nanoboy
Well-Known Member
not for me. I would just consider that an annoyance that you didn't actually see it!
I often use my camera to zoom in on birds, so technically I do see them.
not for me. I would just consider that an annoyance that you didn't actually see it!
well that's a different situation. You are focusing on a bird at the time, or taking a photo of a specific bird. But if you just take a photo of a group of birds and then later look at the photo and say "oh hey there's a such-and-such in that photo"...would you count it?I often use my camera to zoom in on birds, so technically I do see them.
well that's a different situation. You are focusing on a bird at the time, or taking a photo of a specific bird. But if you just take a photo of a group of birds and then later look at the photo and say "oh hey there's a such-and-such in that photo"...would you count it?
boof said:to quote ( or misquote) Kenny Bostick from the big year, "how do we know it's not another birder making bird noises?"
ha, same for me in the Blue Mountains. There was obviously a massive Parliament of Fowls taking place down in the forest but somehow I knew that there couldn't be that many cockatoos and kookaburras all in one spot, so I snuck in through the trees and spied a lyrebird doing his display. Awesome moment.Years ago I was in a rainforest and could hear at least a dozen different birds all vocalising from the same dense little thicket. But I couldn't see anything. I finally realised it wasn't a dozen different species, but just one individual.
Bloody lyrebirds.
So, if something shows up in a photo, but you didn't actually see it on the day (and recognise it as something different), you can still count it?
Hix
well that's a different situation. You are focusing on a bird at the time, or taking a photo of a specific bird. But if you just take a photo of a group of birds and then later look at the photo and say "oh hey there's a such-and-such in that photo"...would you count it?
It depends. There was once a group of waders quite far out that I couldn't see very well with my binoculars. I knew from the colour and shape that one was a red neck avocet, but I couldn't be sure because it was so far away. So, I took a few pics and zoomed in, and I was right, so I ticked it. I use my camera the way someone might use a scope, but I have a permanent record of the sighting.
That's fine - I've done the same thing.
But what if you were looking at all these waders with your binoculars, and all you could see was stilts and avocets. You take a photo and later that night when you zoom in your see an oystercatcher that you had no idea was there. Do you count it?
I wouldn't. I'd go back the next day with an agenda. And more powerful binoculars.
Hix
what all this comes down to is, it is your list so follow your own rules. Just so long as you're not just making stuff up and pretending you saw something you hadn't.
For myself, I wouldn't count it if it was too far to see with binoculars but I took a photo and zoomed the picture right up. I can see the photo sure, but I still didn't actually see the bird properly. I would try and get closer, and if that fails or is not possible then I didn't see it. I'll hopefully see it later elsewhere.
I have two ways of accepting birds, depending on whether it is for the year list or the life list. This relates to both the paragraphs above. For a year list, many of the birds are species I have seen hundreds of times before. I can recognise a starling or a NZ pigeon or whatever from a long way away just by the way it flies. So for a year list that can count as a tick, because I am so familiar with the species I know what it is whereas someone with less experience of that species wouldn't be able to. However, if the bird is a lifer (or just a bird which I rarely see), then I want to see it well. Second-best isn't good enough for the life list. Birds of prey are a little different because quite often the only view you get is a soaring one. In that case so long as it is identifiable then it counts.True, and I agree with you. However, in my case, I feel that a more experienced birder will be able to recognise the far away birds (as I was able to recognise the black swans next to the waders) even with a low power binoculars. I, however, need to scrutinise the image in minute detail at home, so I don't feel too bad. I thought the little fleck of white on one of the oystercatchers was a reflection, but the photo analysis proved it was a pied oystercatcher.
That raises another point: can you count birds that you have not had a very good view of, but are 100% sure what it is? For example, would you count a wedge tail eagle soaring hundreds of feet in the air that just appears to be a speck? (For readers that aren't aware, this eagle's silhouette is unmistakable, because of the wedge-shaped tail.)
I have two ways of accepting birds, depending on whether it is for the year list or the life list. This relates to both the paragraphs above. For a year list, many of the birds are species I have seen hundreds of times before. I can recognise a starling or a NZ pigeon or whatever from a long way away just by the way it flies. So for a year list that can count as a tick, because I am so familiar with the species I know what it is whereas someone with less experience of that species wouldn't be able to. However, if the bird is a lifer (or just a bird which I rarely see), then I want to see it well. Second-best isn't good enough for the life list. Birds of prey are a little different because quite often the only view you get is a soaring one. In that case so long as it is identifiable then it counts.
So if I was in Australia and there was a crowd of birds on the far side of a lagoon just at the edge of binocular range, I would count the black swans and the pelicans because it is obvious what they are and I've seen them many times before. I may be reasonably positive there are red-necked avocets there too but I can't quite make out if they are or not. I don't count them (unless I can get closer for a 100% positive ID).
no that would go on my Feathers On The Floor list.Man, you have some strict rules. And here I was thinking that you would count a bird if you saw a feather on the floor.![]()
Birds:
78 Little Black Cormorant Phalacrocorax sulcirostris
79 Blue-billed Duck Oxyura australis
80 Black-tailed Native Hen Gallinula ventralis
81 Pink Robin Petroica rodinogaster
82 Scarlet Robin Petroica multicolor
83 King Parrot Alisterus scapularis
Mammals:
1 New Zealand Fur Seal Arctocephalus forsteri
2 European Rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus
3 Brush-tailed Possum Trichosurus vulpecula
4 European Hedgehog Erinaceus europaeus
5 Echidna Tachyglossus aculeatus
6 Black Rat Rattus rattus
7 Swamp Wallaby Wallabia bicolor
8 Australian Water Rat Hydromys chrysogaster
9 Eastern Grey Kangaroo Macropus gigas
10 Koala Phascolarctus cinereus
11 Red Fox Vulpes vulpes