Journal archives for January 2019

January 1, 2019

End of Year Goal Check

It is that time of year were we look back at the year behind us. For the last few years I've been setting some year-long naturalist goals. These are just things to strive for and give me some direction throughout the year.

1. Have photos for 75% of my life birds.
I had this goal last year as well but only got up to 63% so this year I’m looking to move it up.

After another year, I'm up to having photographs of 76% of my life birds. So two years later, I've finally made it up and over the 75% mark. I'm not always that good to remember to take pictures of birds, unless they are rarities.

2. Audio for 25% of my life birds.
To be honest, I’m not really sure about this one. I currently don’t even own any recording equipment except a small microphone which plugs into my iPhone.

I didn't really do too much on this front this year. Right now I have 8% of my life birds recorded. I still don't have any equipment other than my iPhone (which is actually pretty good).

3. Participate in a dragonfly moon.
Inspired by Josh Fecteau’s website, I have attempted to do at least one or two moon challenges each year. In this case I will spend one moon cycle seeking out and identifying at least 15 dragonflies and damsel flies.

This spring and summer I spent a number of days observing odonates around where I lived. I added a number of new species to my life list. I didn't hit the 15 mark but I was able to learn 8 new ones. But more importantly, I found a number of new resources to help to me find and identify odonates. It also lead me to researching best practices for observing odonates.

4. Participate in a mushroom moon.
I will spend one moon cycle seeking out and identifying at least 15 different types of mushroom or fungus.
This is one that I really wanted to do and it seemed liked a good mushroom year, but I didn't really spend much time working on it.

5. Screen-light summer.
Once school ends for the year then I have little need to be on a computer or my phone. So this summer, as I did a couple years ago I’m going to go screen-light and attempt to limit my total screen time to about 1-2 hours a day.

Because of some changes in my job I wasn't able to have as screen-lite of a summer as I would have liked. At the same time, because I don't work during the summer my screen usage was much lower than it is during the rest of the year.

6. Complete all eBird challenges.
I will probably talk about this one again later, but basically each month eBird issues a challenge. Each person who meets the challenge will have his or her name entered into a drawing for a free pair of binoculars.

I was able to meet every eBird challenge this year with the exception of August, September, and October. I'm still stinging from a couple years ago when eBird had a year long contest for people who met all of the monthly challenges. I thought I had made it but I had made one book keeping error in March which through the entire thing off. This year, I was able to easily meet them all with the exception of the three above. Those three are usually hard because I'm starting up school again and my outdoor/birding time drops.

7. Increase monthly bird numbers throughout the year.
I have been keeping track of how many birds I have identified on a monthly basis for the last few years and this year I am setting a monthly goal to beat my highest number.

The first three months of the year were hard, I tried to hit my monthly goals but fell short each month, but once spring started I was able to hit, tie, or crush my monthly numbers. In fact, from April until August I was able to match or beat my goal. September was a bust but I've been back on the saddle with the last few months of the year. One thing that I quickly learned is helpful for meeting this goal, was to go back and look at what birds I had seen that same month in the past few years. Then with that list I was able to focus on the gaps and make sure that easy birds didn't slip through.

8. Identify over 300 birds this year.
Each year I give myself a number goal. The last couple years it has been 300 and that keeps me busy but not too crazy busy.

This one was fairly easy with a trip to Florida during April. I was able to hit 336 species for the year, which is a new personal best for me as well. I don't think I'll be able to put up those kind of numbers in 2019 but that I okay, because I have some other fun goals already in the works for myself.

9. Draw 1 nature picture a week.
This one is probably the hardest of the bunch, as I have no drawing skill at all. That said, if I can stick with it, then I should be better by the end of the year.

I started to do this and even started a Maine Master Naturalist class where I was asked to draw a lot. And I learned one very important thing about my self. I hate drawing. I understand the value in observational terms but the act of it is so laborious and my work is so bad. I just don't have the patience to do it with any real focus. I'd much rather just sit and watch a bird or whatever.

10. Start a blog/website as a way to share what I see and learn.
Subgoal. Post on that blog/website at least once a week throughout the entire year.

This was a goal that I set after I had set other goals. During the winter months I like to have something to do when I can't be outside or rather don't want to gear up and go outside. Not to mention the extra darkness. One can only bother the owls so many times. So I started a blog. But then stopped as the weather got nice. And finally moved everything to this journal.

Posted on January 1, 2019 01:56 PM by hallnatec hallnatec | 0 comments | Leave a comment

2019 Naturalist Goals

Another year and another set of goals. And even though last year was the year of the bird, in 2019 I'm focusing exclusively on birds.

  1. Participate in the 2019 5-Mile Radius Challenge.
  2. Get all of the eBird Hotspots in my 5-Mile Radius patch up to at least 50 species, including the Hotspots I'm planning on suggesting.
  3. Continue at least 1 checklist a day and move my Complete checklists to over 2400.
  4. Have photos for 80% of my life birds.
  5. Complete all eBird challenges.
  6. Increase my monthly bird numbers throughout the year.
  7. Identify over 300 birds this year.
  8. Secret goal (which might get reveled later this year).
Posted on January 1, 2019 01:57 PM by hallnatec hallnatec | 1 comment | Leave a comment