View Single Post

  #7 (permalink)  
Old 12-03-2007, 01:14 PM
almostnormal's Avatar
almostnormal almostnormal is offline
Officer of the Wild Empire
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Haydon Bridge (that's in Northumberland)
Posts: 851
Blog Entries: 2
Send a message via MSN to almostnormal
Re: Origin of Twitchers

Quote:
Originally Posted by yellowhammer View Post
According to Bill Oddie in his Introduction to birdwatching the term

'...was coined many many years ago among a then small group of rarity chasers, some of whom would get so over excited at the prospect of seeing a new bird, or so frantically nervous that they might miss it, that they would literally shake, palpitate or "twitch" with the emotion of the whole thing.'

Bill Oddie's Introduction to Birdwatching, 2002, New Holland Publishers, pp. 8-9.
i don't ordinarily go twitching. i'm too lazy to go haring around the country at high speed looking for a bird that's invariably already flown off/been snaffled/died by the time you get there. however, a few years back a great knott landed in my patch and there was a helter skelter ride through back roads to get to the stretch of mud it was on. now i wasn't driving - a died-in-the-wool twitcher of great experience was - and i'll tell you this: i agree with bill oddie. i have never, in all my life, seen anyone get that excited about a bird. they were literally leaping about with the sheer excitement of it. mind you i was sat on a boat mooring breathing deeply and trying not to think about the near death experiences on the way to the bird so its possibly i was twitching too!
Reply With Quote