Since I started serious birding in November, I’ve read a lot of beginner books to ramp up my identification skill. In this post, I’m going to share with you what I learnt in the process, specifically, all the tips I collected in the books I’ve read. I’ll also provide a structured learning plan that tailored to the habitat and species of the Pacific Northwest, so you can gradually move from backyard basics to more complex shoreline and mountain species.
Remember, birding should be fun and flexible. I love the identification process because it aligns with my professional pursuits (pattern recognition, taxonomy). But it can also be as relaxing as you like it. Use my framework as you see fit, but please don’t let anything come between you and the simple joy of sharing some quality time in nature!
1: The Mental Framework
As the famed birder Pete Dunne said, “Bird identification is not made by eyes or ears, but the brain”. And David Sibley defined identification as “interpreting what you see and hear in order to make better judgments…the trick is to know how to gather and weigh the evidence. The experts of bird identification do not have heightened senses as much as a better understanding of what they are seeing and knowledge of what they should be seeing.”
Before diving into guides, adopt good habits and use a system-thinking approach in IDing.
Active Learning Techniques
Start Small: Observe backyard or balcony birds for a few minutes daily to “detox” from busy schedules and train your senses. Repetition helps your brain create new neural paths for quicker identification. Why backyard species? Because they are common, slow‑moving, and easy to observe repeatedly. You can easily practice these fundamentals without venturing far:
- Size & shape
- Behavior
- Basic field marks
- Sound recognition
- Size & shape
The 10 Most Common: Use the 80/20 rule. Master the 10 most common birds in your immediate neighborhood to eliminate 90% of what you see.
Anchor Birds: This comes from my trip leaders and the Kristi Dranginis’ book. Pick 5 “ambassador birds” from different families to use as stepping stones for comparison. Each family or group of birds has an overall size and shape, or silhouette that are similar within the family. By using such anchor, it is easier to put what you see into a family quickly.
The Feynman Method: I have used the Feynman technique to learn various subjects (IT, math, marketing) with very good results. Similarly, in birding, you can describe a bird vocally in every detail you see to a companion. Can you describe a Robin’s eye ring or whether it hops or walks? Do you know this common bird as well as you think?
Sketching: This tip comes from “How to Look at a Bird” by the illustrator Clara Leslie. Drawing a bird reveals the gaps in your observation that your brain normally “fills in.” This can be combined with the Feynman method listed above as multimodal learning to improve learning effectiveness.
Pre-reading: This tip comes from “Birding for Boomers” by by Sneed Collard in which he suggested against consulting guide books in the field. Rather, prepare a list of potential candidates you will see tomorrow, and closely study them at home. This aligns with the modern learning concept of priming and pre-reading to enhance actual learning in the field.
Practice in real conditions:
- Identify birds in backlit conditions.
- Spot silhouettes at dawn/dusk.
- Track movement through branches.
- Go birding at sunrise or sunset.
- Practice “flash ID”: look for 1 second, then write what you saw.
- Identify birds in backlit conditions.
The 5 S’s of Birding
Do not start by studying field marks in a guide book. Rather, experienced birders integrate contextual clues to narrow down possibilities. Use the 5 S’s of Birding to answer the what, how and where and when of bird identification.
Space (Habitat/Behavior):
Habitat: Where is the bird? Are they in a tree or on the ground? Is it moving up or down a tree? Is it in a riparian area or an open meadow? Many birds are specially adapted to specific habitats for their feeding behaviors. For example, Dark-eyed Juncos are almost always found in the underbrush looking for food on the ground; woodpeckers on the trunk of a tree drilling for insects; and hawks perched on high branches searching for small mammals. In addition, a species is usually found in the region during a particular season. This alone can rule out a lot of birds that are simply absent from where you are during this time of the year.
Behavior: What is the bird doing? Behaviors are good indicators as they don’t change with location or season.
- Foraging: What is it feeding on, and where.
- Flocking: As the saying goes, judge one by the companions it keeps.
- Preening: How does it clean its feathers with its bill.
- Flight patterns: soaring, undulating, hovering, flapping, or gliding.
- Nest building techniques
- Mating displays
Size: Use “anchor birds” as baselines (e.g., is it smaller than a sparrow or larger than an eagle?). Size and shape are also good indicators as they don’t change throughout the year.
Shape: Look at the silhouette, body and tail shape, bill length, and posture (upright vs. horizontal when perched).
Shade (Color/Pattern): Start from the top of the bird’s head and scan to the eyes, cheeks, throat, wing and tail. Are they the same color from crown to tail or is there some pattern to their coloration? Remember: light can be misleading.
Sound: This is the toughest skill to acquire, similar to learning a new language. Learn the difference between long, complex songs (usually males) and short, simple calls (both sexes).
2: The PNW Habitat Learning Roadmap
The Pacific Northwest is blessed with a diverse landscape of high mountains, forests, farmlands, estuaries/wetland and open sea. Each kind of habitat and climatic zone hosts unique groups of species. As a beginner, I rank these groups from easiest to most difficult to ID based on distance and movement:
- Ducks in Ponds: Large, slow, and easy to spot in the open without much obstruction.
- Seabirds: Slow moving, but require a scope due to distance.
- Raptors: Easy when perched; flight patterns and silhouette are the key to ID for those in the air.
- Shorebirds: Very similar plumage; difficult for beginners to distinguish. Same problem with gulls even though they are plenty and can be seen from most places.
- Songbirds: Fast, hidden in canopies, and require strong voice recognition. Start with your backyard songbirds first.
Now let’s put this into practice! This learning plan blends books, online tools, and real‑world practice to build your skills systematically. It also blends in a phased progression through PNW habitats: Start solo in backyard → Add clubs when species get harder (waterbirds/raptors) → Mix both in the Cascades.
A Weekly Rhythm
- Evening (45 min): Read 5–10 species in field guides and listen to their calls on Merlin.
- Two Outings (60 min): One at home (yard or nearby park), one at a “destination” (lake or trail).
- Reflection (20 min): Write down 3 species you’ve mastered, 2 that confused you, and 1 question for your next bird walk.
Phase 1: Backyard Foundations (Weeks 1–4)
Goal: Master 15–25 common species you can see from home or a short walk. Focus on 80% self-study with Tekiela book + Merlin. A beginner group walk can help you confirm chickadees, sparrows, and juncos quickly.
Weeks 1–2: Size & Shape.
- Focus on posture,silhouettes and movement (before color) — the most reliable ID features.
- Practice: Set up a feeder. Use a notebook to record behavior (e.g., “clinging to trunk” vs “hopping on ground”) — especially useful in poor lighting.
- Anchor Birds: Black-capped Chickadee, Dark-eyed Junco, Steller’s Jay, American Robin. Pick one family to investigate, for example, learn what makes a sparrow a sparrow.
Weeks 3–4: Field Marks & Real Conditions.
- Study wing bars, eye rings, tail patterns, and bill shapes.
- Practice: Intentionally watch birds in “bad” conditions (backlit or at dusk) to identify them by posture alone.
- Compare: Use your guide to distinguish the Song Sparrow from the Fox Sparrow side-by-side.
Recommended resources
- Birding for Beginners: Pacific Northwest — Stan Tekiela
- Merlin Bird ID (Northwest pack)
- Kaufman Field Guide (for comparisons)
- Watch short ID videos from Cornell Lab’s All About Birds.
- Read Audubon’s ID guide
Phase 2a: Water & Predators (Weeks 5–10)
Goal: 50% club walks for waterfowl, raptors, and shorebirds, 50% self‑study between outings.
- Weeks 5–6: Big Water Birds & Sound.
- Focus on ducks, geese, and herons.
- Practice: Visit a local pond/bay (e.g., Juanita Bay). Note the difference between “dabbling” and “diving” ducks. Start using Merlin Sound ID daily.
- Weeks 7–8: Habitat Patterns & Raptors.
- Learn to predict birds based on their environment.
- Practice: Visit open fields for Northern Harriers or shorelines for Bald Eagles. ID raptors by wing shape from below before looking at plumage.
- Weeks 9–10: Intro to Shorebirds.
- Don’t get overwhelmed. Focus on “anchors” like the Killdeer or Black Oystercatcher.
- Practice: Compare leg length and bill shape.
Why clubs matter here:
- Waterfowl and raptors are easier with guidance:
- Experts can point out silhouettes, flight styles, and behavioral cues.
- Shorebirds are notoriously difficult:
- Experts can help you learn bill length, leg color, feeding style, and seasonal plumage.
- Puget Sound has mixed gull flocks, a classic beginner trap.
Local hotspots with club-guided walks
- Juanita Bay
- Marymoor Park
- Lake Sammamish State Park
- Nisqually NWR
- Discovery Park
- Union Bay
Phase 2b: Forest & Cascade Songbirds (Weeks 11–20)
Now we’ll taking our backyard skills into more complex habitats. Mountain bird walks introduce us to species we won’t see in our yard, e.g., Townsend’s Warbler, Hermit Thrush, Sooty Grouse, Gray/Canada Jay, Clark’s Nutcracker.
Goal: Master fast-moving birds in complex terrain. 60% self-study / 40% club walks. Forest birds move fast and stay hidden, thus sound becomes essential. This is where self‑study helps. But identifying kinglets, wrens, warblers, and thrushes in dense foliage is much easier when someone points out foraging height, movement pattern, habitat preference, and song vs call differences
- Weeks 11–14: Lowland Parks.
- Focus on woodpeckers and wrens in dense foliage.
- Practice: Train your ear to recognize the Pacific Wren’s song. Note “foraging zones”: is the bird on the trunk or the outer twigs?
- Weeks 15–20: High Elevation & Advanced ID.
- Practice: Use eBird “Explore” before a hike to see what’s active.
- Challenge: Distinguish between a Townsend’s Warbler and a Hermit Thrush by sound and movement in the canopy.
3: Helpful Resources
Self‑study gives you flexibility and deep personal observation skills, while joining a birding club accelerates your learning by exposing you to expert eyes, shared knowledge, and real‑time feedback. In the Puget Sound region where species diversity is high and habitats vary dramatically, a hybrid approach is ideal.
When Self‑Study Works Best
- You enjoy learning at your own pace.
- You want to master backyard birds before meeting others.
- You prefer quiet, solo time in nature.
- You’re building foundational skills (size, shape, behavior, sound).
Self Study Materials
Here’s a curated set of beginner‑friendly bird ID books. Each is chosen because they help you avoid classic pitfalls like confusing look‑alike species, dealing with bad lighting, and identifying birds partly hidden in foliage. For those with interest in history, read up the development of field guides through the years.
| Need | Resource | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Newbie | Birding for Beginners: PNW (Tekiela) | Hyper-local and focuses on common backyard birds. “Compare” feature is priceless for beginners as it highlights subtle differences that are easy to miss. |
| Visualist | Kaufman Field Guide | Uses photos; excellent for confusing species and bad lighting. |
| Patterns and Details | Sibley Field Guide (Western) | Best for subtle plummage differences, molts, and silhouettes. |
| Holistic Approach | How to Know the Birds (Ted Floyd) | 200 essays focusing on “knowing” each bird through its behavior, ecology, and seasonal cycles in a year-long journey. |
| Contextual Images | Crossley ID Guides: waterfowl, Western, raptors | Innovative presentation by photoshopping each species in its habitat with different plummages, behaviors, etc. Group birds by similarity rather than taxonomy |
| Digital Tools | Merlin, eBird, Audubon App | Essential for sound ID and finding local hotspots. |
Why Join a Club?
While self-study builds discipline, clubs have their advantages:
- The PNW region has complex habitats (shoreline, estuary, old‑growth, alpine, suburban), and clubs know the best spots for each.
- Many species look similar (e.g., Western vs Glaucous‑winged Gulls, Cooper’s vs Sharp‑shinned Hawks, shorebirds on mudflats, wablers).
- Seasonal migration is dramatic. Clubs help you catch the right species at the right time.
- You want to learn how experts think: what they look at first, how they eliminate species.
- You want real‑time correction so you don’t build bad habits.
Local groups worth checking:
- Puget Sound Bird Observatory (PSBO) — community science, banding demos, habitat education.
- Local Audubon chapters (Eastside, Seattle, Pilchuck, Rainier, Skagit) — regular walks, classes, monthly programs.
- Puget Sound Bird Fest in Edmonds — annual event with field trips and talks.
- Washington Ornithological Society has a wealth of local birding information to share.
How to see more birds
- Early bird gets the worm: plan to arrive early in the morning to catch the peak activity of many birds. Alternately, heading out near dusk can be an active time for many species.
- Visit local bird sanctuaries and wildlife refuges: Billy Frank Jr. Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge (Olympia/Tacoma), Grays Harbor NWR (Hoquiam), Ridgefield NWR (Ridgefield), Skagit Wildlife Area (Skagit County), Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge, and Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve.
- Join a birding tour: Guided birding tours can provide valuable insights into the local birdlife and help you identify different species. Local Audubon chapters hold an annual winter bird count open to the public and offers various educational walks and classes.
Conclusion
As the saying goes, “the trick to success for new bird-watchers is to not be discouraged by what you don’t know, but to be encouraged by what you are learning; and to enjoy the birds and the experience without worrying how many birds are on your life list. You don’t have to go to Costa Rica to enjoy your feathered friends. Birds can be as close as your backyard or a nearby park.”
Have fun, keeping practice what you learnt, and I’ll see you in the trails!