Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Conducting a Big Year can be Monumental

Speaking about a Green Jay, Taylor said: “I remember looking at bird books and thinking I’m never going to see this bird. It’s just so beautiful and vibrant, I can’t believe this thing exists” (photo by Paul Konrad).
Taylor Paez in action during her Big Year of birding (photo by James Allen Taylor).

In case you didn’t see the movie The Big Year, a Big Year is a personal quest to find as many species as possible during a calendar year. There are personal variations on this simple definition, but any way you do it, a Big Year is a serious undertaking that takes an absolute dedication, lots of free time, and some extra cash, as most participants do a lot of traveling, which may include air travel. Enter an ambitious young birder, Taylor Paez, who planned her Big Year, saved money, and left her office job; then ready, set, go – she was off, with the hope of finding 700 different birds in the lower 48 states.

Starting at her home in northern California, Taylor looped south through Arizona, southern Texas, and around the Gulf of Mexico; then turned north, passing through many eastern states to New Hampshire and Maine. Next, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Michigan including the Upper Peninsula, and Wisconsin. Then it was back to the West: the Great Plains, Colorado, on to Washington, and back home to California – all by July; traveling solo, living out of her compact pickup camper, and experiencing the ultimate bird search day by day.

As she traveled cross-country, Taylor monitored bird sightings reported on eBird, the American Birding Association’s state by state Birding News, Audubon listserves, and local birding groups’ posts on Facebook. Sometimes she even learned of rare bird sightings on Instagram, or by word-of-mouth from birders she interacted with at popular birding hotspots.

After a month-long break to re-charge at home, Taylor began the “zig-zagging” phase of her Big Year, driving through southern California, Arizona, Texas, Mississippi, then zigging and zagging before taking a boat trip off the coast of Maine; on to New Jersey, Ohio, Minnesota, Nebraska, Montana, and back to California to finish the year. Taylor explained her zig-zag pattern: “Toward the end of the year it was pretty crazy because it’s less about the common birds and more about the rare ones;” so when a rare bird showed up cross-country, she might begin a heated chase.

Pick a Favorite

After her sweeping bird quest across the country – twice – Taylor had a tough time picking just one favorite local. The country is filled with amazing biodiversity, and she enjoys it all. But if she had to pick a favorite, Taylor would pick the subtropical region of southern Texas. During one day at Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge she identified 35 new birds, the most new species she listed at once.

But presidential plans for a border wall, intended to curb illegal immigration, could destroy the habitat that allows wildlife to flourish in that south Texas area. Although Congressional funding for border wall construction that is proposed to be built through Santa Ana Refuge, Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park, and the National Butterfly Center has not passed, local governments, citizens, and conservation leaders are still concerned. “The area is such a treasure that I think a lot of Americans don’t know about, or don’t understand that it would be just a devastating loss,” Taylor acknowledged.

Her favorite birds: Green Jays, Roseate Spoonbills, Greater Kiskadees, and Audubon’s Orioles – all found in the aforementioned south Texas public lands.

Lessons from a Big Year of Birding

After spending a year in the great outdoors and tallying 634 species, Taylor did not go back to her stable office job. Instead, she turned to opportunities in the natural world: Working as a park naturalist and a stint conducting hummingbird surveys.

“I realized I not only wanted to be outside, but I wanted to make a positive impact on people. I wanted to bring them accessibility to nature and the outdoors. We need it now more than ever,” Taylor said. “I never thought I would do what I did – before that I played everything safe. I didn’t take risks, ever.”

Such a long trip was a big challenge, but after her Big Year, Taylor knows the risks are well worth the payback.

The original article about Taylor Paez’s Big Year appears on the BirdsEye Birding website, which you can refer to at http://www.birdseyebirding.com/category/frontpage-article/

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