Notebook
              LIFE AND  ADVENTURES OF A BIRDWATCHER FROM ZEMUN
                Birds Make Us Better
                People  who study, photograph and understand birds seem to have an unspoken brotherhood  of their own, above profession, guild or personal enthusiasm. They have their own language, signals, principles  of solidarity and alliance. Some mental, geographical and symbolic maps of  their own. They read their environment and the person in it with much more  warmth and depth. They know that 365  species of birds have been recorded in Serbia so far, that they have names,  characteristics, species history, and the right to life. (...) This is a personal testimony of how a famous  Belgrade archaeologist entered that world and stayed in it
              Text and Photo: Josip Šarić
              
                
I have a habit of joking and saying that in my  youth (not counting girls) I had two first loves. It usually confuses the  interlocutor, but everything becomes clearer when I emphasize that the first  first love was archaeology, while the second first love was photography. By chance, and  to an extent by surge of passion, archeology became my professional commitment.  Photography followed all the events from the background and only lurked for the  moment to occasionally take archeology off its pedestal, until it has  irreversibly taken over the winner’s podium in recent years.
                The bird watching that is discussed in this article  was born from the combination of love for photography and building of a bridge.  Namely, in early 2015, I stepped for the first time over Pupin’s Bridge, which  had been opened to traffic at the end of the previous year, and I visited an  area I had never been to before.  A completely new world opened up before me across the river, the so–called  foreland of the left bank of the Danube. Walking along the 
embankment built in  the late 1920s, which was supposed to prevent flooding of the low–lying land on  which numerous settlements were located, my attention was first drawn to the  landscape. Indescribable  and enchanting were the changes in the colors of the dense vegetation that  accompanied the change of seasons. And then I started noticing the ”natives” of the  foreland. Wild boars, roe deer, rabbits, jackals, nutria and – birds started to  come out of the bushes.  Birds flocked from all sides. They appeared from the swamp vegetation,  were on the water in so–called ponds, pecking at the coastal mud, chirping in  the branches of willows and poplars, white–tailed eagles cried 
at heights where  I could barely see them with the naked eye, kestrels  and buzzards patiently stalked their prey from dried branches.
                In those days, my bird watching started without me  even being aware of it, or even having the basic concepts about it. And then,  during one of my walks on the embankment, I met a man who was carefully  following the flight of some birds, unknown to me, with binoculars. A casual  conversation began and I found out that I had met Dragan Simić, an ecologist by  education, a passionate bird watcher and traveler who had traveled to the  Balkans, the Mediterranean, South Africa, India and Central America in search  of birds. Not  even a sporting accident in which he suffered a serious injury while falling  from a cliff did prevent him from this dedicated bird watching. After two years  of rehabilitation, he realized that he could engage in bird watching from a  kayak, and he started that activity right on the foreland area where we met. On parting,  he gave me a small guidebook Birds of  Serbia and Areas of International Importance, of which he was one of the  authors.
              DIFFERENT PEOPLE, SAME PASSION 
              
The illustrations with the birds that can be found  most often in our area and the list of areas in Serbia that are of international  importance for birds started to ignite my interest in observing and recording  the birds that I met and that I slowly began to recognize. ”If you don’t  have it in your head, you have it on Google”. With that slang proverb, I  started browsing the internet. During my search for data to expand my limited  knowledge of birds, I came across the website of the Society for the Protection  and Study of Birds of Serbia and, of course, immediately became a member. And then I  slowly began to discover another world – the world of bird lovers and the many  interesting people who make up that world. All of them, people of the most  diverse professions and profiles, are united by a common passion – love for  nature and respect for the rules it sets up.
                
Among the bird lovers is Milan  Ružić, doctor of veterinary medicine, president of the aforementioned Society,  from Čačak, living in Novi Sad. He has been studying birds professionally for  more than twenty years, has published dozens of scientific papers and a large  number of popular texts. He always emphasizes that Serbia is located in one of  the six European centers of biological diversity and that on the territory of  our country, which covers less than one percent of Europe, about two–thirds of  the bird species inhabiting the Old Continent are nesting and met seasonally.
                Primarily as a photographer who  unexpectedly found himself in the world of birds, I very quickly noticed images  on the Internet that caught my attention due to their quality. One of the  authors of such photographs is Čedomir Vučković, known among bird watchers as  Wolfson Birdman, a versatile personality in which anthropologist, journalist,  photographer, musician and bird watcher combined. According  to him, bird watchers are divided into three categories. In the first category  are those who observe birds and record data on their appearance and behavior,  in the second category there are nature photographers who observe and record  birds, and in the third category there are those who combine the activities of  the first two.
                
In Serbia, the presence of 365  species of birds has been recorded so far, and in the area where I first paid  more attention to them, in Beljarica (that’s how that part of the Danube  foreland is called among bird watchers), the presence of 183 species has been  observed so far, although these figures are subject to constant changes. Considering that, for now, I count myself in the second category of bird  watcher according to Čeda’s definition, I am more focused on photographing  birds than on systematically recording observed species and searching for a new  species 
that will mark my photographic portfolio. However,  even I, a beginner, got lucky in the first days of bird watching. While I was  sitting gathering strength to continue hiking, on 08 May 2020, a bird with  yellow feathers on its head landed on a dry branch just a few meters from me.  Camera in the bag, I am unprepared for such an encounter! My wife, who was filming the swamp ibis not far away, calls: ”Take out the camera, take a picture, what are you waiting for?" Reluctantly (but dutifully as a spouse), expecting the bird to fly away  immediately, took out my camera and miraculously faced the gaze of a completely  calm bird that allowed me to take a few shots. When reviewing the images and trying to figure out from the manual which  species it was, I concluded that it was a yellow wagtail. But a retraction immediately followed: Milan drew my attention to the fact  that it was a yellow-headed wagtail. It turned  out that my camera recorded its presence on the territory of Belgrade for the  first time, and it was the 169th species in Beljarica, and at that  time only its fifth appearance in the territory of Serbia.
              SURPRISES IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD 
              
We often hear the birds before we  see them, and this especially applies to the warblers. In such situations, it  is crucial for the bird watcher to recognize the call or song of the bird in  order to know what species it is, and then having an insight into its behavior  to make a strategy how and at what moment he can expect to see it. It goes without saying how important it is for the photographer-bird  watcher.  My ears are still quite ”hard”, so I get a lot of help from another friend who has excellent hearing  and perfectly locates and recognizes birds by their calls. It is Sever Nagulov, a geographer by education and the best postman who  ever appeared in the area where I live. He is a bird watcher listening to  birdsong to a great extent, diligently recording data on their appearance and  selflessly informing interested bird watchers about where some rarer species  have appeared.  One almost anecdotal event is related to Sever. The winter before last, I went to Kikinda to see and photograph small owls  in the city of owls. It was a nice experience and a memorable encounter with  dozens of these attractive birds tucked in the branches of trees in the  pedestrian zone.  However, not long after, Sever 
informed me that in the  crown of a pine tree that grows ten meters from the entrance to the building  where I lived, there was a small colony of six or seven long-eared owls. I could reach them with about twenty steps. However, I took the most  attractive shot of a little long-eared owl on an abandoned farm not far from  Kovilovo, where we patiently looked into each other’s eyes for the duration of  the shooting, which lasted several minutes.
                Bee–eaters are among the most  beautiful European birds. In the places where they hunt, people will often hear  them, and in the heights and against the light, they will be difficult to spot. In order to photograph the beekeepers, I spent hours craning my neck and  watching them fly over the embankment quickly and undetectable by the lens on  Beljarica.  
The failure of photographing in Beljarica led me to  search for them in Deliblatska peščara, which was also unsuccessful. Learning  that there is a colony in Višnjička Banja was promising. And to paraphrase  Caesar: I came, I saw, I failed! And then a surprise. From another bird watcher, also a neighbor from the settlement, Dejan  Kovačić (a precision mechanic currently working in a glass tempering plant), I  learned that a colony of beekeepers resides in nests excavated in a loess  profile near the small gorge, which the people of Zemun know under the name  Goveđi brod.  So, the beekeepers that I chased around Banat were flying  about three hundred meters from the building where I live. This was followed by crawling through gardens and nettles up to my waist,  avoiding an unfriendly stray dog, forcing a barbed wire fence and finally – a  close encounter with beekeepers and photos that I will probably never take  again.
              STEPS ON THE BIRD WATCHING WAY 
              
As my bird watching days passed,  interesting experiences followed. Last year (2021), together with my friend  Petar Petrović (graduated in geological engineering), I tried for a week to  record the ibises in Beljarica that other bird watchers had seen days before us. We finally managed to see them and somehow take a picture, waiting for them  to come closer to the bank where we were hiding behind some vegetation for the  more attractive shots. Then a car rushed over the embankment, scared the  nervous river gulls, which took off screeching, and were followed by ibises  that rose into the air and disappeared into the distance. Only two disappointed photographers-bird watchers remained on the  embankment. And then this year, we both went to the Sebeš canal in Borča so  that he could record the great reed warbler, a marsh songbird with a not very  sweet voice, but with an attractive figure while singing. While looking for a place to shoot reeds, in the empty pools of the ”Mika Alas” pond, I saw four ibises, which 
this time I shot properly without  being disturbed. Among those shots is one showing three ibises in flight, their  dark feathers shimmering in the full spectrum of rainbow colors, justifying the name they have in some other languages – glossy ibis.
                After several years of bird watching  and intensive bird photography, it happens to me that when I am walking with  acquaintances or friends, and some unfamiliar bird appears in front of us, when  asked what species it is, I completely spontaneously and unintentionally give  its name in Latin as an answer. I didn’t notice  how those names imperceptibly began to be engraved in my memory. Maybe it is a  sign that I have passed the first, true amateur step in bird watching. And the very process of bird watching, no matter how one defines bird  watching, shapes a person in a special way, even if he starts doing this  activity relatively late.  The birds that, being born in the city, I took for  granted and noticed only as vague outlines in the air, became much more than  that. I started to think about the fact that these are actually creatures that  inhabit the planet Earth incomparably longer than humans, so maybe they have  some greater rights than those that we deny them in the constant plundering of  natural resources.  Meeting more and more species, I begin to see different  characters among them, similar to the ones we have among humans.
              THE BIRDS ARE NOT CHASED, BUT WAITED  FOR 
              
Birds have their lives colored by  habits and instinctive behavior, and this requires a bird watcher interested in  taking photos to play with them both physically and mentally. This includes  kilometers walked both on a hot summer day and on a cold winter day. This includes filming birds during autumn and spring migration, when  weather conditions can be unpredictable. You should definitely not carry a  tripod or monopod made of carbon fiber with you, because they are real bait for  lightning.  Mosquitoes and a host of other annoying insects are  regular companions. I also realized that in the search for a good photo, you  don’t chase after the birds, but wait for them. To This  means knowing 
their behavior and accordingly making a strategy where and how to  record them. Accompanying elements are prolonged waiting under a camouflage  cape in the summer with sweat dripping from the forehead that makes the eyes  burn, rubbing frostbitten fingers in the winter to be able to press the shutter  button on the camera at the right moment, and wet feet from shoes that turn out  not to be waterproof.
                Before every departure to observe  and record birds, I remember the words of Milan Ružić who said in an interview:  ”Birds have so  many noble qualities that it is a real joy for a smart person”. And just by  watching birds you can get better. Watch a couple of pigeons from your terrace,  you will see what love means, how they bring twigs for the nest, how they  carefully guard those two eggs, how they try to nurture those chicks, how they  teach them to fly.”
                
I am sure that each of us,  even if we are not dedicated bird watchers, watching those feathered neighbors  of ours flying around buildings and in parks, can see the world we live in in a  different way; pay more attention and respect to it, finding perhaps a hidden  and unspoken empathy for everything that surrounds us, and the birds would take  credit for awakening such an often deeply subdued feeling. I think they helped me in that. The first thing I will do after  finishing this article will be packing my photography equipment and going out  to meet the birds and their fall migration this year.
              
                ***
              No Age Limit 
                Bird watching definitely does  not recognize age and this is confirmed in the best way by Mr. Vladimir Ristić,  retired teacher of general technical education and head of the photo section at  the elementary school ”Stevan  Sinđelić”, who in his late eighties is  regularly present at some of the bird watching spots. When we meet, we must report to each other what we saw, where and when.  He says that these ”escapes” from the city center  fill his day and dispel boredom. And judging by his vitality, they allow him to  still be young in body and spirit.
              ***
              Encounters to Avoid 
                Last summer, in the company of  Gojko Kukobat (graduated IT engineer), I visited the sedimentation tanks of the  devastated sugar factory in Padinska Skela. Instead of the expected birds, in  the thicket we noticed traces of intense presence of wild boars in that area,  so we concluded that it would be wiser to take shelter before an unwanted  encounter with these unpredictable and sometimes very aggressive animals ensues. The sugar factory sediment tanks are still waiting for our return to  that bird watching zone.