How Blind Birders are Building a More Inclusive Birding Community
The first time someone called me a birder, I was startled, not only because Iβm completely Blind. I had accumulated bits of knowledge here and there over the years and felt smug when I could identify birds by their songs, but Iβd never studied, and it had never even occurred to me to go on an outing. Birders get up early, which wasnβt my habit, and I believed falsely that birding was entirely centred on vision. While some are, many birders Iβve spoken to describe listening as one of the key tools in finding birds to identify, especially in high summer when the foliage is at maximum density.
So on a sunny day in late summer, I accompanied Steve Garrett of the Toronto Ornithological Club (TOC), a Nature Network member group, to hear what was to be heard in Torontoβs High Park (mostly it was goldfinches and chickadees). We had our expectations set appropriately, as anyone who can distinguish a house sparrow from a bluejay can tell you, late summer isnβt the best time for birding.

Despite the season, I learned a lot. I got acquainted with the Merlin Bird ID app, and grilled Steve about birders and their ways.
Things I learned:
- A βspark birdβ is the bird that first catches someoneβs attention and turns them into a birder
- A βliferβ is a first-ever sighting of a bird that a birder may have been chasing for years
- And the best way to get a bird to stop singing is by turning on your ID app microphone
Steve told me the image of the classic birder has changed. The classic birder, armed with field glasses and reference manuals, isnβt quite as conspicuous anymore, because the smart phone offers options both for viewing, photographing, identifying and documenting.
Also, the idea of who a birder is has consciously shifted. βThe birding community has followed the cultural shift towards diversity, equity and inclusion,β Steve told me. βWhen it was founded, way back in 1934, the Toronto Ornithological Club was exclusively men. Of course thatβs not true anymore, and weβre actively interested in including people with a wide range of ages, backgrounds and abilities.β
This led to a discussion about an event involving the TOC and a group of Blind adults brought together by Balance for Blind Adults. One participant was Alex Bulmer, a Blind actor and director, who lives near High Park.
Alex, who lost her sight in her 20s, explained that one of the biggest barriers for Blind birding is access. βItβs one thing to walk down the street,β she says, βThatβs good, cause thereβre birds out on the street in the city and you can travel with your cane or your dog down the street, but youβre limited. Unless you can get into a woodland or a place thatβs less navigable, I mean I canβt get into the depths of High Park with my cane or my dog, I just canβt without a sighted guide.β
I also think itβs important to tackle a common myth. Blind people have better hearing than sighted people. My conclusion is that, as a Blind person, Iβm no more likely to excel at a hearing test than anyone else, but also as a Blind person, I rely heavily on sounds around me to make my way through the world and perceive what I can about it. This means that I often notice sounds my sighted friends donβt, not because I have quantitatively better hearing, but because I give more energy to processing what I hear.

Technology has also changed birding for Blind people. Gone are the days when sighted birders carried around reference books or paper journals. As a Blind person itβs all about the phone now. And as a totally Blind person, I rely on the voiceover feature on my iPhone which reads screen text aloud as synthetic speech. If an app developer has built accessibility features into their app, my experience will be as smooth as anyone elseβs.
Iβve appreciated the opportunity the Merlin Bird ID app gives me to participate in community science by sharing recordings with research databases. Jim Halilton, a retired Blind tech user, became interested in identifying birds through a course called Birdability: Birding By Ear, designed and offered by Birds Canada. I asked him about the Merlin ID app. βIt has helped me answer bird-song questions which I have had for decades. since having this app, and recognizing more birds as a result, I now pay more attention to birds I hear, to try to identify those I have not heard before.β
As a Blind birder I wonβt be taking photos of birds, but learning their songs and calls helps me fill in the auditory landscape in a way that centres nature rather than just the human-made sounds I hear in my urban life. That persistent trill in my backyard, I discovered, is not a dying squirrel but a dark-eyed junco; I looked it up.
