WASHINGTON — If you鈥檙e a birdwatcher, Clemson University professor of wildlife ecology says, you鈥檒l need a spotting scope, binoculars and a field guide.
And if you鈥檙e a black birdwatcher, he says, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to need probably two or three forms of ID.鈥 He鈥檚 only half-joking. In a video that walks a line between comic and serious, Lanham says as a black birdwatcher, he has to consider how he looks when out in the field.
At one point in the video he balls up a hoodie, looks into the camera and says, 鈥淣ever wear a hoodie. Ever.” That鈥檚 an obvious reference to the Trayvon Martin case and viewers have commented how they weren鈥檛 quite sure if they should laugh at the wry humor in the segment. That sentiment鈥檚 grown more acute since the video was made. The shootings of black men from Ferguson, Missouri to North Charleston, South Carolina have heightened the awareness of how African American men are perceived. Referring to the humor in the video, Lanham says, 鈥淚 like to tell people that I want聽 you to laugh at it, and then think about why you laughed. Ultimately, that鈥檚 the goal.鈥
But there鈥檚 another goal behind the video –and to Lanham鈥檚 work as an ecologist. Lanham wants to do away with the stereotype of the birdwatcher. 鈥 I call it the “old Jane Hathaway box,鈥 he says, referring to a character on the “Beverly Hillbillies” sitcom of the 1960s. 聽Jane Hathaway was a prim banker鈥檚 assistant who was given to dressing in khakis and a pith helmet and rhapsodizing about her latest sighting of some rare bird. Back then Lanham says, the message was, 鈥溾檅irding was for little old white ladies.鈥
Lanham says he got into birding, 鈥渂ecause I could travel vicariously through birds. I knew that they were going places that I couldn鈥檛 go at the time. And they were flying-and I wanted to fly.鈥 Whenever he gets the chance, he works to foster an interest in nature, especially among people of color. He emphasizes that you don鈥檛 have to be in some far off wilderness area to experience the excitement of seeing birds you鈥檇 never noticed before. 鈥淪ome of the best birding in the U.S. is in Central Park,鈥 he says, referring to the giant swath of green space in New York City. That鈥檚 not the only urban center rich in bird life. 聽In Washington, D.C, there are three pairs of American Bald Eagles that have made nests. Local biologists have recently confirmed that there are eaglets in two of those three nests.
Lanham sees a clear link to the natural world, and it鈥檚 something he鈥檇 like everyone to share. 聽He explains, 鈥淚 mean, we鈥檙e all in this thing together. We breathe the same air, drink the same water, tread the same ground. So, if we figure out how to get along together and for us to appreciate other living beings, then I think it鈥檚 a better thing in the end.鈥
VIDEO: Lanham’s Rules for the Black Birdwatcher
If interested in birdwatching, theand the聽 are suggested online resources.
