Hiking with Jessie, my significant other, means flushing birds by pishing so we can look at their jizz. I learned what this means the old-fashioned way in 2012, without Google, on our first hike together. It means moving very slowly.
I am not a birder, though I鈥檝e learned a lot since dating one. At the University of New Mexico, Jessie researches, writes, and reads about birds. She even writes about researching and reading about birds. Those who surround her also watch birds, and they in turn surround me, throwing around lingo I don鈥檛 understand. 鈥淚 can only contribute the occasional 鈥業 saw a bird once,鈥欌 Vince Ortega, a nonbirding fianc茅e of Jessie鈥檚 former lab mate, once told me in solidarity.
My greatest birding accomplishment remains spotting a pack of endemic fowl crashing through underbrush in Borneo, making loud, chicken-like noises. I spotted them because I didn鈥檛 have binoculars and was limited to looking only at the ground. Jessie gave me a pat on the back and said, 鈥淕ood boyfriend.鈥 Then she went back to looking at them. I was thrilled.
Such victories come sparingly when every bird soaring above you looks like a raven. When you鈥檙e in love with a birder, it鈥檚 usually best to just stand back and watch them.
I do this mostly by tagging along with Jessie鈥檚 lab in the field鈥攐r at a bar where they gather after their lab meeting on Fridays. It鈥檚 a strange scene at 5 p.m., a nerdy collection of biologists ordering IPAs at a fratty bar with sticky floors. Birdwatchers frequently find tranquility in places many consider unsavory鈥攔emote desert puddles, drainage ditches, or garbage piles鈥攚here they see attractive habitats for themselves and avifauna. Here, at dusk before hoards of patrons arrive, we have a balcony overlooking the Sandias all to ourselves. You can gaze across the valley for wildlife鈥攎erlins, lesser goldfinches, and Cooper鈥檚 hawks that dive-bomb packs of clumsy, idiotic doves.
These identifications thrill birdwatchers, and they have taxonomies for fellow birders as well. Once, after taking a professor鈥檚 recruiting call when she was applying to grad school, Jessie made an observation that confused me.
鈥泪鈥檓 so glad he鈥檚 a birder,鈥 she said
鈥淎ren鈥檛 all ornithologists birders?鈥 I asked.
Dumb question. Jessie explained that, for some ornithologists, a bird is merely a vessel by which to study more exciting aspects of evolution, ecology, or conservation. Such ornithologists were a mystifying subspecies; they would finish a day of fieldwork outdoors, often in exotic locations, and then not return to look at the birds for fun. The horror. I was lucky not to be dating one of those people.
When dating a birder, everything鈥攆rom religious beliefs to daily habits鈥攊s affected by avifauna. Jessie refers to children as 鈥渙ffspring.鈥 Homes become 鈥渘ests.鈥 Noteworthy hair becomes 鈥減lumage.鈥
So who are the ideal birding companions? They are, I鈥檝e found, often old and retired. Madi Baumann, who鈥檚 married to Matt, a savant of New Mexico birds in his early thirties, verified as much. 鈥淪omething that took some getting used to was how many random phone calls he would get from older men that I knew nothing about.鈥 They turned out to be innocent birders calling Matt to report sightings, plan trips, or get tips. But they were also unexpectedly useful assets鈥攂ullpen relief for nonbirding partners wishing to sleep later than 5 a.m. Other birders claim conversion is inevitable. On one trip, Jessie and I met a couple from Texas. Only the groom was a birder when they married; five years later, the bride had taken up birding and renounced Christianity for atheism. She said the two events were related.
When dating a birder, everything鈥攆rom religious beliefs to daily habits鈥攊s affected by avifauna. Jessie refers to children as 鈥渙ffspring.鈥 Homes become 鈥渘ests.鈥 Noteworthy hair becomes 鈥減lumage.鈥 A few weeks ago, lounging on the couch, Jessie said she was roosting. On another occasion, she showed me videos of colorful birds doing bizarre, elaborate mating dances鈥攐ne male in front of a creative lean-to he had built worthy of Andy Goldsworthy, decorated with purple flower petals. I looked around the house and then at myself, pasty and unremarkable, and pondered my underwhelming bank account as a freelance journalist. I wasn鈥檛 sure what Jessie was trying to suggest.
She is more straightforward, however, when relieving me of driving duties after I fail to stop for birds. Once, while leaving New Mexico鈥檚 remote Gila Wilderness in our 1997 Honda CRV with nearly 300,000 miles on it, Jessie spotted some birds and took the wheel鈥攕uddenly unworried about the engine overheating. She looked everywhere but the road, screeching to sudden halts when something fluttered nearby, while I improvised prayers in the seat. 鈥淚 honestly don鈥檛 know how they stay on the road,鈥 says Aaron Matins, a nonbirder dating Selina Bauernfeind, one of Jessie鈥檚 lab mates.
Birding by foot tends to be more relaxing. A few years ago in Thailand, I brought a Kindle along on hikes and strapped a foldout chair to my pack. When Jessie came upon mixed flocks (a group of birds with many species, which is very exciting), I鈥檇 settle in and get some reading done. Hiking loops work wonders; on that trip, I completed an eight-mile circle and linked up with Jessie after she鈥檇 gone less than one and a half. She had barely noticed my absence.
I hung back for a bit, lovesick and even a little envious, watching Jessie stumble onto gold mines of her own fascinations. She鈥檇 just moved to Beijing with me, and Thailand marked her first time birding in Old World tropics. Their canopies concealed thousands of unopened gifts; watching her find them, I sometimes felt disappointed a similar curiosity didn鈥檛 grab me the same way.
Increasingly, I find myself in awe of great birders鈥攖heir recognition of songs and calls and the seemingly invisible details they use to identify the LBJs鈥攖he 鈥渓ittle brown jobs鈥 of drab gray and brown birds that all look the same. They value something intimate about the natural world in a way, I suspect, that even . Lately, I鈥檝e found myself ditching the foldout chair for binoculars, and I鈥檝e gotten better at making IDs. Last summer, I spotted Jessie her first pair of American three-toed woodpeckers, this time slightly off the ground on a log鈥攁 small improvement from the fowl I鈥檇 spotted in Borneo. And in April, according to the birding site , I recorded the third to arrive in Albuquerque, a feat I proudly recounted at聽lab drinks.
A few weeks later, Jessie and I were driving back from a weekend of camping with her lab in Boone鈥檚 Draw, a sweltering ditch of forest patch in the eastern New Mexico desert that attracts desperate migrating birds. Aaron was driving, Selina in the passenger鈥檚 seat, and I sat next to Jessie in the back, napping and guzzling Gatorade to recover from near heatstroke. As we approached the Sandias, Aaron remarked that a recent hike with Selina had gone slower than expected, and I offered my condolences鈥攕ix years of them now. Selina and Jessie laughed, but neither promised change. We weren鈥檛 hoping for it anyway.