Most people I know have a bucket list (whether mental or physical). A list of things they justย haveย to experience or do before they die. Inspired byย Richโs videoย (you really shouldsubscribe to his channel), I created my own Bucket List PowerPoint deck.

The result: Having it visual and accessible actually helps me get things ticked off the list. Once Iโd had them all listed together, I also realised that most of them are pretty easy to do: They just require time and money. For example, โMeet Mona Lisaโ and โEat a crepe under the Eiffel Towerโ were both ticked off while on a visit to Paris in December. Buy flight ticket. Book Airbnb. Easy.
However, going through the list again this weekend, I realised I not only had โthe easy onesโ, I had a listย withinย a list. List inception. You see, one of my bucket list items isย โTick 1000 birds in the worldโ. As a birdwatcher (birder / twitcher / birdnerd) I have another list Iโm completing too. Since I started this hobby in 2013, every time I see a new bird species (theyโre called โlifersโ) I get to tick it off the list, and itโs been one helluva exciting, emotional, tactic-shifting journey.
When I started birding it was easy enough. We placed some food out in the garden and watched them flock in. The usual suspects visited, and kept visiting, but the lifers decreased, and eventually ended. So we visited other places around the country to add to our Southern African list. Different birds prefer different areas, habitats and food, and seldom wander out of their areas, so by going to new places, the lifers increased. As the list grew, though, itโs started to get trickier to add more.
You see, ticking birds off the list is, essentially, a diminishing return. Of the roughly 950 recorded bird species in Southern Africa alone, weโve ticked 482 lifers to date. This not only requires travel, it now also requires heaps and heaps (did I say heaps yet) of patience. Why? Well, the birds weโve added to the list to date are mostly the easily-accessible ones: The raptors who soar the skies, the fence-sitters who grace our roadside telephone poles, and the species who are happy to be out in the open โ in grasslands or wetlands – for the world to see. To add more lifers to the list, we now need to go out and find the more difficult-to-see species: The shy. The secretive. The species who donโt like coming out in the open. The ones who skulk around in the middle of bushes or reeds, keeping to themselves, keeping very quiet, and not very keen on being seen.
Iโve made a few birding friends in the past few years, and I recall early on someone mentioning for me to sit and continue toย scan the area for a whileย when in search of birds. Back then, my โwhileโ was 5/10 minutes, and if we didnโt see something moving around, or didn’t see something new, we moved on to the next location. Well, how things have changed. This year alone, we have spent hours and hours in bird hidesย (we recently did a 06:00-09:00 stint in one hide waiting for one particular bird, who never showed up).ย So my plan to achieve my bucket list item has changed from aย โletโs see a few birds in this areaโstrategy to one ofย โif we get to see only one on this trip, weโre winningโ. This weekend, after spending a number of crazy visits around the country, over 5 years, to try see one particular bird, we were graced with a spectacular viewing of one of the most secretive birds in the region: The African Finfoot.
I wonโt lie. It was a spiritual moment.
So why am I telling you this?
Finding these kinds of birds now requires a different approach. Different tactics. My Victory Condition remains the same:ย โTick 1000 birds in the worldโ. Butย howย I get there has changed. Itย hadย to change, and thatโs okay. If I hadn’t instilled saintly-patience into my birding journey, I’d add very few new species, which would be not working well towards achieving the Victory Condition laid out before me.
My question to you:
Are you trying the same-old tactics, but not getting results? Think itโs maybe time to change something?
Originally posted on LinkedIn, 25 March 2019

