, we will wait here while you go order one from
Amazon or online at www.whatbird.com .)
The colors of a bird can play tricks on
you. A bird's colors look different when the bird is at
the top of a tree at sunset than it does at noon. Check
the color of each body part. Sometimes just the color of
a bird's legs can help you tell one from another.
Also check to see if the bird has wing
bars or an eye-ring or a patch of color on its rump,
chest, or head. Many birds found near water have
distinctive markings on their wings or tail.
Finally, look around you. Are you and the
bird deep in a forest, on your lawn or 50 miles out at
sea? Each bird likes a certain habitat. Habitat refers
to things like plants and trees in the area, the
elevation (are you in the mountains or at the shore?),
the climate in the area and the type of water nearby.
See if the bird is swimming or wading. Can the bird
climb trees? Does it wag its tail a lot? When it flies,
does it go straight or up and down like a baby roller
coaster?
If you can answer many of these
questions, you have a good chance of finding your bird
in the field guide. When you understand how your guide
arranges the birds, it will become easier to quickly
turn to the right page. Birds are arranged in Taxonomic
order. Here is a hint: look for little birds seen in
trees in the back half of your book.
There is one final secret you need to
know. Really good birders can "see" more birds with
their eyes closed than you and I can see with our eyes
open! They know the songs a bird sings. Even one chip
note might tell them a bird called a Rose-breasted
Grosbeak is hiding in the bushes. LISTEN ! Some birds
such as rails and bitterns live deep in the swamp. You
may never see them. Birders can identify them by their
call or their song.
Finally, you need to know the names of
the parts of a bird. You already know most of the
important names. You will soon discover that birders
seem to have given a name to every little line on a
bird. Do you know where to find a bird's wing bars,
primaries, superciliary and malar stripe? Bird books
often refer to these to help you identify a bird.
Bill Church is a certified WV Master
Naturalist and herbalist, and has trained with Tom Brown
(world reknown tracker). He has published a book, called
“Medicinal Plants, Trees, & Shrubs of Appalachia”; and
is a network and computer specialist at Glenville State
College. Articles are courtesy of Gilmer County Master
Naturalist Association.

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ABOUT THE
AUTHOR: |
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Bill Church is a certified WV
Master Naturalist; certified
herbalist; has trained with Tom
Brown (world renown tracker);
has published a book called
"Medicinal Plants, Trees, &
Shrubs of Appalachia"; and is a
network and computer specialist
at Glenville State College.
Bill has trained for many
years with as a tracker,
botanist, birder, learning about
animals, herbal medicine and
other things about nature. He
works full time as a Network and
Computer Specialist for
Glenville State College. He has
taken classes from some of the
countries most famous
Herbalists; (David Winston,
Rosemary Gladstar). He is of
Cherokee and English descent.
In 2005 Bill wrote and
published “Medicinal Plants,
Trees, & Shrubs of Appalachia”,
which lists 107 plants from the
Appalachian region, especially
Gilmer and the surrounding
counties. He is also
Co-coordinator for the Gilmer
County Master Naturalist
Association and has taught
classes on herbal medicine. Bill
has also taken training by the
world reknown tracker Tom Brown
in tracking and wilderness
survival.
Bill also setup and maintains
the website for the Gilmer
County Master Naturalist
Association and helped with the
website for the WV Herb
Association.
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