5 Questions with Bill Thompson III
I have met several of the top names in the birding world.
One that I was very excited to meet was Bill Thompson III and I finally got to
meet him at the 2012 Space Coast Birding and Wildlife Fest. I was truly honored
when he agreed to sit down with me for this interview and then suggested a
picture with him, my wife and I. The guy is as kind and humorous as I hoped he
was.
Bill Thompson III is editor of Bird Watcher’s Digest, writer
of several books including his newest one The Young Birder's Guide to Birds
of Eastern North America that he wrote with his daughter and her
classmates, a father, a great field trip leader, a musician, a husband, and
many other things. You can check out his blogs at http://billofthebirds.blogspot.com/
, his magazine’s website at http://www.birdwatchersdigest.com
, or check out iTunes for his podcasts under the title This Birding Life.
How did you encounter
your spark bird?
I encountered my spark
bird, I am not exactly sure, it was either ’68 or 69’, 1968 or 1969. In our
front yard in Pella, Iowa, It was November and we were raking leaves, there was
just a dusting of snow, we wanted to get the leaves up before the snow got
thick, Iowa gets deep snow, and this big white bird flew up into the oak tree
in our front yard. I called my mom’s attention to it and she said. “I think it
is an owl.” I ran in to get these old World War I binoculars and this filed
guide we had, a Chester Reed Guide, and we figured out it was a Snowy Owl. I
was just so fascinated by that. So I took the field guide, in the ensuing days
and weeks and I flipped through and I saw, 20 or so pages later, Painted
Bunting. And it said lives on shrubby habitat. So, I spent the rest of the
winter looking around Iowa, in our Iowa
woods, for a Painted Bunting, because they
had no range maps back then, so I kinda went off like that for some time and
till this day anytime I get to see a Snowy Owl, which is few and far between,
is a real treat. Of course all kids know Snowy Owl now from Harry Potter and Hedwig.
Who was the person to
get you into birding?
The person that got me
into birding was really probably, my mom. We moved to Ohio from Iowa in about 1971,
she got involved with a group of women that went out every Friday bird watching,
the Betsy Birders, the Betsy Mills Club, a women’s club, in Marietta, Ohio. The
gal who was the leader of that group was Pat Murphy, so she was sort of the
knowledgeable birding mentor, but it was my mom’s interest in trying to meet
new people that got us into the bird club and once a month they would let kids
come, so my brother and I would go. We spent most of our time catching crawdads
and throwing rocks. Fairly regularly we would spot birds that the adults
wouldn’t see, I remember once I scared up a Harrier in a field. And so, you got
positive feedback for the adults for finding birds and it kinda sunk in to me
that it was a neat way to interact with adults and I got more and more
interested in. My mom open the door and Pat Murphy, who was the local bird
columnist in the paper and the local bird expert, she was the one organized the
field trips and took us out, so she was my first birding mentor, but then there
have been a lot of others over the years that have helped me to get better and
learn more stuff and learn how to be field craft and stuff like that.
You have an
all-expenses paid 14 day trip to go birding, where are you going and why?
There are a few places
on my wish list, I think Australia maybe. I have never been to Australia, I
have been close, I have been to Papua, New Guinea, but I have never been to
Australia. The whole thing about Australia
fascinates me; the bird life, the animal life, the history, the people. I think
Australians are light hearted, easy going people. I have encountered a lot of
Australians in my travels and it just a place I have always wanted to go and
hope to get there on of these days. And 14 days would be just about right. You
would not want to fly down there for a 3 day trip. That would kill ya, coming
and going. It takes you 3 days on either day to get there.
What would you
consider your greatest birding trip?
That would be really
hard to pick out. There are elements of every trip that I really like. The New
Guinea trip was fabulous because we saw 18 of the 36 or so Birds of Paradise
and those are spectacular things that you can’t even believe they are birds.
They are so ornate and almost ridiculous in their coloring and pigments and
their behavior. Every trip I go on there is something really memorable. I don’t
want to fink out on the answer, but I have been to Guatemala a few times and
had a fantastic time there. I love going somewhere new in the states. I would
love to go to central Alaska, I have never been there. I would have to say some
of the exotic locations. I have been to South Africa a few times and that place
is stupendous for birds and nature. It is hard for me not to pick some place
that’s not in North America, because I am such a North American homer. It is
hard to one. I can pick elements of every single trip I have taken that would
make it stand out in my memory.
Why do you bird?
Why do I bird, you
know, boy, that’s a deep one. For me, it is a healing, cleansing, almost like a
spiritual thing. I love being out in nature with birds, I love being out so far
out that you do not know where you are and nobody knows where you are. There is
something very restorative about that, given our connections and all of our
vices and constantly being wired to the world. I love being out in nature and
just far, far away from everything. And that, I found that recharges your
battery in your heart and soul. And I also like being out with people, like
guiding. I have had some great trips here at the Space Coast Birding Festival
and Florida is a great place to come to watch birds. I so appreciate that when
a festival comes to a place like this, that it is making an impact on the local
politicians and city planners and I hope that helping over time to encourage
people that is worth setting aside habitat, that is worth preserving wild
places. Because if we do not have these wild places, we do not have animals and
the birds that people come to see. And there are millions of dollars; it’s all
about money in the end for most of these decision makers. It’s all about money
and jobs. To be able to support what Brevard County is doing here and putting
away natural space and setting it aside and protecting it, I like being part of
that. So that is part of it too. And of course I like getting the young people
and that’s paying it forward. Somebody was kind to me when I was a kid, spent
time with me; I feel a real obligation to pass that on and pay it forward, so that
is why I am doing it.
No comments:
Post a Comment