Why are there so few female birders?
Although Lincolnshire has a few notable female experts (whom I won't identify without their permission), very few women seem to venture out (of their own volition) to coast and countryside with a pair of binoculars.
This is suprising. After all, they like birds. They love to feed the ducks with the grandkids, and they adore chicks (of almost all species) just out of the nest.
What is more, women seem to derive huge pleasure from watching activities around the garden bird table.
On that basis, I would be prepared to guess that organisations such as the RSPB and possibly the
Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust have as many, if not more, women members than men. They certainly turn out in abundance for local branch meetings
Yet I am pretty confident that relatively few belong to either the BTO or the Lincolnshire Bird Club -
organisations with a slightly different emphasis.
I have seldom (if ever) seen woman/ women birders scanning the wildfowl at Covenham reservoir or trekking along the coastal saltmarshes in a quest for harriers or other unusual species. And when the national media carry images of a throng of birders attending the sighting of some mega-rarity, there is never a woman in shot.
What is the explanation for this? Is there one? Do they feel intimidated? Are binoculars too heavy/uncomfortable?
By way of comparison, up until about 20 years ago, women had no interest in football - very few watched it on TV and hardly any attended matches. But now that's all changed. Many are avid fans. What prompted that particular revolution? Could it happen in the birding world?
I could also pose similar questions about birders from ethnic minorities (are there any?). But, on second thoughts, no! I don't want the Moderators to come down on me like a ton of bricks!