January Recap

January Recap

Total Species Recorded: 36

I am one month into my Big Recording Year, and it has certainly been a learning experience.

I do a lot of birding by ear, which means that I identify birds based on their calls or songs. When I set out on this goal to record 100 bird species, I thought it would be a relatively simple pursuit because of the frequency in which I identify birds by ear. The reality is turning out to be quite different.

Oftentimes I will hear a bird call just once, and that’s enough to identify it. To record it, however, I need the bird to continue to vocalize, as there’s the time needed to open up the Merlin app and get my microphone ready. Very often I’m left with an empty recording because the bird only sounded off once before going quiet or flying away. That has made recording tricky.

In spite of this, I’ve submitted recordings for 36 bird species in January. My absolute favorite experience so far was spending time with a small group of short eared owls. To hear their barks and screeches while they interacted with each other was magical.

January has been otherwise filled with seets, chips, and chups with a general lack of singing. I expect that to change soon as spring migration and the breeding season gets underway.

To read more posts about this challenge, see the dedicated Bird Recording Challenge 2026 web page or click on “Bird Recording Challenge 2026” under “Tags” at the bottom of this post.

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