james smith wrote:
What's next? Katherine's comments
For me, birdwatching is more than lists and the like - it is about the whole experience of getting out there and absorbing the sights, smells, sounds of the birding environment you're in and engaging in conversation with birdwatchers who I am sure know a hell of a lot more about birds than I do! I want them to pass on their knowledge so I can go off a better birdwatcher and develop fieldcraft skills such as identifying birds.
I like to provide readers with something more than just a dry, plain list of species seen. That approach is, to me baffling. I get no sense of atmosphere, I get no impression of your mood that day, I get no idea of what the weather was like and how it affected the species of birds you see. I would like to read more animated tales of your exploits. When I read these extra details in books, it's brilliant, and Bill Oddie is a great exponent of that.
He doesn't leave you guessing. He's a character and I admire that in someone, even if it comes across as annoying to others. You get soul, you get dry wit, you get scepticism and then some. And it's excellent to see that enthusiasm come across in Spring/Autumnwatch. It brings banter and light-heartedness to a hobby that still suffers from a negative press opinion.
If banter, light-hearted mickey-taking and the like helps make birdwatching a more human, mainstream hobby rather than one perceived to be full of grumpy mugwumps freezing cold, staring sternly into the last mugful of tea in his Thermos, grumbling sourly about 'dipping out' on Red-flanked Bluetail, being gripped off about an Ortolan in the Scillies without remembering all the good times when he WAS lucky, then I'm all for it.