When you first fall in love with birding, it鈥檚 like you鈥檙e seeing the world for the first time. The everyday commute to work suddenly becomes an adventurous treasure hunt, with every tree potentially concealing new gems. That neighborhood park you鈥檇 always neglected to visit is now an urgent destination. Every glimpse out a window is filled with possibility. You feel aware of everything, and you can鈥檛 imagine how you lived before.
I鈥檝e found that many veteran birders think back on their early days of birding with extreme nostalgia. I certainly do. I remember the very first bird I ever identified as a birder: a drake Northern Shoveler (鈥淟ook at the bill on that thing!鈥) in a flooded Indiana cornfield. I remember a few days later, on the coast of Maine, seeing the cold gray waters packed with eiders and bufflehead and scoters. At Pt. Pelee, I remember standing silently near a bunch of experienced birders and trying to keep up as they called out species I had barely even heard of before.
But over time and with the more birds you see, that level of excitement can fade. Not to say that birding isn鈥檛 still exciting, because it absolutely is, but it鈥檚 different. The possibilities aren鈥檛 endless anymore, and the day-to-day focus becomes less frenetic and geared more toward study and detail. It鈥檚 natural and probably for the best: If all birders kept up their original level of excitement, they鈥檇 all probably lose their jobs. But that doesn't mean it isn't a little disappointing.
For this reason, it's important to remember that birds aren鈥檛 the only creatures out there. If you're looking to kickstart that sense of excitement once more or just looking for another fascination to fill up your bookshelves, there are other groups of living things as varied and beautiful as birds that you can start learning to identify. Some might take a little bit more effort to find鈥攁 lot more in one case鈥but they'll show you yet another angle on the world while also providing that familiar thrill of discovery. Here are some options:
Butterflies and dragonflies are pretty easy next steps from birds. Often just referred to as 鈥淟eps and Odes,鈥 (from the order 鈥渓epidoptera鈥 which includes butterflies, and the order 鈥渙donata鈥 which is made of dragonflies and damselflies), these insects are colorful, abundant, and found in many of the same places and at the same times as birds.
I started photographing butterflies when I got bored standing around in the Mississippi heat waiting for some bird to show itself. Looking later at the photographs, studying the intricate patterns and colors to try to separate the fritillaries from the crescents and the checkerspots, I got hooked. I鈥檓 continually amazed at their variety: I figured butterflies spent all their time visiting flowers in gardens, but they鈥檙e actually found all over, from the mountaintops to deserts, from the Arctic to the jungle. Dragonflies are similarly diverse. Plus, they鈥檙e , which right there is enough to warrant attention.
I鈥檝e found that leps and odes are harder to watch than birds. There are exceptions, but most of these insects don鈥檛 sit still long enough to allow for the detailed looks necessary for identification. A camera is very helpful, and a net for in-hand study is needed for some of the trickier species, especially certain dragonflies. But that sounds fun, doesn鈥檛 it?
Moths, beetles, and other insects are less easily observed than butterflies and dragonflies, but they make up for it in sheer numbers. There are just over 500 butterfly species commonly found in the United States and somewhere just north of 700 species of breeding birds. Compare that to more than 12,000 species of moths and more than 25,000 beetles!
Studying insects is rewarding because the incredible variety combined with the relative lack of people out looking at them (compared to birders, anyway) means that there are lots of discoveries to be made. While a birder can spend years birding and not add a new bird to the state or county checklist, folks searching for insects more frequently make important observations about where certain species live or, if they鈥檙e extremely lucky, .
Just as beginning birding has the effect of turning your morning dog walk into a safari, the incredible diversity of insect species can turn your block alone into an immense wilderness. Speaking with Bill Hubick of the , he said that when he got into insects he felt that all of a sudden his 鈥渂ackyard was the size of Indiana.鈥 In the same way a birder dreams of taking a trip to Attu or Cape May, Bill dreams of spending time picking apart that rotting log back by his fence.
Fish are something of a new frontier for those interested in diversity. Lots of people catch fish, of course, but they鈥檙e mostly focused on trying to find the biggest of just a few species. What about the rest of them, though? The minnows and darters and sunfish and dace? Those little guys that dart away as you wade into the shallows? Who knows what those are?
It鈥檚 different in the tropics, where there are lots of people who scuba and snorkel to identify reef fish and other sea life in the same way birders go out and identify birds. But away from the tropics, on our colder coasts, rivers, streams, and lakes, very few people spend time exploring fish diversity. Maybe they should.
Like birds, fish are large enough to identify pretty easily and come in all shapes and colors. Like insects, there is surprisingly little known about the distribution of a lot of nongame fish. Unlike either of them, you鈥檝e got to figure out how to catch the dang things, and you don鈥檛 really have any idea what you鈥檝e got until you can successfully pull it out of the water. Can you imagine how much harder birding would be if you had to just cast a line into every bush and tree hoping something was in there?
The abovementioned Bill Hubick, who is nothing if not dedicated to the exploration of diversity, competes with some of his friends in Maryland in informal fishing Big Years just like they do as birders. They鈥檙e making misidentifications. They鈥檙e experimenting with tiny hooks used for the niche sport of , which itself is derived primarily from a Japanese style of fishing called . They鈥檙e getting yelled at by other fishermen for throwing back perfectly good flounder. In short, they鈥檙e consumed with the same kinds of passion that beginner birders feel. I鈥檓 jealous.
Finally, trees, flowers, grasses, and other plants are an endless source of interest for those who appreciate biodiversity. There are enough species here for multiple lifetimes鈥 worth of searching, and no matter where you are or what else you might be identifying, plants are always around. Plus, unlike everything else mentioned here, they don鈥檛 move. No need to leave work early to go see that rare tree鈥攊t鈥檒l still be there on the weekend!
Listen, I love birds and always will, but it鈥檚 a big world, and we should never stop exploring. So next time you head out birding, consider using your binoculars to pick out some other creatures as well.