Hi all,
I'm a grad student (studying birds) and freelance nature writer. I
have successfully pitched a story to BirdWatcher's Digest, concerning
the use of electronics and technology for birding and whether they
detract from or add to the experience of birding. I would like to do a
large-scale survey of birders to find out the range of opinions on this
topic, what sort of technology people use, and whether different groups
of people (men vs. women, older vs. younger, etc.) have different
practices.
If you are interested in helping me out, you can send a reply directly
to me (crkigh@xxxxxx, specialagentCK@aol, crkigh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx). Feel
free to include (or exclude) any of the following information:
1. Name
2. Age
3. How long you've been birding
4. How often you go birding
5. Whether/how often you have used the following: electronic bird song
devices (birdsong CD's, iPod birdsong programs, hand-held song tutoring
programs), birding programs (e.g. Thayer birding software, electronic
birding journals, etc.), internet resources (listservs--I think we've
got that covered!, websites such as those provided by Cornell or the
USGS for identification or background, websites with birding-related
information, such as maps, birdhouse plans, suet recipes, etc.),
navigation systems (in the car or handheld, for locating birding
sites), anything else I haven't thought of
6. Your opinions about the use of technology--does it add to your
experience? does it detract from being out in nature? is it better in
some situations than in others? does it make birding less pure?
Thanks in advance for everyone who participates. I won't be mentioning
any actual names in the article, but I will definitely give credit to
all groups/organizations that contribute to my piece. I would be happy
to send a final copy of my article to anyone who's interested, and to
follow up with publication information once I know more details. I look
forward to hearing from you!
Caitlin Kight
Department of Applied Science
College of William and Mary