![]() ![]() Not as fully featured as some other apps.Records your location with GPS, or you can use eBird hotspots.Very fast to enter data in the field, unless you want to note male/female, etc (see below).They will also email lists, export them in a format acceptable to eBird, and keep a rudimentary life list. ![]() (Note, some of these are also available on Android phones, but I haven’t used those versions.)įirst, all of these apps will obviously let you record which birds, and how many, you see. But which one? I’ll briefly describe and compare the iPhone listing apps that I’ve used. If you have an iPhone or iPod Touch, I highly recommend using one of these apps. ![]() Although I still use my trusty voice recorder from time to time, I’ve pretty much fully switch over. It’s very convenient to keep your list on a device that you always have handy. Smart phones and listing-keeping applications seem to be made for each other. I love that thing and never imagined that I could bird without it.Īnd then comes the iPhone with all its wonderful apps. Plus, it could record bird sounds in a pinch. I could keep the device in my pocket, clip the mic to my binocular strap, and be able to record notes without ever lowering my binoculars. So I bought a digital voice recorder with a remote mic. How cool was that! Well, not the cassette part. A few years later, I met a birder who dictated sightings into a cassette-based voice recorder. It was a great way to learn, but a little cumbersome. When I started birding, I carried a pencil and small notebook into the field to record sightings and make notes. ![]()
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