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- Oklahoma City Audubon Society – Promoting Birding in Oklahoma City and . . .
Our meetings are held September through June on the third Monday of each month Meetings begin at 7 p m Visitors are always welcome Meeting Location: Our meetings are held at the Will Rogers Garden center, located at the intersection of NW 36th Street and I-44
- Birding and Bird Watching in Oklahoma - TravelOK. com
From the lesser prairie chicken to the bald eagle, learn more about the nearly 500 species of birds at home in Oklahoma
- Birding in Oklahoma | Audubon
Add it all up, and Oklahoma offers some of the best birding in the central United States This relatively new site (dating from the 1990s) has become one of the premier birding destinations in the region, with a bird list of well over 300 species
- Birding - Oos Site
The trail’s 13 highway-based driving loops link area wildlife watching destinations and direct outdoor adventurers to 300 miles of scenic routes that showcase western Oklahoma’s natural beauty For the birdwatchers, each loop has a recommended birding route that begins at sunrise and ends at sunset
- Birding For Beginners - U. S. National Park Service
You don't have to actively be looking for birds to practice birding Take note of the birds you see and hear on your walk to work or school, while you're looking out your kitchen window, or while you're doing other activities outdoors
- eBird - Discover a new world of birding. . .
eBird transforms your bird sightings into science and conservation Plan trips, find birds, track your lists, explore range maps and bird migration—all free
- How to get started birding - US Forest Service
Websites and apps are also a great source of support for birding The Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s All About Birds website is a free and fantastic resource with information about hundreds of North American birds They include identification details, life history traits, maps showing the bird’s range, and sound recordings
- Welcome New Birders! - American Birding Association
Welcome to the world of birding! Birds are everywhere to be found—no matter who you are, no matter where you live But where do you find them? How do you learn their names? How do you discover information about their behavior and ecology? Those are some of the questions set forth in Let's Go Birding! by Ted Floyd
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